Beck v. State

STONE, C. J.

There is a principle of law, that if a fraud on the court be attempted, in the getting up of false testimony, or by any other artifice tending, or designed to deceive or mislead, or to make the false appear to be the true, and this is knowingly assisted, or procured to be done by the suitor, this is a circumstance which the jury may rightly consider, to the disadvantage of the party making, or assisting in such attempt. An honest cause, the law considers, needs not the aid of such reprehensible methods. But, to justify the application of this principle, there must be some proof of it, or testimony of facts or circumstances, tending to support such inference. Mere conflict among witnesses examined on the opposing side, without more, does not aud can not raise such inquiry, or bring the principle referred to into play. 1 Greenl. Ev., § 469 ; Childs v. The State, 76 Ala. 93. Cases of conflicting statement, or conflicting recollection, frequently occur, and it would be a dangerous precedent, as well as an unsound rule, to visit on either side, in case of such conflict, the severe intendments which the law denounces against the suborner, or procurer of simulated or manufactured testimony.

There was in this case a direct conflict in testimony. One witness testified that on the day on which the alleged offense was committed, he saw a pistol projecting out of defendant’s hip-pocket. Tie and other witnesses gave testimony tending to show that later on that day, a pistol was in said pocket and on the person of the defendant, and that it was concealed from view. The defendant testified in his own behalf that he had *3no pistol on that day. This conflict presented a question for the jury to determine. They were not bound to believe the one side or the other, further than to render a verdict under the charge of the court, “their judgments should be convinced, with that measure of conviction the law requires in criminal cases.” The bill of exceptions sets forth that it contains all the evidence, and the conflict noted above, and a conflict on one other question of- fact, are the only incidents of the trial on which the charge hereafter noted can be attempted to be justified. They do not present a state of facts which raised the legal question embodied in that charge, and the charge was consequently abstract. An abstract charge, if it probably misled the jury, even if it assert a correct legal principle, is an error for which we will reverse. Partridge v. Forsyth, 29 Ala. 200; Russell v. Erwin, 38 Ala. 44; Mc Williams v. Rogers, 56 Ala. 87; Glass v. Pinckard., Ib. 592; Hammett v. Brown, 60 Ala. 498; Bernstein v. Humes, 71 Ala. 260; Herring v. Skaggs, 73 Ala. 446. The charge we refer to is the third paragraph of the general charge given and accepted to, and instructed them “if they believed from the evidence that defendant had attempted to prove facts material to his defense by false statements, and that he knew such statements to be false, and, so knowing, procured them to be made, then, that might be a circumstance against the defendant to be considered by the jury in weighing the evidence.”

As we said above, the evidence on the trial did not raise the legal question which the charge sets forth, and the charge was abstract. It moreover authorized the jury to draw an inference, while there was no testimony from which it could be drawn. “A charge that the jury may infer a fact of which there is no evidence is erroneous.” Henderson v. The State, 49 Ala. 20; Fverett v. U. S., 6 Por. 166; Lehnan, Durr & Co. v. Warren, 53 Ala. 535.

It is not our intention to intimate an opinion as to the guilt or innocence of the accused. That is a question for the jury, which, weighing the evidence, they must determine for themselves.

There is nothing in the other questions reserved.

Reversed and remanded.