DeFoe v. People

Christiancy, J.

The charge in the information was of an assault with intent to commit a rape. The prosecutrix gaye evidence tending to show an assault with the intent charged, by the defendant, who was a physician, and that it took place in his room-or office while, as such physician, he was.treating her arm for some malady for which she had several' times before been treated by him at the same place.

Her evidence was not confirmed by that of any other witness as to any of the more important facts going to establish the truth of the charge; but was contradicted as to several important circumstances by other witnesses.

The defendant on the trial, as permitted by the statute, made a statement in his own behalf, of the facts and cir*225cumstamces on the occasion alluded to by tbe prosecutrix, as be claimed them to be. This, as stated in the bill of exceptions, was, so far as material to be noticed here, as follows: “And defendant’s counsel further gave in evidence, by the statement of the defendant in said cause, that all the allegations of the prosecutrix were false and untrue,” and “that he never insulted her in his life.”

Tbe court, in his charge to the jury, after some comments upon defendant’s statement, which are admitted to have been fair and correct, added the following, which is complained of as erroneous: “The statement of defendant does nob, however, directly deny the assault. This silence would go far to confirm the testimony of the complainant.”

If, as we arc bound to assume, the bill of exceptions •correctly sets forth the defendant’s “statement,” and its effect, that “ all the allegations of the prosecutrix were false .and untrue,” and that “he never insulted her in his life,” then this part of the charge was certainly erroneous, in assuming as a fact what the bill of exceptions shows not to have been as thus assumed.

The direct denial that “he had ever insulted her in his life” must certainly be regarded in the connection in which it is found and with reference to her testimony, as a direct denial of the assault which her testimony tended to prove. And if his statement tended to show that “all her allegations” (of which the assault was one), were false and untrue, this was a clear and sufficiently direct denial of the assault.

Had the record, however, confirmed the omission of the denial assumed as a fact in the charge, we are not prepared to agree with the counsel for the plaintiff in error that such omission could have no tendency to confirm the testimony of the prosecutrix in reference to the assault.

*226The statement of a prisoner in such a case, does not stand'upon the same ground, and is not to be governed by the same considerations in this respect, as the testimony of a witness refusing to answer a question which might criminate himself.

The statement is not upon oath. It is optional with the prisoner whether he will avail'himself of the privilege.of making any • statement at all. If he choose to decline making, any statement, no inference is to be drawn against him for the omission. ' But as it may be presumed that he will only elect to make a statement when he believes it will operate in his favor, and he is under the strongest temptation to make it as favorable to himself as he can, without running the risk of being disbelieved, and the jury, as we ■havé already held, may give it such credence as they may think it is entitled to,'even in opposition to sworn testh •mony, it is of the utmost importance that the jury should be allowed to test its credibility by a full and critical examr ination, its consistency or inconsistency with the circumstances of the case which are satisfactorily proved, by the consideration whether it is apparently full, frank and without reserve, or evasive as to • important tacts which must have been within his knowledge, or confined to sonxe comparatively unimportant circumstances, or to those upon which he could not be' contradicted if false. And in determining the credit to which they may think it entitled, they are not to be precluded by any artificial rule 'from giving full weight 'to- every consideration, or to any feature of such statement which may tend in any way to produce belief or disbelief, either • of the statement itself or of the evidence of witnesses' to which it relates. Such statement may be just as significant in what it omits as in what it containsand its omissions as well as its contents may tend to corroborate or impair the-effect of the testimony-'upon *227which it may happen to bear: and the jury have aright to give it such weight in this, and all other • respects, as, under all the circumstances of the case, they may think it entitled to:, and it cannot,.therefore, be erroneous in the court to instruct them that they have such right.

The judgment must be reversed,-and a new tidal awarded.

The other Justices concurred.