The opinion of the Court was delivered by
The defendant was tried and convicted of manslaughter before Judge Dennis and a jury at the January term oi
Exceptions 1, 2, and 3 must be sustained.
Mrs. Williams should not have been allowed to give the complete details of a transaction that occurred at her house about four weeks before the killing. That was a transaction between the defendant and a third person, and the witness should have been permittd only to testify as to threats made by the defendant against the deceased. It was prejudicial to the defendant that she should be allowed to testify to the abuse of her made by the defendant, and that he cursed and abused her in the absence of her husband.
It is not allowed to give the details of any previous difficulty between the defendant and the deceased much less to give the details of a transaction between the defendant and a third person.
In the case of State v. Williams, 125 S. C., 385; 118 S. E., 784, the Court says:
“Evidence was allowed, over objection, as to the origin of the difficulty. The fact that there had been a previous difficulty was proper, the details were inadmissible, and their introduction error.”
The rule in such cases is thus stated in the case of State v. Evans, 112 S. C., 43; 99 S. E., 751, where the defendant was given a new trial on the ground that the Court allowed the State to give the details and causes of a previous difficulty :
“The evidence as to the previous difficulty was competent only to show the animus of the parties, and thus aid the jury in reaching a conclusion as to who was probably the aggressor, and what demeanor each party had reason to expect from the other when they met and the fatal difficultyPage 364occurred. The general details of the previous trouble were properly excluded.”
In State v. Adams, 68 S. C., 421; 47 S. E., 676, the Supreme Court says:
“ ‘Therefore, previous threats and quarrels are permitted, not as a defense for killing a man, not as a defense to a homicide, but to show the attitude of the parties.’ No enlightened tribunal could receive such testimony on any other ground than that stated in this quotation; and we think it was not only proper, but the imperative duty of the Circuit Judge, to charge it should have no other effect.”
The Judge made no charge-on this case to save the defendant from the prejudicial error in admitting this testimony. From these cases it will be seen that the. error here is clear. No detail of the transaction was excluded by the presiding Judge.
The case of State v. Gregory, 127 S. C., 87; 120 S. E., 499, states the correct rule to be that evidence of conduct immediately preceding the homicide is admissible to show the frame of mind at the time of the homicide, but things which happened four weeks prior thereto would not be competent. Mrs. Williams should not have been allowed to state the details of a transaction between herself and the defendant that occurred some weeks before the homicide in the absence of her husband. That she secured a warrant for the arrest of the defendant, the result of the trial, that the warrant was dismissed and that she procured another; this was a transaction between the defendant and a third person and it went into the details and trial of another case against the defendant, and was prejudicial to the defendant.
As to exception 3 this was merely a conversation between the defendant and Mrs. Williams; it was not in the nature of a threat, but an attack on the reputation of the defendant by an attempt to show that he violated the prohibition laws, it certainly did not bear on the case that he was on trial for. Exception 4 must be sus
“Now, let us recur to the first exception. A leading case upon the question of law raised therein in England is the case of Omichund, v. Barker, reported in 1 Willes, 538, and more fully in 1 Atk., 21, and found in 1 Smith Lead. Cas., 195. In this case, upon a full and most interesting discussion of the whole question of the competency of a witness as affected by his religious creed, it was made to rest upon the question of his belief in the existence of a God, and rewards and punishments by Him, either in this world or in the future state, ‘the Court stating that one who believes a future state, and that he shall be punished in the next world as well as in this if he does not swear the truth, should be entitled to the greater credit, as he is plainly under the strongest obligation.’ ”
In most of the States of the Union it has been held that the competency of a witness is not affected by a disbelief in a future state, and that his testirftony should be admitted if he believes in the existence of a God and in divine punishment of crime. See Hunscom v. Hunscom, 15 Mass., 184. Brock v. Milligan, 10 Ohio, 121. Blocker v. Burness, 2 Ala., 354. United States v. Kennedy, 3 McLean, 175 (Fed. Cas., No. 15524). Bennett v. State, 1 Swan. (Tenn.), 411. In our own State the case of Jones v. Harris, 1 Strob., 160, lays down very much the same doctrine, holding that a belief in God and His providence is sufficient to establish the competency of a witness, objected to on account of defective religious beliefs.
Inasmuch as the judgment must be reversed and a new trial granted, it is unnecessary to consider the other exceptions.
Judgment reversed and a new trial granted.