"We shall not discuss in detail the numerous grounds of the motion for a new trial, the overruling of which is the error complained of in the present bill of exceptions. It is a case where an employee of a railroad company, upon conflicting evidence, obtained a recovery for personal injuries. There are no important questions of law involved, except those specially dealt with in the headnotes. The plaintiff's right to a verdict did not turn upon any presumption of negligence raised by law against the defendant. It was a case in which
It appears from the record that one Waters, who was an employee of the defendant in the capacity of fireman at the time when the injuries in question were sustained, and who had excellent opportunities for knowing the truth of the matter, was not introduced as a witness at the trial. He was, however, at the instance of the company, present in court, and this fact was known to the plaintiff’s counsel. The latter, in his argument to the jury, contended that the failure of the defendant to introduce and examine this witness was a circumstance from which an inference could be drawn that, if he had been so introduced and examined, he would have testified to facts prejudicial to- the defendant. The court was requested to compel the plaintiff’s counsel to desist from making such an argument, on the ground that it was improper and illegal; and was also requested to declare a mistrial because of such “improper argument.” The court held that the argument was not improper, and refused to declare a mistrial because of it. It was urged here that these rulings were both erroneous, for the reason that when the defendant produced the witness in court, so that he could have been introduced and examined by the plaintiff’s counsel if he had chosen to do so, there could be no proper inference that he knew anything which would be detrimental to the company. The court also refused to charge the following written request, presented by counsel for the defendant': “As plaintiff’s counsel have argued that as only the engineer was examined as a witness, and not the fireman, that this was a circumstance from which the jury might infer that, had the fireman been introduced, his testimony might have shown negligence on the part of the company, I charge you that when the defendant company in open court tendered this fireman Waters as a witness to be introduced by plaintiff if he desired, this was sufficient to relieve defendant of this presumption.”
It is not necessary to rule in the present case that the contention of plaintiff’s counsel as to the effect of the defendant’s failure to introduce the witness Waters was well taken. It was, after all, a matter to be passed upon by the jury. Nor do we think the argument upon this matter was out of order because the defendant’s counsel had caused Waters to be present in court so that he could have been introduced and examined by the plaintiff’s counsel. Presumptively, all persons will tell the truth when sworn to do so; but we know from experience that it is frequently unwise to call as a witness one
Theoretically, one party may be under as much obligation as the other to introduce a witness who was present at a transaction or occurrence in dispute, and failure to do so may be said to cut as hard against the one as the other, or that it should not cut against either, when the witness is in court and ready to be examined; but in spite of all the reasoning and refining which may be had on this subject, and notwithstanding intimations and expressions to the contrary by learned judges, the great fact remains that a large number of witnesses are, for various reasons, more or less biased; and it certainly is true that a party may with more safety introduce a friendly witness than one who is otherwise—not necessarily from a desire to have perjury committed in his favor by the former, or from a fear that it will be committed against him by the latter, but because, as everybody knows, there is much in the manner in which a witness testifies, a great deal often depending upon his emphasis, upon the clearness or uncertainty of his recollection, upon his animus, and upon a hundred other things which can not well be described but can readily be imagined, all of which, without bringing him into the attitude of swearing falsely, affect and qualify the force of what he says.
The above mentioned theoretical rule is, therefore, too broad for universal application, and the lawyer who does not recognize that this is so is apt to make serious blunders in introducing testimony. As an illustration of the matter with which we are now dealing, suppose there was a matter of fact in controversy between A. and B., the truth of which was known to no other persons except these two and C., a brother of B. A. goes on the stand and gives his version of what occurred ; B., in his turn, gives an entirely different version, but does not introduce as a witness his brother C., though the latter is present in court. Is it not a proper matter for con
We are of the opinion that the judges should have as little to say about matters of this kind as possible. They should not restrain counsel so long as their arguments are kept within reasonable and proper bounds, and they should also be careful not to usurp the functions of the jury in accepting or in disregarding what the counsel have to say. We therefore think, in the present case, that it was certainly right for the judge to refuse to give in charge the request above quoted. It was not for him to say what effect the production of the employee in court by the defendant ought to have had, and he was surely right in declining to instruct the jury that this, of itself, would be sufficient to relieve the defendant of any presumption or inference that, in case he had been examined, he would have sworn to facts showing negligence on its part.
We do not think the case of Davis & Hatcher, 75 Ga. 645, relied on by the Chief Justice in support of his dissent when this case was decided, is controlling upon the question in hand. No point was raised in that case as to the propriety of any argument submitted by counsel, nor did - this court, in deciding that case, review any charge, or refusal to charge, by the trial court with respect to the failure of the defendant company to introduce its fireman as a witness. The plaintiffs evidently relied mainly, if not entirely, upon the legal presumption of negligence raised by law against the defendant; and the verdict being against them, they sought a
The Chief Justice will, in his dissenting opinion, also refer to the cases of Washington v. State, 87 Ga., and Johnson v. State, 88 Ga., and make certain extracts from the opinions therein. Read with reference to the questions under discussion in those cases, it is hoped that the language then used was appropriate and pertinent; but whether so or not, it is difficult to perceive how it can throw much light upon the present controversy, since the question it involves could not possibly have been in mind when those cases were being considered. It is not desired to comment further upon them except to say that in the former, which was a case of arson, the language of the writer which the Chief Justice will quote was used in endeavoring to establish the proposition that the trial judge erred in allowing the solicitor-general, in his argument to the jury, to state “that frequent burnings had occurred throughout the country,” and make this statement the basis-of an argument for a strict enforcement of ■ the law; and in the latter, the question under discussion was, whether an admission by the accused resulted either from a failure of his counsel to examine the State’s witnesses concerning a fact which the court had ruled to be inadmissible, or from a failure to introduce these same witnesses, in behalf of the accused,, for the purpose of proving this identical fact, after their exclusion as witnesses for the State. Immediately following that portion of the writer’s opinion in the Johnson case which the Chief Justice will quote are the following words: “Let us sum
We do not think that any decision of this court, upon a careful" examination thereof, will be found contrary in principle to what is now decided upon the point in controversy.
Judgment affirmed.