Court Opinion

ID: 3487506
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-05 21:15:07.166124+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T13:54:24.563313
License: Public Domain

The traverser was indicted in the Criminal Court of Baltimore City for feloniously stealing five hundred and sixty dollars, the money and property of Michael J. Ward. He was tried before a jury and convicted.
At the trial the traverser took two exceptions to the refusal of the Court to allow him to ask one of his witnesses certain questions. After the State had offered evidence tending to prove that the traverser had stolen the money mentioned in the indictment, he asked the following question of a witness *Page 389 
called on his behalf: "Do you know the general reputation of Ward, the prosecuting witness?" To which the witness answered, he did. He was then asked what was Ward's general reputation for getting drunk and afterwards accusing people of stealing money and articles of value from him? To this last question the State objected, and its objection was sustained. This ruling constitutes the first exception.
The traverser then offered to prove by competent witnesses that the general reputation of Ward, the prosecuting witness, in the community in which he lived, was that of a man who frequently got drunk, and that on recovering from sprees, he accused different persons of robbing him. The State's objection to this question was also sustained, and the traverser took his second exception. The verdict being against him he has appealed.
Upon an examination of the record we find nothing in it to show that Ward, whose reputation for veracity it was intended to impeach, had testified in the case. Certainly there is nothing to show that he testified that the traverser had stolen his money. It follows, therefore, that he could not be impeached, for if he had given no testimony in the case, it was immaterial, so far as the issue involved was concerned, whether his reputation for veracity was good or bad. It would, therefore, follow that there was no error in either of the rulings. But in addition to this it is well settled that if the object is, as it was here, to impeach the witness, the inquiry must be as to his reputation for truth and veracity. 1 Taylor on Evidence, p. 257, (9th ed.); 3 Joneson Law of Evidence, sec. 863; Knight v. House, 29 Md. 200;Vernon v. Tucker, 30 Md. 456; Sloan v. Edwards,61 Md. 104; 2 Poe Pleading and Pr., sec. 285.
The inquiry, therefore, must relate to the general reputation of the witness, and not to his reputation for getting drunk and accusing people of robbing him, for the fact that he was in the habit of getting drunk and while drunk of making the accusations mentioned, could have no tendency to impeach the witness for the reason that it by no means follows that a *Page 390 
reputation for getting drunk and making such accusations necessarily includes a bad reputation for veracity. The accusations thus made may have been true, and the question does not state whether they were true or false.
The second exception is substantially similar to the first, and was intended to present the same question. The inquiry here proposed, like the one just considered, has no reference to the general reputation of the witness for veracity and, therefore, it also violates the well-established rule. But it also seeks to impeach the witness by proving a reputation for getting drunk and making accusations without designating whether these accusations were true or false.
Judgment affirmed.
(Decided June 12th, 1901.)