Court Opinion

ID: 3672971
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-06 06:20:44.656626+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:16:55.499824
License: Public Domain

A. MARTIN,           [SEAL.] A.H. SANDERS,        [SEAL.] J.A. DUMAS,          [SEAL.] Credit of interest to                  T.S. COTTON,         [SEAL.] 20th July, 1861.                    P. HARRIS,           [SEAL.]
No appearance was entered for any of the defendants, except Dumas, who entered the plea of non est factum.
On the trial of the issue on this plea, at the Fall Term, 1870, of ROWAN Superior Court, before his Honor, Judge Henry, there was conflicting evidence as to the execution of the bond by Dumas, when the *Page 164 
plaintiffs offered to prove that the defendants, Dumas and Martin, lived within eight miles of each other, and that they were strong personal friends. The evidence was objected to by the defendant but received by the Court. The plaintiff also proposed to prove that all the co-obligors of the defendant, Dumas, were men of good character. This was also objected to by the defendant but admitted by the Court. Under the charge of his Honor the plaintiffs had a verdict and (215)  judgment and the defendant, Dumas, appealed.
There was error in admitting the evidence that the defendant Dumas, and Martin, a co-obligor in the covenant sued upon, were strong personal friends.
It is the duty of the Court to protect juries from irrelevant and incompetent testimony. This circumstance, conceding it to be true, is too remote to throw any light upon the transaction under investigation, and could only serve to mislead and confuse the jury, as to the true matter of inquiry.
The fact of their being strong personal friends does not tend to prove that Dumas executed the covenant sued upon, and furnishes no legal foundation for such an inference.
What we have said in reference to this testimony is equally applicable to the evidence which was admitted to prove that all the co-obligors of the defendant, Dumas, were men of good character. In civil suits the general rule is, that unless the character of the party be put directly in issue, by the nature of the proceeding, evidence of his character is not admissible. McRae v. Lilly, 23 N.C. 118. In Fowler v.AEtna Fire Insurance Company, 6 Cowan 673, the Court say, in speaking of the admissibility of evidence of character in a civil suit, "if such evidence is proper, then a person may screen himself from the punishment due to fraudulent conduct, till his character becomes bad. Such a rule of evidence would be extremely dangerous. Every man must be answerable for every improper act, and the character of every transaction must be ascertained by its own circumstances, and not by the character of the parties." The same doctrine is laid down in Thompson v. Bowie, 4 Wal. 470. But in our case the admission of evidence (216)  of the good character of co-obligors was much more irrelevant to the issue involved, than it would have been in any of the cases cited. Indeed it was not the character of the defendant, Dumas, who is contesting this matter, which was sought to be directly proved, but the *Page 165 
more remote matter of the character of his co-obligors, in order that an inference might be drawn from that fact to his prejudice.
The judgment of the Superior Court is reversed and a Venire do novo
awarded.
Per curiam.
Venire de novo.
Cited: Sc 69 N.C. 206; Clements v. Rogers, 95 N.C. 253; Norris v.Stewart, 105 N.C. 457; Marcom v. Adams, 122 N.C. 225; Lumber Co. v.Atkinson, 162 N.C. 302; Walters v. Lumber Co., 165 N.C. 392; Merrill v.Tew, 183 N.C. 175.