State v. King

Decision Date01 March 1934
Docket Number13790.
Citation173 S.E. 76,172 S.C. 127
PartiesSTATE v. KING.
CourtSouth Carolina Supreme Court

Appeal from General Sessions Circuit Court of Chester County; W. H Townsend, Judge.

Sam King was convicted of grand larceny, and he appeals.

Reversed and remanded for another trial.

Hamilton & Gaston, of Chester, for appellant.

W. Gist Finley, of York, for the State.

BLEASE Chief Justice.

The appellant, convicted and sentenced on a charge of grand larceny, in the court of general sessions for Chester county raises, in his appeal, but one question.

The main witness for the state was Lucy Reid, an old colored woman, a resident of Chester county, whose money was the subject of the alleged larceny. She identified the appellant also colored, as being the person who stole her money.

No attack on the general reputation of Lucy Reid for truthfulness was made by the appellant.

Over the objection of the appellant, the solicitor was permitted to present the testimony of two reputable white gentlemen that the reputation of the prosecuting witness for truthfulness, honesty, and fair dealing was good. The reason for the admission, as stated by the trial judge, was that the witness was a colored woman, and that the jurors, who were all white, probably did not know all of the colored people of the county.

While sometimes testimony as to the good reputation for veracity of a party's witness, who is a "stranger" to the vicinage--that is, to the county in which the cause is being tried (40 Cyc. 202)--may be offered by the party (Woods v. Thrower, 116 S.C. 165, 107 S.E. 250, 15 A. L. R 1062; State v. Lyle, 125 S.C. 406, 118 S.E. 803), it is clear that the admission of the "character evidence" in this case was error. Almost the exact point was decided in the case of State v. Edwards, 127 S.C. 116, 120 S.E. 490. There, the defendant, charged with highway robbery, was not allowed to offer testimony as to the good reputation for honesty and veracity of one of his witnesses, a colored man, presumably a resident of the county of the trial, whose evidence was strongly relied upon to establish an alibi; and this court sustained the ruling of the trial judge. Logically, if a defendant may not show his witnesses, residents, of the county of trial, to be of good reputation, then the prosecution cannot have that privilege.

The cited decision, we think, was based on good reasoning. If parties are allowed in every...

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1 cases
  • State v. Lynn
    • United States
    • South Carolina Supreme Court
    • December 2, 1981
    ...recognizes that evidence of the good character of a witness is not admissible until his character has been attacked. State v. King, 172 S.C. 127, 173 S.E. 76 (1934). However, an exception to the general rule allows evidence of the good character of a witness where the witness in question is......

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