INELIGIBILITY1. The incapacity to be lawfully3 elected.
2. This incapacity arises from various, causes, and a person may be incapable4 of being elected to one office who may, be elected to another; the incapacity may also be perpetual or temporary.
3. - 1. Among perpetual inabilities may be reckoned, 1. The inability of women to be elected to a public office. 2. Of citizens born in a foreign country to be elected president of the United States.
4. - 2. Among the temporary inabilities may be mentioned, 1. The holding of an office declared by law to be incompatible5 with the one sought. 2. The non-payment of the taxes required by law. 3. The want of certain property qualifications required by the constitution. 4. The want of age, or being over the age required. Vide Eligibility2. Incompatibility6.
INEVITABLE7 ACCIDENT. A term used in the civil law, nearly synonymous with fortuitous. event. (q. v.) 2 Sm. & Marsh8. 572. In the common law commonly called the ad of God. (q. v.) 2 Smed. & Marsh. Err9. & App. 572.
INFAMIS. Among the Romans was of a general rule, and not by virtue10 of an arbitrary decision of the censors11, lost his political rights, but preserved his civil rights. Sav. Dr. Rom 79.
INFAMY12, crim. law, evidence. That state which is produced by the conviction of crime and the loss of honor, which renders the infamous13 person incompetent14 as a witness.
2. It is to be considered, 1st. What crimes or punishment incapacitate a witness. 2d. How the guilt15 is to be proved. 3d. How the objection answered. 4th. The effect of infamy.
3. - 1. When a man is convicted of an offence which is inconsistent with the common principles of honesty and humanity, the law considers his oath to be of no weight, and excludes his testimony16 as of too doubtful and suspicious a nature to be admitted in a court of justice to deprive another of life, liberty or property. Gilb. L. E. 256; 2 Bulst. 154; 1 Phil. 23; Bull. N. P. 291. The crimes which render a person incompetent, are treason; 5 Mod. 16, 74; felony; 2 Bulst. 154; Co. Litt. 6; T. Raym. 369; all offences founded in fraud, and which come within the general. notion of the crimen falsi of the Roman law; Leach17, 496; as perjury18 and forgery19; Co. Litt. 6; Fort. 209; piracy20 2 Roll. Ab. 886; swindling, cheating; Fort. 209; barratry; 2 Salk. 690; and the bribing21 a witness to absent himself from a trial, in order to get rid of his evidence. Fort. 208. It is the crime and not the punisshment which renders the offender22 unworthy of belief. 1 Phill. Ev. 25.
4. - 2. In order to incapacitate the party, the judgment23 must be proved as pronounced by a court possessing competent jurisdiction24. 1 Sid. 51; 2 Stark25. C. 183; Stark. Ev. part 2, p. 144, note 1; Id. part 4, p. 716. But it has been held that a conviction of an infamous crime in another country, or another of the United States, does not render the witness incompetent on the ground of infamy. 17 Mass. 515. Though this doctrine26 appears to be at variance27 with the opinions entertained by foreign jurists, who maintain that the state or condition of a person in the place of his domicil accompanies him everywhere. Story, Confl. 620, and the authorities there cited; Foelix, Trait« De Droit Intern28. Priv«, 31; Merl. R«pert, mot Loi, 6, n. 6.
5. - 3. The objection to competency may be answered, 1st. By proof of pardon. See Pardon. And, 2d. By proof of a reversal by writ29 of error, which must be proved by the production of the record.
6. - 4. The judgment for an infamous crime, even for perjury, does not preclude30 the party from making an affidavit31 with a view to his own defence. 2 Salk. 461 2 Str. 1148; Martin's Rep. 45. He may, for instance, make an affidavit in relation to the irregularity of a judgment in a cause in which he, is a party, for otherwise he would be without a remedy. But the rule is confined to defence, and he cannot be heard upon oath as complainant. 2 Salk. 461 2 Str. 1148. When the witness becomes incompetent from infamy of character, the effect is the same as if he were dead and if he has attested32 any instrument as a witness, previous to his conviction, evidence may be given of his handwriting. 2 Str. 833; Stark. Ev. part. 2, sect33. 193; Id. part 4, p. 723.
7. By infamy is also understood the expressed opinion of men generally as to the vices34 of another. Wolff, Dr. de la Nat. et des Gens, 148.