Coplon v. State
Coplon v. State
Opinion of the Court
The defendant (appellant) wag tried in the criminal court of Jefferson county, charged with buying, receiving, concealing, or aiding in concealing personal property of the value of $25, the property of James M. Shelburne, knowing that it was stolen and not having the intent to restore it to the owner. Defendant appeals from a judgment of conviction imposing a sentence of three years’ imprisonment in the penitentiary. The original indictment contained two counts. The first count charged the burglary of a dwelling house, but this charge was abandoned and is not involved in this appeal. The evidence *333 in the case is undisputed that the defendant was found in possession of goods belonging to Dr. James M; Shelburne, which were stolen from his residence.
Defendant has made 37 assignments of error on the record, which will be discussed as far as deemed necessary in their order as they appear in the record and brief of defendant’s counsel.
As set out in the assignment of error, the testimony of the witness and exception taken are not accurately stated. The witness Shelburne, in his direct examination, was recounting the: facts connected with finding a part of his property in the hands! of the defendant (appellant) at his store in Birmingham, and in connection with that part of his testimony stated: “I asked him [defendant] where he had his cleaning done, and he said Ensley, and at his brother’s.”
It would be a fair inference from that statement made by the defendant to the witness to conclude that he had whatever clothes he had cleaned at his brother’s in Ensley. Then Dr. Shelburne, continuing his direct examination, stated: “I went there, and there I found a pair of trousers that I did not know that I had lost. The same afternoon I came in and found my gray suit at defendant’s place, nicely pressed and in good order.”
This testimony was elicited in Dr. Shelburne’s direct statement, and no objection seems to have been suggested on the part of the defendant until some time later, when a motion was made to exclude the statement of the witness that he found a pair of trousers that he did not know he had lost, in Coplon’s brother’s place at Ensley. This testimony was not irrelevant, immaterial, nor was it illegal. The fact that the defendant had a part of witness’ stolen property in his possession, with the further fact that the defendant admitted he wqs in the habit of having his goods cleaned at his brother’s place, where the witness found other articles of clothing stolen at the same time, was not either irrelevant, illegal, incompetent, or immaterial, but was a circumstance to which the jury might look in determining the guilt or innocence of the defendant.
This question was objectionable because there was no evi- • dence in this case that the suit in question was owned by one person, worn by another, and a third person desired to buy it. The matter in issue was simply the value of the suit of clothes at the time they were stolen from the witness Shelburne. He had testified that the Prince Albert coat was worth $20, silk vest $3, and pair of trousers $6 or $7; and, so far as the evidence in this case shows, it was the value of these clothes when stolen from the witness in the condition they were then in that was the legitimate subject of inquiry, and not their value after they had been worn by some one else and their value to some supposed third párty purchaser. — Coony v. Pullman Co., 121 Ala. 368, 25 South. 712, 53 L. R. A. 690. The same objection applies to assignment of error No. 3.
No mention of assignment of error No. 4 is made in brief of defendant’s counsel, and it seems to be based on a matter of no consequence.
No reason is given in support of either of these assignments, and we are led to believe that they have no basis, or that they would have been argued by appellant. The court’s ruling in each instance seems to us to be free from error. Many of the objections reserved are to the action of the court in refusing to exclude evidence to which no objection is shown to have been interposed to the questions eliciting it, and are therefore unavailing to show error. — Thomas v. State, 12 Ala. App. 278, 68 South. 524.
The state then asked the witness: “I will ask you whether or not he said that this man Fox had been working for him for about three years, and he sent him out on the morning that these clothes were brought back to his place, to buy clothes ?”
Defendant’s attorney objected to that question on the ground: “That the state examined this defendant, it examined him in a case .against this man Robert Lee. If the state used him and put him up as a witness against this man Lee, and if the theory of the state as stated to your honor a few minutes ago by the learned solicitor here is that there was a conspiracy, and if the state proposes now to sustain its case on the theory of a conspiracy, and if the state elected to use one of the coconspirators to secure the indictment of another, putting him up before the grand jury as a state witness, without warning him, your honor, then the state elects to use him as a witness, and whatever he *337 said might not be used against him directly; but I submit, your honor, that even a prosecution cannot even be properly sustained under circumstances like that for this reason.”
We have set forth the objection made by the defendant’s attorney on the trial to the question propounded to the witness Allen as set forth in the record. Stripped of redundancy, we understand the objection of the defendant on the trial to amount to this: That although at the time the defendant was being examined as a witness against some one else charged with the commission of the crime for which the defendant himself was afterwards charged, and although his statement was voluntarily made, whatever incriminating testimony he may have given on that examination, or whatever admission he may have made, could not afterwards be used against him when charged with that offense. This is the cardinal question to be determined in this case; for, if the law is as the defendant contends, the court committed reversible error in permitting testimony of the character outlined to be used against the defendant over timely objection made on the trial. The attorneys for appellant (defendant) have filed an able brief contending that the testimony of the defendant given under the circumstances above outlined before the grand jury was involuntary, and could not be used against him on a trial of the matter then being investigated by the grand jury. They have cited a long list of authorities, both English and American, sustaining their contention. What our conclusion would be on this proposition if the question had not already been determined under the decisions of our courts need not be adverted to; but we are constrained to the opinion that under the holding of the Supreme Court in the majority opinion in Wilson v. State, 110 Ala. 1, 20 South. 415, the testimony given by the defendant before the grand jury was admissible against him as a voluntary statement. Attorneys for appellant, in order to avoid the force of the decision in the case of Wilson v. State, supra, emphasize a statement not shown in the record, that the appellant had been charged with the crime at the time he was examined before the grand jury. This is not borne out by the record. He may have been suspected of buying, receiving, etc., stolen property; but this is an entirely different proposition from having been accused in the sense in which the word is used in the law. An accusation, such as we understand is meant by the courts in the use of that term, is to be charged in due form of law before an officer *338 or tribunal competent to proceed toward the punishment of an offense. “Accused. — One who is charged with a crime.” — 1 Cyc. 504. See, also, Century Dictionary. The term “accuse,” in the law, means to charge with an offense, judicially or by a public process. It is intended to refer to a person who, in legal manner, is held to answer for an offense. — 1 Words and Phrases, p. 105. There is no evidence in this case that, at the time the defendant was called before the grand jury, he was accused of the crime for which he was indicted; the fact that a case was docketed against him shortly after he testified, or even immediately after, would not make his testimony given before the grand jury on the investigation be held to be involuntary.
“In this state, the decisions are uniform that confessions made by a prisoner in custody, and charged with an offense, although made to an officer in charge of the defendant, are not thereby conclusively rendered involuntary and inadmissible. * * * Much less can this court consistently declare that the statements of a witness, not accused and not under arrest, are conclusively involuntary, because made under the sanction of an oath.” — Wilson v. State, supra.
The employment of Fox by the defendant for three years or more was an undisputed fact in evidence, testified to both by the defendant’s witness Fox and the defendant. That the defendant had sent Fox out for the purpose of buying clothes, on the morning that these clothes were brought back to the defendant’s place of business, was also a matter without conflict in the evidence, and testified to by the defendant himself on his examination in chief, when testifying in his own behalf. The admission of evidence, though it be incompetent, if it be of undisputed facts, is harmless. — 1 Enc. Dig. of Ala. Reports, 601, § 1051 (2), and the numerous authorities there cited. The defendant cannot complain of the admission of improper evidence where he himself *339 testified to the same facts. — 4 Enc. Dig. Ala. Beports, 575, § 776 (3), and authorities cited. At most, the matter elicited was of a collateral matter, not in any sense a confession of guilt, and was admissible without first showing that it was voluntarily made. — McGehee v. State, 171 Ala. 19, 55 South. 159.
The same reasoning and the same answer applies to assignments of error 24, 25, 26, and 27, all of which are hypothesized on the theory of counsel that the testimony of the defendant before the grand 'jury was involuntary and incriminating, neither . of which contentions is, in our opinion, sound.
The charge which is the basis of assignment of error 33 was as follows:
(a) “I charge you that you must give the same weight to the evidence of Sol Miller as to the evidence of other witnesses.”
This was a charge on the weight of the evidence, and clearly not proper. The substance of charge “b” was given in the oral charge of the court.
Charge 4 refused to the defendant, on which refusal assignment of error 35 is based, was given in substance in charge 7.
*340
We conclude, after consideration of the entire record, that the appellant has had a fair trial in the court below, and that no error intervened prejudicial to his rights in the administration of substantial justice.
Affirmed.
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