Curry v. State
Curry v. State
Opinion of the Court
The defendant was convicted of murder in the first degree, and sentenced to imprisonment for life.
The record shows that on arraignment the defendant came in his own proper person, and by attorney, and being in open court pleaded “not guilty” to the indictment for murder; that a day thereafter was fixed for the trial of his cause; that order for special venire, etc., was made and entered by the court and return thereof by the sheriff; that a continuance was had therefrom to another date; the defendant being present in person and by attorney when said order of continuance was made. On said last-named date fixed for his trial came the solicitor 'for the state and the defendant in his own proper person and by attorney; and, being duly arraigned upon said indictment, for his plea thereto, defendant said he was not guilty. The issue was joined on the plea, and came a jury of good and lawful men, impaneled and sworn according to law, before whom the trial of the cause was entered upon, at which trial, according to the docket or minute entry of the court, it was “made to appear to the court that, on this 3d day of February, 1918, at 3 o’clock p. m.,< the jury in this cause appearing in open court, after having been sent out for deliberation in this ■case on Friday, -February 1, 1918, at 3 o’clock p. m., and reporting their utter inability to agree, and that they are hopelessly divided upon a verdict in this case, and reporting that it is their opinion that it is impossible for them to agree on a verdict in this case, after making effort and having deliberated for 48 hours, and failing to agree on a verdict in this case, it is the opinion of the court from evidence taken that the jury cannot agree upon a verdiet in this cause if kept together longer, and that there is a manifest necessity for their discharge. The court, therefore, hereby allows the jury to separate, and they are discharged without reaching a verdict in this case, and by consent of the defendant a mistrial is entered by the court, and a new trial is ordered in this case.”
Thereafter (February 23d) the solicitor prosecuting for the state came, and, also, the defendant in his own proper person and by attorney being in open court, it was ordered that the 4th day of March be set as the date for his trial, which cause on that date was passed and reset for a subsequent date, the record reciting that the defendant and his attorney were present in court. The court ordered the sheriff to summon the venire indicated, and that a copy of such venire and the indictment against the defendant be forthwith served on defendant by the sheriff of the county, which order was shown to have been duly executed by the sheriff.
On the day of the last trial defendant, through his counsel, filed his plea of former jeopardy, to the effect that the state ought not to further prosecute the indictment against him, for that on “January 31, 1918, at a regular term of court, which court had jurisdiction to hear and try said cause, the defendant was duly arraigned and placed upon trial before a jury of 12 men duly sworn and impaneled in said cause upon a plea of ‘not guilty’; that said jury, after hearing the evidence and the charge of the court on, to wit, the 1st day of February, 1918, in the afternoon of said day retired to consider their verdict; that thereafter on, to wit, Sunday, the 3d day of February, 1918, and without the consent of defendant, the said jury and jurors were discharged by the court unlawfully and without any legal necessity therefor, and without rendering a verdict. The order of said judge discharging said jury being in words and figures as follows: * * * ” (the order of mistrial hereinbefore set but).
The plea further averred that defendant was the identical person charged in the indictment on which the former trial was had and now charged, and which offense is based on the same transaction and act alleged in said indictment; that the jury was discharged without the consent of defendant, and before the jury had ample and sufficient time to consider its verdict, and before the discharge of said jury was authorized by law; that there was no manifest necessity for the discharge of said jury; that said jury was discharged on a Sunday in violation of the law, and “for aught appearing the defendant nor his attorney was present in open court at the time said order declaring a mistrial was so entered as aforesaid; and that the record fails to affirmatively show that defendant was present in court at the time a mistrial was so ordered.”
Defendant further moved to amend the minutes of the court in said cause by striking therefrom the recital that the mistrial *241 was entered by “consent of the defendant”; that the record showed affirmatively that the consent so recited was interlined in the minutes of the cause by error or mistake of a deputy clerk in the office of the clerk of the circuit court.
The state answered defendant’s motion to amend the minutes nunc pro tunc by motion to strike out the words “by consent of the defendant,” where they occurred in the minute entry; and for further answer to the motion averred that at the time of the beginning of the trial of said cause against the defendant Curry, as shown by the minute entry, on January 31st, and “continuously thereafter, up to and including the time when the jury reported its inability to agree upon a verdict, and when the court announced its order discharging the jury and ordering a mistrial” the defendant “was present in court,” and, being so present, it was immaterial whether he “consented to the discharge of said jury and the entry of the order of mistrial”; that the defendant was present in court at the time the jury reported its inability to agree on a verdict, and the order of mistrial was entered as shown by' the bench notes, wherein it was recited that the defendant pleaded to the indictment and by the recitals in the minutes that he was' present in court at the beginning of the trial, which said minutes and bench notes are referred to and made a part of the state’s answer. The state further said that if the minutes of the court be amended, it should be to show the truth, and should recite the fact now shown by the record that “the defendant was in court at the time the jury reported its disagreement and the order of mistrial was entered,” and “did not consent to the discharge of Said jury or the entry of said order of mistrial, if 'such be the fact.” The state sought to support its motion by an affidavit of one Greente, a bailiff of the circuit court, who was present during the trial of the cause against defendant and when the jury in said cause announced its inability to agree upon a verdict and when the judge discharged the jury and entered an order of mistrial, that the defendant was present in court, together with his attorney, at the time of the report of the jury of its inability to agree upon a verdict, and at the time the court entered the mistrial and discharged the jury. The defendant moved to strike the affidavit of said Greene because, among other grounds, the facts set out therein as to defendant’s presence in court at the time of the order or judgment declaring a mistrial and discharge of the jury were de hors the record. The amended minute will be set out by the reporter.
The trial court committed no reversible error in entering a mistrial and discharging the jury engaged in the first trial of defendant, the same being authorized by law as ascertained by the court and shown by the docket or minute entry thereof, or in the amendment of the judgment nunc pro tunc on a subsequent day of the court. Robertson v. King, 120 Ala. 459, 24 South. 929; Cosby’s Case, supra.
“Any, the slightest, menace or threat, or any hope engendered or encouraged that the prisoner’s case will be lightened, meliorated, or more favorably dealt with, if he will confess— either of these is enough to exclude the confession thereby superinduced. Any words spoken in the hearing of the prisoner, which may, in their nature, generate such fear or hope render it not only proper, but necessary, that confessions made within a reasonable time after-wards shall be excluded, unless it is shown by clear and full proof that the confession was voluntarily made, after all trace of hope or fear had been fully withdrawn, or explained away, and the mind of the prisoner made as free from *243 bias and intimidation as if no attempt had ever been made to obtain such confessions. And when a confession has been once obtained after appliances of hope or fear, any subsequent confession must alike be excluded, until the prisoner’s mind is fully and clearly disabused in the manner suggested above, and until it is fairly explained to him that the confession previously made cannot harm him, nor be given in evidence against him. Less than an entire obliteration of all ground of hope or fear previously engendered will not meet the severe requirements of the law; and trial judges could not well be too strict in the enforcement of this rule.”
In weighing confessions as to whether or not voluntary, the age, character, and situation of the accused at the time it was made, are important considerations. Manifestly, if the defendant is of tender age or weak intellect, his will may be the more easily overcome by the same circumstances than that of one who is more intelligent or more mature. For this reason greater attention should be paid to a defendant’s situation and surroundings. This is the position taken by the courts whatever the theory of exclusion of incriminating statements may be. Beck-ham v. State, 100 Ala. 15, 17, 14 South. 859; Levison v. State, 54 Ala. 520, 524; Hoober v. State, 81 Ala. 51, 1 South. 574; Young v. State, 68 Ala. 569; Johnson v. State, 59 Ala. 37; Brister v. State, 26 Ala. 107; Washington v. State, 53 Ala. 29; Sampson v. State, 54 Ala. 241; Porter v. State, 55 Ala. 95; Newman v. State, 49 Ala. 9; Peck v. State, 147 Ala; 100, 102, 41 South 759; McAlpine v. State, 117. Ala. 93, 100, 23 South. 130.
Under the rule that confessions disclosing extraneous facts which show the truth and tend to prove the commission of the crime, though the confession, thereof was obtained by influence of threats or promises, such facts may be proved and so much of the confession as relates strictly to the facts discovered (Pressley v. State, supra) have application to the defendant’s separating his clothing from that of Brady Howell. That is to say, defendants sorting of the clothing in two piles, indicating which belonged to Howell and which to himself, if coupled with the further evidence that the assortment made by him was true, was competent evidence against him in relation to the blood stains found on such clothing and his explanation that he did not know how the blood came thereon, and that his brother had been wearing the shirt in question. So, as to the location of the pistol with which the crime was alleged to have been committed, if it was found at the place indicated by defendant in his confession; and likewise as to the book or papers placed in the back of the car driven by the deceased chauffeur' on the night of his assassination; the location of the body and of the car, its condition as to the blood being thereon and with reference to proximity to road, woods, and other natural objects mentioned in defendant’s confession, in so far as the same corresponded with his statements thereof. Aside from the foregoing, the confession was involuntary, and should have been excluded on defendant’s motion, when the same is tested by the rule we have quoted from Judge Stone’s Owen v. State, supra.
Beversed and remanded.
Reference
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- Curry v. State.
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