Miles v. People
Miles v. People
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the Court.
October 13, 1954, after writ of error was issued and after expiration of the term within which judgment was entered, counsel for.Miles tendered in the trial court a supplemental motion for new trial upon the ground that it would not be possible to submit the complete record to this Court for review because of the loss of said exhibits. The trial court declined to entertain the tendered motion and assigned as a. reason therefor that it had no jurisdiction in the matter after writ of error had been issued.
October 20, 1954, counsel for Miles filed their petition in this Court in which they sought “to reverse the judgment in the above entitled cause and remand the cause
The Attorney General, in response to the petition, admitted that Exhibits D and E cannot be found. He alleged, however, that duplicate originals of said exhibits, in the form of carbon copies, all of which were signed by Miles and each page thereof initialled by him, have been located. These signed carbon copies were tendered, and the Attorney General asked that a rule should issue commanding Miles to show cause why they should not be made a part of the record to supplant the missing exhibits actually admitted in evidence upon the trial. We directed that such a rule be issued and counsel for Miles, within the time allowed to show cause, have filed their objections to the proposed use of the carbon copies as a part of this record. There is no denial of the signature of Miles appearing on the tendered confessions. Each page thereof contains his initials and there is no allegation or showing that they are not genuine. The substance of the objections made by counsel for Miles is that, due to “a lapse of more than six m'onths it would be impossible to determine from memory whether the tendered exhibits are or are not duplicates of the real Exhibits D and E admitted in evidence * * *.”
The undisputed fact appears from the record before us that Miles signed duplicate copies of Exhibits D and E in the presence of arresting officers, and he so testified upon the trial. An examination of this record in the light of the objections made by counsel for Miles leads inescapably to the conclusion that the tendered carbon copies are exact duplicates of those exhibits identified and admitted as Exhibits D and E upon the trial. We hold that the showing made by Miles in objecting to the use of the signed carbon copies is insufficient to raise any substantial issue upon the question as to
We cannot agree that a new trial necessarily must follow in every case and under all circumstances in which exhibits are proved to be missing when causes are presented to this Court by writ of error; accordingly, it is ordered that the tendered copies of Exhibits D and E be incorporated in the record of this cause, and that thirty days from and after the date of this order be allowed plaintiff in error within which counsel may file their opening brief herein.
The rule to show cause is made absolute.
Mr. Chief Justice Stone did not participate in the present proceeding.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Miles v. The People
- Status
- Published