25 Fla. 501 | Fla. | 1889
The plaintiff in error was jointly indicted with Paul Barco and Holmes Jacobs for the murder of Henry B. Hammond, and the case was tried at a special term of the Circuit Court of Marion county, in the month of January, 18S9. A severance was granted and the plaintiff in error alone was tried.
The issues were submitted to a jury, who convicted Coffee of murder in the first degree, and the sentence of death was passed upon him, and he now brings his case before this court on a writ of error, and assigns the following errors:
1st. The court erred in allowing the confession of the plaintiff in error, made at Martel, Fla., to go to the jury against the objection of the plaintiff in error, it .being evi
2d. The court erred in overruling the motion of the plaintiff in error to exclude the confessions of the plaintiff in error from the jury, it being evident it was not voluntary, and there being no evidence to remove the presumption that the influences inducing the first two confessions continued.
3d. The court erred in overruling the plaintiff in error’s motion for a new trial. The 1st, 2d, 3d, 4th, 5th, 6th, 7th, 8th and 9th grounds in said motion are not insisted on.
The evidence set up in the transcript of the record tends to show that on the 13th day of June, 1S88, a difficulty occurred between the plaintiff in error, Coffee, and Henry B. Hammond, at Cotton Plant, in Marion county. The difficulty occurred about a small sum of money which Coffee claimed Hammond owed him. Coffee demanded the amount of Hammond, who refused to pay it, saying that he was entitled to a credit of thirty cents; angry words ensued, each of the parties cursing the other, when they clinched and fell upon the ground, when Coffee struck Hammond several times with the handle or staff of a buggy whip ; some other party interfered and the parties engaged in the fight were separated, and Hammond, who was on the bottom in the fight, after getting up seized a piece of board, when Coffee hurriedly left, going in the direction of his home, saying at the time, either that he had given Hammond h — 1, or that he would give him h — 1; that Hammoud was at the time clerking for one Fant, at Cotton Plant, and that he slept in a back room of the store where he was clerking; that some time from one to three o’clock on the morning after the difficulty between Coffee and Hammond, Fant’s store was discovered to be on fire ; that it had nearty burned down at daylight when the first persons
There was much more evidence in the case, but the foregoing is the substance of the whole, and it is not in any material point, changed by any other part thereof, and it is sufficient, we think, to give a clear idea of the facts of the case.
At the trial of the cause the State offered in evidence the several confessions made by the plaintiff in error, to the introduction of which plaintiff in error objected ; the court admitted in evidence the confessions made at Martel, but
The following is the confession admitted in evidence, upon the evidence of H. W. Long, a witness for the State, and who liad assisted in conducting the case against the prisoner at both the coroner’s inquest and the preliminary examination, which evidence is corroborated by other witnesses :
“ The defendant in substance stated at Martel that after the difficulty between him and Hammond, which occurred at Cotton Plant, near Mr. Mann’s store, that he left for his home and stopped where two men by the name of McCullough and Bostock were drawing boards ; that he communicated to them the difficulty he had had with Hammond. One of them, I think McCullough, stated to him that he had a grudge against Hammond, and they had better put him out of the way, giving as a reason, that in case Hammond was permitíed to live, that he and his friends would take the life of Coffee; that they then and there made up and agreed that they would meet at Coffee’s house — these two men, McCullough and Bostock, would meet at Coffee’s house during that night, and that they would from there proceed to Fant’s store and murder Hammond ; that about one o’clock he, or one of them (my recollection is) whistled (I am not positive as to the precise hour) which he recognized as a signal for him to join them ; that he did so; that one of them (I forget which, McCullough or Bostock,) had a-quart bottle of kerosene oil, and the other a pistol, and that he, Coffee, had a pocket knite ; that on their way to the store he, Coffee, suggested that they muse not shoot Hammond, there being houses in close proximity to the store where Hammond slept; that the firing of the pistol would arouse the inmates of the houses. They then agreed that the man having the kerosene oil was to saturate the front of the store with the oil and apply
Upon cross this witness stated some additional minor details, which did not change the foregoing statements of the witness in any material point. Other witnesses testified to-the confession, but none of them stated any fact materially
The first two errors assigned may be considered together as they raise but one and the same question, to-wit: did the court below err in admitting in evidence the confession made by plaintiff in error at Martel ?
The Martel examination was a judicial examination, and it was the duty of the Justice of the Peace holding the same to caution the prisoner, to put him ou his guard, and to inform him as to his rights in the premises. .Heard’s Criminal Law, 192, and cases cited; 3 Russell on Crimes, 9th Edition, 378.
Before the confessions of a party charged with crime are admissible in evidence against him, it must be shown that such confession was freely and voluntarily made. Simon vs. State, 5 Fla., 285; Dixon vs. State, 13 Fla., 336; Metzger vs. State, 18 Fla., 481; Flanagan vs. State, 25 Ark., 92; State vs. Staley, 14 Minn., 105; Cardy vs. State, 44 Miss., 332; State vs. Lowhorne, 66 N. C., 638; O’Brian
It is a rule of law that the confessions of parties charged with crime should be acted upon by courts and juries with great caution. 1 Greenleaf on Evidence, section 200; Best on Evidence, top p. 537; Deathridge vs. State, 1 Sneed, 75; People vs. Johnson, 41 Cal., 452; Simon vs. State, 5 Fla., 285; Dixon vs. State, 13 Fla.; 636; Metzger vs. State, 18 Fla., 481; People vs. Rulloff, 3 Parker C. R., 438.
The wisdom of this rule cannot be questioned, for the reason that notwithstanding the confessions of persons accused of crime have been held to be evidence of the very highest character, upon the theory that no man would acknowledge that- he bad committed a grave crime unless he was actually guilty, but experience teaches that this theory is a fallacy, for it is a fact that numbers of persons have confessed that they were guilty of the most heinous crimes, for which they suffered the most horrible punishments, and yet they were innocent.
In the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, in enlightened England, men and women confessed that they were guilty of witchcraft — communion with evils spirits and
There is another rule of law, aud it has its foundation in justice, and that is, that when a confession has, in the first place, been made under illegal influences, such influences will be presumed to continue and color all subsequent confessions, unless the contrary is clearly shown. Simon vs. State, 5 Fla., 285; Love vs. State, 22 Ark., 336; 2 E. P. C., 658; Roscoe’s Criminal Evidence, 40; Peter vs. State, 4 S. & M., (Miss.), 37; Joe vs. State, 38 Ala., 422; Dinah vs. State, 39 Ala., 359: Ward vs. State, 50 Ala., 120; Redd vs. State, 69 Ala., 255; People vs. Jim Ti, 32 Cal., 60; People vs. Johnson, 41 Cal., 452; Austine vs. State, 51 Ill., 236; Commonwealth vs. Cullen, 111 Mass., 435; Brockman vs. State, 46 Mo., 566; State vs. Jones, 54 Mo., 478; State vs. Howard, 17 N. H., 171; Deathridge vs. State, 1 Sneed, 75; Brown vs. State, 36 Texas, 356; Thompson vs. Commonwealth, 20 Grat., 724; Best on Evidence, 537; Heard’s Criminal Law, 189, and cases cited; 2 Russell on Crimes, 832; 2 Starkey on Evidence, 49; Wharton’s Criminal Evidence, 677.
Aud now, applying the evidence in the case to the principles oflaw laid down supra, was the confession made by the plaintiff in error at Martel, under the circumstances it was made, proper legal evidence to go to the jury? If so-the court below committed no error in admitting said Martel confession. But, on the other hand, if the Martel confession was not made under such circumstances as to most elearly show (and it was incumbent on the State to
Now, it is true that both Mr. Long and Mr. Harrison, in their evidence, say that they cautioned the prisoner that anything he might say would be used against him, and that they promised to protect him. But who were they to thus caution the prisoner and to promise him protection, and in the light of what had actually occurred to the prisoner on the previous day, in the very presence of these gentlemen, what confidence could the prisoner have in such promises, though ever so honestly made? Mr. Long was acting as prosecuting officer for the State at the time, and endeavoring to fix the crime on the prisoner, and Mr. Harrison held no official position whatever to which the prisoner could hope to look for protection. Take all the evidence in regard to said confession into consideration, and we are not satisfied that the same influences which induced the first confession, did not operate upon and control the prisoner in his last or Martel confession.
It is contended that the court below, in the exercise of its sound discretion, admitted the confession, and that this court precluded from questioning such discretion. As a rule, the discretion given to the Circuit Courts is conclusive, but there are exceptions to this rule, and when it is shown that the Circuit Court has transcended its discretion, and that a wrong may have been done thereby, this court will control such discretion. Blige vs. State, 20 Fla., 742.
There is another part of the evidence in this case, and the charge of the court in reference thereto, that strikes us as being very peculiar, that is, that the plaintiff in error confessed that he, Bostock and McCullough killed Ham
After the repeated confessions of the accused the State seemed to have adopted the theory that Coffee, Bostoek ane McCullough were the parties who kill Hammond, and they were committed on the charge, but before the trial this theory was abandoned, and Coffee, Jacobs and Barcowere indicted for the offence. During the trial the second theory adopted by the State was abandoned and the first again taken up, and evidence — Coffee’s confession — -was introduced in support of this, the first theory. Upon this state of the case the court charged the jury: “That in cases of capital felonies, all parties who are present aiding and abetting at the time of the commission of the felony, are principals, and upon the trial of one of the parties accused it is not necessary for his conviction that it should be shown that the party on trial himself inflicted the fatal wound, but it is sufficient if it be proved that he was present at the time of the commission of the felony aiding and abetting.” This is a sound legal proposition, but how does it apply to the case at bar ? If the plaintiff in error had been indicted with Bostoek and McCullough, and his confession had been legal evidence, then there would have been something to base such a charge upon, but under the indictment upon which he was tried, there is not a particle of evidence to
The third assignment of error, that is, that the verdict of the jury was against the evidence, is, we think, well taken, because, under the view we have taken of the case, there was not legal evidence before the jury to sustain a conviction.
The judgment of the court below is reversed, and the cause is remanded with directions for further proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.