IN RE APPLICATION OF DONALD DALE COTNER FOR A WRIT OF HABEAS CORPUS. DONALD DALE COTNER, APPELLANT, v. THOMAS S. SOLOMON, SHERIFF OF CASS COUNTY, NEBRASKA, APPELLEE.
No. 34059
Supreme Court of Nebraska
January 25, 1957
80 N.W. 2d 587 | 163 Neb. 619
James F. Begley, for appellee.
Hеard before SIMMONS, C. J., CARTER, MESSMORE, YEAGER, CHAPPELL, WENKE, and BOSLAUGH, JJ.
CHAPPELL, J.
In a complaint filed in the county court of Cass County, defendant was charged with the crime of indecent
Subsequently defendant, as relator, sought release and discharge from custody of respondent, Thomas S. Solomon, the sheriff of Cass County, by a habeas corpus action filed in the district court upon the alleged grоund that there was no competent and sufficient evidence adduced at the preliminary hearing that a crime had been committed or that there was probable cause to believe that defendant committed the alleged offense. At the hearing upon the merits of the habeas corpus action a full and complete transcript of the proceedings had and evidence adduced at defendant‘s preliminary hearing, including a voluntary statement made by him to the sheriff at about 9 p. m., August 24, 1955, was offered by relator and received in evidence by stipulation. Thereupon the trial court denied the writ and refused to release and discharge relator, who for clarity will be hereinafter called defendant. Thereafter his motion for new trial was overruled and defendant appealed to this court, assigning in substance that the trial court erred in finding that the evidence adduced at the preliminary hearing was sufficient to hold accused for trial in the district court, and erred in failing to release and discharge him from custody pursuant to his request for a writ of habeas corpus. We conclude that the assignment should not be sustained.
The other minor girl alleged to have been fondled and massaged in an indecent manner by defendant was then called as a witness by the State. She gave her name, together with the names of her father and mother. She said that she was 5 years old аnd attended kindergarten school, First Ward, and the Baptist Sunday School. She testified at length with regard to her knowledge of the truth and the consequences of untruth. Despite vigorous examination by counsel for defendant to test her competency as a witness, she finally qualified, and over objections of defendant‘s сounsel, she was duly sworn as a witness. As such she identified defendant as Donald Cotner who drives the bus which was kept in defendant‘s garage close to their house in Plattsmouth. She testified that she and her little brother got in defendant‘s bus outside of his garage and rode into the garage while defendant was driving it. As soon as the bus got in the garage hеr brother got out of it but she stayed in for a little while. She did not know what defendant did to her, but he tickled her once. However, she would not tell where on her body defendant had tickled her because she was afraid a cop, “I mean the sheriff,” whom she had previously identified, might pick her up, and “I wouldn‘t dare say it * * * Because I just wouldn‘t dare * * * Because I just don‘t want to.”
The State then called the sheriff as a witness. He testified that in the course of his duties as sheriff he made an investigation with reference to an incident between
Prior to making the statement the sheriff, defendant‘s father, and defendant had a conversation on the staircase of the jail whereat defendant admitted that he had fondled the two girls involved in an indecent manner, and expressed a desire to make a stаtement about the incident. Defendant‘s father then began to cry and walked over to his car, whereupon the sheriff and defendant went to the sheriff‘s office where the typewritten statement was voluntarily made by defendant. It was offered by the State and received in evidence at the preliminary hearing.
It would servе no purpose to recite herein the salacious and revolting details of defendant‘s statement. It is sufficient for us to say that therein he voluntarily admitted that he had deliberately committed the offense
In the light of the foregoing evidence and authorities hereinafter cited and discussed, we conclude that the trial court did not err in refusing to release and discharge defendant.
Among other authorities, defendant cited and relied upon People v. White, 276 Mich. 29, 267 N. W. 777, wherein the court said: “It appears to be well settled that the corpus delicti cannot alone be established by the extrajudicial confession of an accused. If the admissions, which were in the nature of confessions, be eliminated from the testimony taken by the examining magistrate, that which remains is not sufficient to establish probable cause that the crime * * * has been committed by anyone. Aside from the confessions, there was not sufficient testimony in the examination to connect defendants with the offenses charged in the warrant.” In that connection, defendant argued here that there was no competent evidence adduced at defendant‘s prеliminary hearing to prove corpus delicti except the admissions of defendant. We do not agree with that contention.
In Birdsley v. Kelley, 159 Neb. 74, 65 N. W. 2d 328, we held that: “The sufficiency of evidence adduced at a preliminary examination to hold an accused to answer for a crime with which he is charged may be raised and tried in habеas corpus proceedings.
“In a habeas corpus proceeding instituted for the purpose of testing the sufficiency of evidence taken at a preliminary examination to require a person to be tried on a criminal charge, the court will not weigh the evidence but will only inquire as to the existence of evidence to sustain the charge.”
In Gallegos v. State, 152 Neb. 831, 43 N. W. 2d 1, in dealing with a trial on the merits in the district court,
As early as In re Application of Balcom, 12 Neb. 316, 11 N. W. 312, this court said: “A writ of habeas cоrpus is not a proceeding to correct errors, and where it appears that the court whose action is sought to be reviewed had jurisdiction; that an offense has been committed, and there is testimony tending to show that the accused committed the offense, this court in this proceeding will not weigh evidenсe to see whether it is sufficient to hold the accused.”
Such case was cited with approval in Jahnke v. State, 68 Neb. 154, 94 N. W. 158, wherein this court said: “It is the rule in this jurisdiction that while the question of the sufficiency of the evidence introduced at a preliminary examination to hold an accused to answer for a crime with which he is charged may be raised and tried in habeas corpus prоceedings, yet where it appears that the court had jurisdiction, that an offense had been committed, and there is testimony tending to
In Lingo v. Hann, 161 Neb. 67, 71 N. W. 2d 716, we said: “‘A preliminary hearing before a magistrate is not a criminal prosecution or trial within the meaning of
“The functional purpose of the preliminary hearing is stated in
“‘It is in no sense a trial of the person accused. Its purpose is to ascertain whether or not a crime has been committed, and whether or not there is probable cause to believe the accused committed it.’ Roberts v. State, supra.
“The effect of the foregoing, if found to exist, is to hold the accused for trial in the district court, which has jurisdiction to try him. See Dobrusky v. State, 140 Neb. 360, 299 N. W. 539.” That is what the county court of Cass County did.
In that connection, defendant also argued that the county court did not find that there was probable cause to believe that defendant committed the offense as required by
In Carson v. State, 80 Neb. 619, 114 N. W. 938, after citing authorities, this court said: “It is true that before an accused can be legally held to answer a criminal charge upon information he is entitled to a preliminary examination, and there must be proof and a judicial dеtermination that an offense has been committed and that there was probable cause to believe the defendant guilty as charged in the complaint. But that does not conclusively argue that it is necessary, in the absence of a statute requiring it, that these findings should be entered, technically, or at all, upоn the docket. Jurisdiction having been obtained, the preliminary examination had, and the accused recognized to the district court would probably be enough to be shown by the record to confer jurisdiction upon the prosecuting attorney to file the information and upon the district court to try the accused.” That statement is controlling under the comparable circumstances and record presented in the case at bar.
In the light of the evidence heretofore set forth and authorities cited herein, we conclude that the judgment of the trial court should be and it hereby is affirmed.
AFFIRMED.
SIMMONS, C. J., dissenting.
I dissent. It is a serious matter when we determine debatable questions of fact insofar as they relate to an individual person. It is also a serious matter when in the process, we determine rules of law that hereafter will apply to all persons accused of an offense
Here the examining magistrate found that an offense had been committed and that there was a “possibility” that the defendant had committed it.
Herе this court examines the record and finds that there is evidence of probable cause. We have from the beginning to as late as Lingo v. Hann, 161 Neb. 67, 71 N. W. 2d 716, sustained the proposition that the purpose of the preliminary hearing is to ascertain whether or not a crime has been committed and whether or not there is probable cause to believe the accused committed it.
That duty the law places upon the examining magistrate. Here the examining magistrate found only that there was a possibility that the accused committed the offense. Obviously he refused to find probable cause. The law clearly requires that finding as to a condition to a commitment—otherwise “he shall be discharged.”
Carson v. State, 80 Neb. 619, 114 N. W. 938, relied on by the court, does not sustain the holding made here. In that case there was no finding that an offense had been committed. There was a finding of probable cause. We held there that there must be ”a judicial determination that an offense had been committed and that there wаs probable cause to believe the defendant” had committed the offense. The Attorney General in the Carson case argued that the finding of probable cause had implicit in it a finding that an offense had been com-
