110 So. 361 | Miss. | 1926
Bloodhounds were sent for. Upon the arrival of the dogs upon the scene they were taken into the store, and immediately took up a trail, and, according to the testimony, the owner of the dogs followed them out of the store onto the railroad track and into the yard of a woman by the name of Mollie Berry, thence to a house in the yard occupied by John Fisher, the appellant. He testified that the dogs bayed and attempted to spring upon the appellant, as was their custom when they located the party whom they had trailed. The owner then took the dogs and circled the house in which the appellant was living, with a view of ascertaining whether the party whose trail was being pursued had left the premises. But the dogs failed to find or pursue another trail, and returned to the house occupied by John Fisher, and he (Fisher) was arrested and placed in jail. Subsequently the appellant was moved from the jail of Coahoma county to the jail in Tallahatchie county, where he was kept about three or four days and returned to Coahoma county jail at Clarksdale, Miss.
Appellant's counsel made a motion for a change of venue on the ground that the appellant could not secure a fair trial on account of prejudgment of the case in Coahoma county. This motion was supported by the affidavit of the appellant and two young attorneys who defended him on the trial. One of the attorneys took the stand as a witness and testified in support of the motion, and the appellant rested. Whereupon the state introduced a number of county officers and other citizens of the county, who testified that there was no prejudgment of the case in the county to the extent that the appellant could not secure a fair and impartial jury, and a fair and impartial trial in accordance with a regular legal procedure. The court overruled the motion for a change of venue and proceeded with the trial.
The state offered the testimony above set forth, also testimony of confessions made by the appellant, Fisher. When the testimony was offered the witnesses tendered *127 testified that the confessions were free and voluntary. No objections were offered to this testimony at that time, but subsequently the defendant, after the state had rested, introduced the sheriff, who testified that he was sent for one night to come and receive a confession of the appellant in the jail; that he went there for that purpose; that when he reached the jail he found a number of parties in the jail; that they had the appellant down upon the floor, tied, and were administering the water cure, a species of torture well known to the bench and bar of the country. The sheriff testified that he told these people not to hurt the appellant, and that the process was new to him as he witnessed it being administered to the appellant.
Several persons were introduced by the appellant who testified as to the presence of the parties in the jail and the administering of the water cure to Fisher and others jointly charged with the offense with him. The defendant also introduced a witness by the name of Hicks Ellis, who testified that he was in the party which administered the water cure to the appellant, and secured the confession thereby.
The witnesses introduced by the state to establish these confessions, with one exception, were parties who went to the jail subsequent to this administering of the water cure, and who testified that they offered no inducements to the appellant to make the confessions, made no threats, or did anything which would make the confessions inadmissible.
The prosecuting attorney, on cross-examining these different persons to whom the water cure was administered, questioned them as to numerous statements they made in the alleged confessions, several of which were denied by the witnesses; and, in rebuttal, after the defense closed, the state offered these statements for the ostensible purpose of impeaching these witnesses. These statements were received over objections and exceptions. *128
After the evidence for the defendant was introduced, a motion was made to exclude the evidence as to the confessions, especially that of certain named persons, on the ground that the confessions were shown not to have been made freely and voluntarily. This motion the court overruled. The court did, however, exclude the testimony of Hicks Ellis as to the confessions made to him, on the ground that they were unlawfully obtained. The court refused to exclude the confessions made to a brother of the said Hicks Ellis subsequent to the administering of the water cure, and also refused to exclude several other confessions to named parties.
After the trial of this appellant another trial of a person jointly indicted with him was had, and resulted in an acquittal, which was followed by a lynching of the person so acquitted. After this trial and subsequent lynching, the sheriff of the county was indicted for dereliction of duty. He first pleaded not guilty thereto, but subsequently withdrew the plea and pleaded guilty, and was fined five hundred dollars therefor by the court.
After these things happened, the court still being in session, the appellant moved to reopen his case, and to offer additional testimony on the motion for a change of venue, which evidence he claimed to have discovered after the trial. He also offered to introduce the complete record of the trial of Coleman, the person jointly indicted with the appellant and acquitted, and to introduce the fact that the lynching took place, and to introduce the record in the case against the sheriff for failure to perform his official duty. The motion did not set out the facts which the appellant intended to prove by such records, nor did the motion state specifically what would be shown on the motion should it be reopened. Similar offers were made on the motion for a new trial, and the court refused to receive them, basing his ruling, in part, upon the ground that the motion did not specifically show what facts were discovered since the overruling of *129 the motion that were not known at that time, and also upon the ground that the motion came too late.
In passing upon an application for a change of venue the court looks to a completed trial, and if at any stage of the trial it appears that the case has been so prejudged, or that other conditions exist which prevent a defendant from securing a fair and impartial trial, the court should entertain the motion even though this appear upon a motion for a new trial. The object of the law is to give a person a fair and impartial trial, and if this result is obtained the court will not disturb its action. But if the court is satisfied clearly that it has not been obtained, it will reverse itself, set aside the judgment, and grant the motion.
The showing on the application for a change of venue was not as full and explicit as it should have been. It should have specified, when it was sought to renew the motion, what particular evidence had been subsequently discovered that would show that a fair and impartial jury and a fair and impartial trial could not be secured.
In this case it is not necessary to pass upon the question as to whether the motion to reopen the case for new proof on the motion to change the venue should have been sustained, because, for other reasons hereafter noticed, the judgment must be set aside and a new trial granted. And it is presumed that on the remand of the case the court will act as may be proper upon the showing and conditions as they may then exist.
We are satisfied that the court erred in receiving the confessions under the circumstances disclosed in this record. The constitution of the state provides in section 26, among other things, that "the accused shall not be compelled to give evidence against himself." This guaranty is violated whenever a confession is illegally extorted from a person accused of crime. In White
v. State,
"Confessions induced by fear, though not aroused by spoken threats, are nevertheless involuntary, because the fear which takes away the freedom may arise solely from the conditions and circumstances surrounding the confessor."
That case, in the methods resorted to to procure the confession, is a good deal like the one before us. There an ignorant negro boy was arrested, brought to the scene of a horrible murder, and after he was released by the authorities fell into the hands of infuriated citizens, who took him into a store building where the bloody corpse lay and a crowd of armed men were assembled, to obtain a confession. The boy confessed to one of the men, and then his hands were tied behind him, he was placed upon the floor, and a white man stood upon his body and administered to him the water cure, which consisted of pouring water into his nose. The court held that this confession was unlawfully obtained, and was therefore involuntary. It is also held, in the third syllabus of the case, that:
"Where confessions were obtained at the scene of the murder by threats, duress, and physical violence, it was error to refuse to allow defendant's counsel to introduce testimony showing a connection between such involuntary confessions, and another confession to some of the same parties subsequently made at the jail to show that the same influence obtained in the latter confession rendering it involuntary."
In Johnson v. State,
"A voluntary confession is one proceeding from the spontaneous operation of the party's own mind, free from the influence of any extraneous disturbing cause. A confession was not voluntary which was obtained from a defendant who was sick and in jail and in fear of lynching by a newspaper reporter who told the defendant he would have no peace or hope of salvation unless *131 he confessed, that he, the reporter, was a `spiritualist' and could look into the defendant's heart, and see the crime which he had committed."
In the second syllabus of this case it is said:
"If on preliminary hearing by the court, there is a reasonable doubt as to whether a confession was freely and voluntarily made, it must be excluded from the jury, and after a confession has, on preliminary hearing by the court, been admitted to go to the jury, either party may introduce the same evidence as was submitted to the court, and any additional evidence relative to its weight or credibility, and if it then, or at any stage of the trial, appears that the confession was made under circumstances rendering it incompetent, it should be excluded. It is necessary to look to all the surroundings of the person making the confession in order to determine whether it is rendered inadmissible because it resulted from fear or threat or undue influence of a person, even though one not in authority, operating upon the mind of the person confessing. Even the act of third persons may amount to a threat excluding confession though no objectionable words are spoken."
In Mathews v. State,
In Jones v. State, 133 Miss. at page 684, 98 So. 150, in the third syllabus, it is said: *132
"Where a confession has been illegally obtained from a person accused of crime by inducement held out, or by fear brought about by the persons taking it, a subsequent confession made under the influence of the same inducements will not be admitted, although the officer taking them states to the accused that he need not make a statement unless he desires, and that such statement, if made, will be used against him, and that such officer has no offer to make him. In order to make the second admissible it must clearly appear that it was not made under the same improper influence as the first" — citing Banks v. State,
The court in that case, quoting from Banks v. State, supra, said:
"It does not sufficiently appear that the appellant was not acting under the influence of the inducements held out to him the day before to warrant us in concluding that the testimony offered to prove the second confession should have been admitted. In order to make this alleged second confession admissible, it must clearly appear that the second confession was not made under the same improper influence as the first."
It clearly appears in the case before us that the original confession in the jail was secured by force and in violation of the law. The sheriff himself so testified, and so did one of the participants in securing the confession. There can be no kind of doubt that this confession was unlawfully secured. The appellant was told in that proceeding to stick to the confession. And another person jointly charged, who had made a confession, receded from it and was called upon a second time, given a second treatment, and urged to stand by his confession. It is impossible for the reasoning mind to ignore the force and effect that these proceedings had upon these negroes. It would be vain and idle to indulge the hope that the effect was removed from their minds before the confessions were repeated to the state's witnesses. *133
While the defendant was on the stand being cross-examined, he was asked as to the statement taken by the county prosecuting attorney and a stenographer, in which the county prosecuting attorney told him he need not make a statement unless he wanted to, and that whatever he said would be used against him. He also examined the appellant about other statements made in the alleged confessions which the appellant denied, and about which he was contradicted by the evidence of other parties who had secured the confession. The other persons jointly indicted who testified in behalf of the appellant were subjected to similar cross-examinations, and their evidence about their own confessions was contradicted by persons who unlawfully obtained them. This evidence, being unlawful, and obtained in plain violation of the constitutional rights of the appellant and others being compelled to testify against themselves, cannot be used under the guise of impeaching the witness. It would be a vain and useless thing from a practical standpoint to exclude such confessions as such and admit them for the purpose of impeaching the witness. It is perfectly manifest to us that the appellant did not secure a fair and impartial trial as guaranteed to him by the constitution.
In Ezra Hampson v. State,
"Mulattoes, negroes, Malays, whites, millionaires, paupers, princes, and kings in the courts of Mississippi, are on precisely the same exact footing. All must be tried on facts, and not on abuse. Only impartial trials can pass the Red Sea of this court without drowning. Trials are to vindicate innocence or ascertain guilt."
What is a fair trial? Perhaps no precise definition can be given it, but it certainly must be one where the accused's legal rights are safeguarded and respected. There must not only be a fair and impartial jury and a learned and upright judge to instruct the jury and pass upon the legal questions, but there ought to be an atmosphere *134 of calm, in which the witnesses can deliver their testimony without fear and intimidation, and in which the attorneys can assert the defendant's rights freely and fully, and in which the truth may be received and given credence without fear of violence. In no case must violence be resorted to — no coerced verdicts — and when acquittals are given, there must be no visible appearance of violence.
We know there are time when atrocious crimes arouse people to a high sense of indignation. And this is true especially in cases where an upright citizen is murdered without cause. But the deep damnation of a defendant's crime ought not to cause those intrusted with the enforcement of the law to swerve from the calm and faithful performance of duty. Coercing the supposed state's criminals into confessions and using such confessions so coerced from them against them in trials has been the curse of all countries. It was the chief inequity, the crowning infamy of the Star Chamber, and the Inquisition, and other similar institutions. The constitution recognized the evils that lay behind these practices and prohibited them in this country. And while it is true that ordinarily the competency of a confession must be raised when the evidence is introduced, there are exceptions to that rule, as noted in the above case of Johnson
v. State,
The duty of maintaining constitutional rights of a person on trial for his life rises above mere rules of procedure, and wherever the court is clearly satisfied that such violations exist, it will refuse to sanction such violations and will apply the corrective.
For the errors committed, the cause must be reversed and remanded for a new trial.
Reversed and remanded. *135