50 Miss. 147 | Miss. | 1874
delivered the opinion of the court:
This is a writ of error from a judgment upon a conviction of the plaintiff in error of burglary. The main questions presented by this record for our consideration involve in their solution an inquiry into the propriety of admitting testimony of the statements of one Alexander Wilson, an accomplice of the accused, not on trial, and of refusing an instruction asked by the defendant below, the plaintiff in error.
There being no proof of any combination or conspiracy between Wilson and the plaintiff, to commit the offense charged in the indictment, the statements of Wilson in regard to it, ought not to have been admitted in evidence on the trial of the accused. Wilson, although an accomplice, was a competent witness, and his statements could only affect himself. He was a codefendant in the indictment with the plaintiff, and before his statements could be given in evidence against the plaintiff, there must be a prima facie ease established by evidence aliunde. A foundation must first be laid by proof, sufficient prima facie to establish the existence of a combination, before the acts or declarations of any conspirator or accomplice can be given in evidence to charge others. This, as a general rule, seems to be universally recognized. 1 Greenl. Ev., 126, sec. 111, and Browning v. The State, 30 Miss., 656.
When tested by this rule, it is manifest that the court' ened in admitting the statements of Wilson as evidence in the cause ; there
The refusal to give the third instruction asked by the plaintiff is error. In that instruction, the court was asked to charge the jury, that statements made by Wilson are not evidence against .the accused, unless the jury believe from the evidence that said Wilson and the accused conspired to commit the offense charged, and that such statements were made before the crime was committed. This announces a correct principle of law, and should have been given to the jury.
Joe Conger testified that Cato Garrard, Alexander Wilson and himself were, by Henry Hilliard, the officer that arrested them, carried before one Leon, a justice of the peace, who said to the accused (Cato Garrard) that if he would tell him all about the matter, he would let him off. And Sam Jones testified that he was at Leon’s when the accused was brought there for examination, for breaking into Steele & Co’s, store, and taking therefrom the goods in November, 1871, and heard Leon say to Cato, “I suspect you, and you had better tell all about it, if you want to get off.” Then Cato said that he and Wilson had broken open the store and taken the things out to divide.
If it be true that these inducements were held out by the magistrate to the accused to confess, his confession would be clearly inadmissible against him upon his trial. There are three kinds of confesssion: 1. A confession in open court of the prisoner’s guilt, which is conclusive, and renders any proof unnecessary. 2. The next highest kind of confession is that which is made before a magistrate. 3. The lowest is that which is made to any other person, and requires to be sustained by proof of corroborating circumstances.
The doctrine is well established, that when a confession is induced by threats or by a promise, or hope of favor, held out to the accused by a magistrate or by the officer making the arrest, it
But against the testimony of these two witnesses, is that of Henry Hilliard, the officer who had the accused in custody, who testified that Cato Garrard and Joe Conger were taken by him before Esquire Leon, a justice of the peace, and then Cato Garrard •confessed, without any promises or threats being made by said justice, that he and Wilson had broken open the store and taken the things out. This conflict of testimony raises a question of fact, as to whether any inducement was held out to procure the •confession, and that question was very properly left to the jury to •decide.
' Hilliard further testified that some of the things were found, where Cato said they were. And the things spoken of by the witness were evidently the stolen goods taken from the store, for which Cato was then in custody and about which the examination was then being had. This was undoubtedly legitimate evidence, even though the confession may have been improperly obtained. Eor the object of all the care which is taken to exclude confessions which are not voluntary, is to exclude testimony not probably •true. But where in consequence of the information obtained from the prisoner, the property stolen or any other material fact is discovered, it is competent to show that such discovery was made conformably to the information given by the prisoner. The statement as to his knowledge of the place where the property or ■other evidence was to be found, being thus confirmed by the fact, is proved to be true, and not to have been fabricated in consequence of any inducement. 1 Greenl. Ev., 262, sec. 231.
And although the entire confession cannot be received in evidence, the weight of modern authority is, that so much of the
If the confession of the accused was voluntary, which led to the discovery of part of the goods stolen, there can be no reasonable doubt that the conviction was right. And had the court rejected the statements of Wilson, and given the instruction asked by the accused, the result must properly have been the same.
But whether there was any inducement held out by the magistrate to make the confession,, was a fact within the province of the jury to decide, and their finding, under the charge given them by the.court on behalf of the accused, “ that confessions made by the prisoner under the influence of a promise or hope of reward held out to him by the person having him in custody, are not competent evidence to convict him of the crime so confessed, unless there is other evidence sufficient to satisfy the minds of the jury of the guilt of the accused,” that the accused was guilty of the crime charged in the indictment, justifies the belief that they found the confession was voluntarily made. This must have been so. The verdict of the jury cannot be accounted for upon any other hypothesis, unless they believed that the other evidence was sufficient to establish the guilt of the accused. The instruction thus given for the accused cured the errors in admitting Wilson’s statements in evidence, and the refusal of the third instruction asked by the accused. The instruction given was substantially the same as that refused, and must have destroyed the effect which Wilson’s admissions and statements might have had upon the minds of the jury, if that instruction had not been given to them.
The judgment is affirmed.