32 P.2d 25 | Ariz. | 1934
This is a companion case to that just decided, ManuelHernandez v. State, ante, p. 424,
It appears that the defendant, Fred Hernandez, was arrested at his mother's home around 4 or 5 o'clock in the afternoon and taken to Casa Grande where he remained about two hours in custody of the officers. While in the freight-room of the Southern Pacific depot in their charge he gave them the particulars regarding the killing but testified at the trial that it was through fear that he made this statement, though the court, after going into the matter fully in the absence of the jury, concluded that it was not forced but made freely and voluntarily. The written confession, signed a little later and containing substantially the same facts, was also introduced over objection, but the defendant has based no assignment on the ruling admitting either.
However, he requested an instruction on the question of confessions upon the ground that both his oral and written statements were in evidence and the jury should be advised as to its duty regarding them, but the court refused the instruction, and this ruling is assigned as error. After a full investigation out *444
of the presence of the jury and before the confessions were admitted the court decided that they were made voluntarily, and this being true an instruction regarding them was not necessary. If, however, the evidence on this point, which was somewhat conflicting, had been such that it did not satisfy the court fully that they were voluntary, it should have left the determination of the question to the jury by advising it properly concerning them, but its duty to refuse to admit them, provided the evidence showed clearly they were not voluntary, was equally plain. The court evidently entertained no doubt on this point, a view the evidence fully justified, and this being true, there was no occasion to submit the matter to the jury, though it would not perhaps have been error for it to have done so. This is in accord with the last expression of this court on the question, which is found in Indian Fred v. State,
"In passing upon the question of law involved, we held (inKermeen v. State,
Clearly there was no error in denying the requested instruction. The judgment is affirmed.
ROSS, C.J., and LOCKWOOD, J., concur.