42 So. 2d 36 | Ala. | 1949
The questions presented by petitioner on this appeal are (1) whether appellant's confession was improperly admitted and (2) whether the court improperly sustained the State's objection to the offer of appellant while testifying on direct examination to say that at the time he made a written confession he was frightened and afraid.
(1) Appellant was tried and convicted for shooting his wife. This occurred in Gadsden, Alabama, and appellant fled to Opelika, Alabama, where he was arrested five or six days later. The opinion of the Court of Appeals states the evidence material as to whether the confession was voluntary, as follows:
"The appellant was arrested and jailed in Opelika around 7 P.M. We gather from the record that on that same night police officers Of Gadsden arrived in Opelika around 11:45 P.M., and appellant being given into their custody they started back to Gadsden within about fifteen minutes. On their arrival in Gadsden around 3:30 A.M. they placed appellant in a jail cell by himself. In the late afternoon appellant was taken to a room in the jail and interviewed by two police officers of the City of Gadsden, one of whom was Detective Cartee. During this interview appellant signed a statement confessory in nature, but in which appellant in nowise claimed that the deceased was attacking him with an ice pick at the time the gun was fired.
"Mr. Cartee testified that no threats, inducements, rewards or hope of reward were made or held out to appellant to induce him to make a statement, but on the other hand the appellant's actions were entirely voluntary.
"He further testified that appellant did not bear signs of mistreatment when he first saw him in the jail at Opelika, and he was not in any way mistreated on the drive from Opelika to Gadsden. Appellant did not bear any signs of mistreatment when he saw him at the interview when the statement was signed, nor did appellant make any claim that he had been mistreated in any way by anyone during the time he was in the Opelika jail or in the Gadsden jail. * * *
"During the examination of Mr. Cartee looking toward establishing the predicate of the voluntariness of appellant's confession the record shows that the court addressed certain questions to the witness as follows:
" 'The Court: Any scars or bruises about him?
" 'The Witness: No, sir.
" 'The Court: Did he appear in pain or comfortable and at ease.
" 'The Witness: Normal.
" 'The Court: He didn't seem nervous or anything of that kind?
" 'The Witness: No, sir.
" 'The Court: Overrule the objection.
" 'Mr. Pilcher: We reserve an exception.' "
And later stated that:
"While testifying in his own behalf the appellant claimed that some person in *499 Opelika threatened to strike him, but never did, and that his request that an Opelika attorney be sent for was refused. He also claimed that some one in the Gadsden jail had threatened him, but he could not remember that he was threatened during the time he was in Mr. Cartee's presence.
"In our opinion Mr. Cartee's testimony clearly established prima facie the voluntary character of this appellant's confession. The fact that appellant gave testimony, which if believed, tended to show coercion does not authorize us to conclude that the trial court erred in determining that this confession was voluntary. Clayton v. State,
The court overruled an objection which invoked the principle of due process under the so called McNabb Rule. McNabb v. United States,
"Actually in the present case there is no showing in the record as to when a commitment was obtained against this appellant. We pretermit consideration of the effect of this omitted showing however, for we do not consider that the McNabb Rule is binding on us. In Townsend v. Burke,
We agree with the opinion of the Court of Appeals in this respect. The quotation in their opinion from Townsend v. Burke,
But the rule which renders incompetent confessions which are obtained by protracted and repeated questioning of ignorant and unlearned persons does apply to state courts. Lisenba v. California,
We do not think that the circumstances under which the confession was obtained are sufficient to deny its use as evidence to appellant because of due process. Phillips v. State,
The defendant offered to prove by his own testimony that at the time he signed a confession he was frightened or afraid. The court sustained the objection of the State.
On appeal to the Court of Appeals they affirmed, but the members of the court differed in the application of some of our cases.
We think it is clear that when fear is entertained by a witness and it is material in a controversy being tried in court, that witness may properly be asked on direct examination whether he entertained such fear. We think such question is permissible, and supported by our cases, *500 and not limited to a situation where there are discrepancies sought to be explained as it is where the offer is to prove uncommunicated motive or intention.
In the case of McGuff v. State,
The Court of appeals has referred to the case of Kinsey v. State,
The judges of the Court of Appeals in this case differ as to whether or not such discrepancies exist as to justify an application of the exception above noted. But in the Edwards case, supra, and in the Kinsey case, supra, as well as the Scott case, supra, in dealing with the question of fear, this Court did not confine it to a situation where any such discrepancy existed, but in the Edwards case based the conclusion upon the fact that fear is an involuntary physical effect such as heat, sickness and physical pain, and for that reason it is different from the mere voluntary mental action of entertaining a motive or intention which was not communicated or otherwise expressed. And so we do not think, upon the basis of the Kinsey case, or of the Edwards case, supra, which we approved in the McGuff case and in the Scott case, supra, that to support such testimony it is always necessary to do so upon the idea of shedding light upon discrepancies or statements made by the witness. Those cases did not so confine it.
Such testimony must be material to some of the issues in the case to be admissible. On the question of self-defense it was material whether deceased was making an attack on defendant with an ice pick. In his confession defendant omitted making such statement but in his testimony he stated that it so occurred. On such a disputed issue we think evidence of fear when the confession was made was material on the value of the confession as evidence on that issue and its exclusion by the court should not be said to be without injury. Brown v. State,
The judgment of the Court of Appeals is reversed and the cause remanded to that court.
Reversed and remanded.
BROWN, LIVINGSTON, LAWSON, SIMPSON, and STAKELY, JJ., concur. *501