On the trial of this'case the State was seeking to prove-a confessory statement by defendant charged with a serious assault and battery.
The defense was insanity. Defendant did not testify. The usual and a sufficient predicate showing the voluntary character of the confession was the subject of testimony. There was none to the contrary. But before the statement was introduced and received, defendant objected. The objection was overruled and the statement' admitted in evidence. Appellant, petitioner here, complains of the refusal of the court to permit him to show, prior to the admission of the confession, that at the time it is alleged'to have occurred, he was insane and, therefore, the confession was not voluntary.
In order to get the exact status relating to this question, we have examined the record as we have a right to do- for that purpose. ■ It shows that defendant’s counsel stated to the court, as follows: “The defendant would like to have the opportunity before that statement is made to put witnesses on the stand to- determine whether or not he was sane at the time, and we would like to have the opportunity to interpose and introduce evidence to the fact that the man was not sane at that time, and therefore, that it was not a voluntary statement”. “The court overrules the request. The defendant excepts.” And in respect to- the proposed testimony of another witness of the confession made by defendant, his counsel made the same objection and offer of proof “through witnesses to show the man was insane at the time any alleged state7 ment was made”. This was not shown to be in corroboration of other evidence that the confession was involuntary.
With -respect to the legal question there presented, the. Court of Appeals approved the principle declared in State v. Berberick,
But we think the weight of authority is not so broad as it is there expressed. 22 C.J.S., Criminal Law, § 836, p. 1464, notes 80 and 81. In the case of State v. Feltes,
I,n the case of People v. Stielow, Sup.,
In Peck v. State,
“The time, place, and surroundings of the prisoner, the manner of evoking the confession, and by whom evoked, in the very nature of things, were calculated to unduly influence the prisoner and render a confession under such circumstances inadmissible in evidence against him. And the mere fact that no threats were used or promises made to the defendant, and nothing more said to him than to ask the question which called for the confession, is not enough, under the facts in this case, to affirmatively show that the confession was voluntarily made.”
In Lindsey v. State,
If the offer of evidence goes to the extent of showing mania, so that the defendant at the time was either an “idiot” or “lunatic during lunacy,” he would be an incompetent witness under section 439, Title 7, Code. Therefore, it would 'be competent to show that the confession was involuntary. Burns v. State,
The offer of evidence was that he was not sane at the time of the confession and therefore that it was not a voluntary statement. This was not offered as a circumstance to support other evidence that the statement was not voluntary. The offer of evidence went to the admissibility of the confession, not to its weight.
In order to' review a ruling on an offer of testimony, there are some well settled principles which we will quote from 64 Corpus Juris pages 127, 128, 129, 130 and 131:
“An offer of proof must be certain, intelligible, .and must definitely state the facts sought to be proved, either by reference to the evidence proposed to be offered or to the facts to be proved. * * * An offer must be specific enough to malee its relevancy apparent. If evidence would be relevant in conjunction with other facts not yet in the record, the offer should be accompanied by an offer to prove those facts at the proper time. * * * The offer cannot be made in general terms, but must be so made as to give the court an opportunity to rule on the specific testimony, complaint of the exclusion o'f which is made, and must be so specific as to show the error of the court in refusing to admit it. A party is bound to know what his witness can say and to make the offer in such terms that the court has the assurance that if permitted to speak the witness will so testify. * * *
“While recognizing that the better-practice is to put the witness on the" stand, it is competent, it has been held,, for the trial court, with consent of opposing counsel, to rule on an offer without calling the witness. Where the court rules that it will not hear plaintiff’s ■ witnesses, he need not produce each of them before the court.”
When the offer was made to prove that defendant was not sane when the confession was made, it was not limited in its scope to the kind or extent of insanity which would serve to make evidence of it inadmissible. A presumption favorable to the court’s ruling will be indulged against defendant. The only nature of evidence which defendant had the legal right to interpose at that stage of the trial in respect to his insanity was that it was such as to show incapacity to know and remember that what he was saying related what had occurred. It is probably the same theory as that which makes a man incompetent to testify because of his. mental deficiency. The offer of proof as framed was not necessarily of the sort which would render him incompetent as a witness. A person may be partially insane and still be competent to testify or make a confession. Insanity is a relative and broad term. A paranoiac is insane, but competent to testify, we doubt not, in many instances.
It is said in McKinstry v. City of Tuscaloosa,
It is our view that the .difference in the authorities which we have noted may be analyzed on the theory that some of them were heedless of the degree of insanity involved. We think that if defendant had *200 made a proper offer to prove that he did not have the mental capacity requisite to be a witness, as stated above, he should have had the opportunity of doing so before the confession was admitted. But that was not the nature of the offer which defendant made. There was therefore no error in sustaining the objection interposed by the State.
The Court of Appeals affirmed, notwithstanding the error as they thought, on the theory that the facts contained in the confessory statement were proven by other witnesses and were without dispute and, therefore, that Supreme Court Rule 45, Code 1940, Tit. 7, Appendix, applies. It does not appear whether this means that during the trial such facts were admitted or how it was that they were without 'dispute. It is not the duty of defendant to admit or deny any given circumstance. If there was error of the court in rejecting legal evidence offered by defendant, tending to show his incapacity to make a confession, and in the admission of the confession without such evidence, the ruling is not rendered innocuous because there was legal evidence of the facts so confessed, and none opposed, but which defendant had not admitted in the trial of the case. The rule is different where defendant admitted in his testimony, or otherwise in court, the existence of those facts. Smith v. State,
If the Court of Appeals meant to ground its finding that the error was harmless under Rule 45, supra, upon the circumstance that there was other evidence of the facts set forth in the confession without conflict, and that defendant had not testified denying them, we doubt if it would be firmly supported. We prefer not to approve that conclusion as thus expressed. We think the cases cited 'by the Court of Appeals to sustain their conclusion do not have that effect. We refer to Moss v. State,
The evidence proposed in the instant case was not to prove a circumstance corroborative of other evidence, as in the Moss case, supra, that the confession was involuntary. That was the only evidence offered, we assume.
The other question presented on this petition is the holding that refused charges 1 and 3 were covered by the court’s oral charge. That has been held to present a legal question and to impose on us the duty to examine the oral charge to determine that for ourselves. Brown v. State,
We therefore deny certiorari, but with the limitations which we have expressed.
Certiorari denied.
