On December 11, 1972, appellee Jesse W. White, was sentenced to life imprisonment in the State Penitentiary by the Common Pleas Court of Cabell County. He was previously convicted by a jury of first dеgree murder.
By an order entered on September 7, 1979, the Circuit Court of Marshall County awarded appellee a writ of habeas corpus. The Court declared White’s conviction of first degree murder void and stayed the execution of the order to permit the State to take this appeal. The basis for
*213
the lower court’s ruling was that at White’s criminal trial two inculpatory statements made by him were introduced into evidence without an
in camera
hearing to determine their voluntariness and, therefore, under Syllabus Point 1 of
State v. Fortner,
Neither
Fortner
nor some of the cases following it
2
gave any consideration to the case of
Jackson v. Denno,
In
State v.
Brewster, _ W. Va. _,
“Where there is a failure to hold an in camera hearing on the defendant’s inculpatory statements, we recognize under Jackson v. Denno,378 U.S. 368 ,84 S.Ct. 1774 ,12 L.Ed.2d 908 (1964), that the сase will not be reversed for a new trial on this basis alone. Instead, it will be remanded for a voluntariness hearing before the trial court. If the trial court finds the statements are voluntary the verdict will stand. If, on the other hand, he finds the statements to be involuntary, the verdict will be set aside unless the trial court determines that this constitutional error is harmless beyond a reasonable doubt.” 3
Admittedly, the discussion of the Jackson v. Denno principle in State v. Clawson wаs not extensive because we reversed the conviction on another ground. We did not state in Clawson, as we do now, that Syllabus Point 1 of State v. Fortner, supra 4 is overruled to the extent that it states that the failure to hold an in camera hearing on the voluntarinеss of a confession “constitutes reversible error.” We also overrule similar language occurring in syllabus points of other post-Fortner cases. We conclude here that the proper procedure is that contained in Syllabus Point 5 of Clawson, supra.
Consequently, we hold that the lower court erred in concluding that White was entitled to have his conviction *215 set aside because of the failure to have a preliminary in camera hearing on the voluntariness of his inculрatory statements. Under Clawson and Jackson v. Denno, White was entitled to a voluntariness hearing. However, for the reasons set out below there was no reversible error in not holding the hearing, since it is abundantly clear from the record that his statements were spontaneous and made in a noncustodial surrounding.
The lower court had the benefit of the relevant portions of White’s criminal trial transcriрt which demonstrated the following facts surrounding his inculpatory statements. Mrs. Texas Gorgia, a telephone operator employed at the Huntington office of the telephone company, testified concerning inculpatory statements made by appellee to her. She testified that on the evening of April 29, 1972, while she was at work as an operator, а male voice called and said, “Operator, connect me with the police. I have just shot and killed three people.” She asked the caller’s name and the address and phone number from which he was calling. The man gave his name as “Jess or Jeff White,” a phone number of 525-0103, and an address of 1032 - 25th Street in Huntington. The phone number was checked through the teleрhone service directory and coincided with the address of 1032 - 25th Street. This information was then relayed to the police.
Officer Ronald Campbell of the Huntington police forcе testified concerning the second inculpatory statement. Campbell had gone to the premises at 1032 - 25th Street because the neighbors had reported a disturbance. He went tо the back of the house, crossing through the backyard to gain access to the back porch. In crossing the backyard, he observed a woman lying on the ground. When he got to the pоrch, he found another woman lying in front of the door. When he looked inside the house, he saw White sitting in a chair and holding a rifle or shotgun against a small child’s head.
Officer Campbell then asked White questions about the safety of the child. He also asked to come in, which appellee permitted. When the officer got inside, White started to talk, stating “he didn’t want to do this thing but *216 those pеople made me do this.” According to Officer Campbell, White demanded that a newspaper reporter be brought to the house. It was after the reporter was brought to the sсene that White recounted his version of the shooting in some detail, which Officer Campbell overheard and testified to at the trial. It was not until after this newspaper interview that White gave up his weapon, released the child and surrendered to the authorities.
We find, as have the federal courts,
5
that under the foregoing facts there was no custodial interrogation. Moreover, we have recognizеd under certain limited circumstances that a spontaneous statement made in noncustodial surroundings may be admitted without first holding an
in camera
hearing. This point was expressed in Syllabus Point 1 of
State v. Johnson,
“A spontaneous statement by a defendant made prior to any action by a police officer or before an accusation, arrest or any custodial interrogation is made or undertaken by the police may be admitted into evidence without the voluntariness thereof first having been determined in an in camera hearing.”
See also, Wilhelm v. Whyte,
*217 “There is no requirement that poliсe stop a person who enters a police station and states that he wishes to confess to a crime, or a person who calls the police to offer a cоnfession or any other statement he desires to make. Volunteered statements of any kind are not barred by the Fifth Amendment and their admissibility is not affected by our holding today.”384 U.S. at 478 ,16 L.Ed.2d at 726 ,86 S.Ct. at 1630 . (Footnotes omitted)
Even though
Miranda
recognizes that a spоntaneous statement need not be preceded by
Miranda
warnings in order to be admissible, the opinion fails to touch on the question of whether or not a voluntariness hearing is required under the сircumstances. We answered the hearing issue in the negative in
Johnson.
It is obvious that one of the purposes of the
in camera
hearing is to determine the circumstances surrounding the making of the statement to see if in fact it was voluntary. A number of courts have recognized that a noncustodial spontaneous statement is admissible. Most of these courts hold that
Miranda
does not apply because the defendant made the statements in a noncustodial environment.
Bosley v. United States,
In some of these cases there was an initial
in camera
hearing to determine the circumstances surrounding the giving of the spontaneous statement so that the reviewing court had a sufficient factual background to confirm the voluntariness of the statements. In several of the cases, it does not appear from the record that an initial
in camera
hearing was held, but the reviewing court had the benefit of the trial transcript and could determine from it that the statement was spontaneously given.
E.g., Bosley v. United States,
Here, we also have the benefit of the trial court record which shows the circumstances surrounding the spontaniety of appellee’s inculpatory statements. We conclude from such record that they were spontaneous and come within the principle set out in Syllabus Point 1 of State v. Johnson, supra. Consequently, we find there is no reason to remand the case for an evidentiary hearing on the issue of voluntariness. We do wish to extend a cautionary warning that the spontaneous statement rule found in State v. Johnson should be narrowly construed and where there is any possibility that the spontaneous criteria do not exist or are based on conflicting evidence, the trial court should conduct a preliminary in camera hearing.
For the foregoing reasons, the judgment of the circuit court is reversed an^ the writ of habeas corpus is dismissed as improvidently awarded.
Case Reversed and Writ Dismissed as Improvidently Awarded.
Notes
Syllabus Point 1 of State v. Fortner, supra, states:
“It is the mandatory duty of a triаl court, whether requested or not, to hear the evidence and determine in the first instance, out of the presence of the jury, the voluntariness of an oral or written confession by an accused person prior to admitting the same into evidence, and the failure to observe this procedure constitutes reversible error.”
See, e.g., State v. Tomey,
This harmless constitutional error test wаs applied to the introduction of an invalid confession in
Milton v. Wainwright,
See footnote 1, supra.
White has filed habeas corpus cases in our Federal District Courts, where his primary argument was that he should have been given
Miranda
warnings immediately оn the arrival of Officer Campbell. This argument was rejected by the Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals in its Memorandum Decision
(White v. Bordenkircher,
No. 75-8191, 7/30/76). The Court found that there was no custodial interrogation under
Miranda v. Arizona,
