132 S.E. 603 | N.C. | 1926
Criminal prosecution tried upon an indictment charging the prisoner with a capital felony, to wit, murder in the first degree.
From an adverse verdict and judgment of death pronounced thereon, the prisoner appeals, assigning errors. There is evidence on behalf of the State tending to show that on the night of 9 June, 1925, Fred G. Claywell, in company with two fellow-policemen of the city of High Point, went to the home of the defendant, John Whitener, to break up a gambling game, which they had reason to believe was going on in his house.
Quite a battle ensued between the officers and the colored men who had gathered at the defendant's home for a game of cards. Fred G. Claywell, one of the officers, was shot, which resulted in his death a few days thereafter; the defendant was shot twice, though not mortally wounded, while another of the card players was killed almost instantly. In the confusion which followed, an oil lamp was turned over and the house was destroyed by fire. Officer Claywell and the defendant were both taken to the hospital. The latter recovered from his injuries, the former did not.
While the defendant was in the hospital the police officers kept him constantly under guard and endeavored to elicit from him a statement as to who shot officer Claywell, and the circumstances under which the shooting occurred.
After several days' questioning, the prisoner signed a written confession to the effect that he was the one who shot officer Claywell; in fact, the only one in his party who had a pistol; and that the wounded officer returned the fire while lying on the floor, or after he had been felled by the defendant.
To the introduction of this evidence the accused, through his counsel, objected, on the ground that the confession was not given voluntarily; and the prisoner asked that the jury be withdrawn from the court room, to the end that he might interrogate the State's witnesses before the court on the preliminary question as to the competency of such *661 proposed evidence. The jury was excused, and on cross-examination by counsel for the prisoner, the witnesses for the State testified that the confession was made voluntarily, after the prisoner had been informed of his rights, and that no inducements whatever were held out to him which caused him to make it.
For the purpose of denying this evidence touching the voluntariness of his confession, the prisoner, through his counsel, asked that he be allowed to take the stand, not before the jury, nor in the cause, but before the judge, to give his version as to how the alleged confession was obtained from him. His Honor ruled that, as a matter of law, he could not hear the testimony of the defendant, in the absence of the jury, on the preliminary inquiry looking to the admissibility of the alleged confession. In this ruling we think there was error. The evidence of the prisoner, had he been allowed to testify, and, if believed, would have rendered the alleged confession incompetent as evidence against him. S. v. Roberts,
"A confession is voluntary in law if, and only if, it was in fact, voluntarily made." — Mr. Justice Brandeis in Ziang Sung Wan v. UnitedStates,
The case of Bram v. United States,
After declining to hear the testimony of the defendant touching the manner in which the alleged confession was secured, the court found as a fact from the evidence of the State's witnesses, that the confession was given voluntarily, and thereupon permitted the solicitor to offer it in evidence against the prisoner.
The record, therefore, presents the question squarely as to whether the prisoner, at his own request, was entitled, as a matter of law, to testify before the judge, in the absence of the jury, on the preliminary inquiry addressed only to the court, with respect to the admissibility of the alleged confession as evidence against him. We think the prisoner, at his own request, was entitled to be heard on this preliminary inquiry — the credibility of his testimony, of course, being a matter for the judge.
In this jurisdiction it is the province of the judge, and not that of the jury, to determine every question, whether of law or of fact, touching *662
the admissibility of evidence. Monroe v. Stutts,
Speaking to the identical question in S. v. Andrews,
And further in the same opinion it is said: "The duty of finding the facts preliminary to the admissibility of evidence is often a very embarrassing one, as in this case, where there is a conflict of testimony. But this duty must be discharged by the judge, and the evil of allowing him to let the jury also pass on these facts is this: If he decide for the prisoner and reject the evidence, that is the end of it, whereas, if he decide for the State, and can leave it to the jury to review his decision, it is an inducement for him to decide pro forma for the State, and so the evidence goes to the jury without having the preliminary facts decided according to law."
This is the fixed law of North Carolina as settled by a long line of decisions. S. v. Davis,
And to like effect are the decisions in other jurisdictions. Enoch v.Com., 126 S.E. (Va.), 222; Com. v. Culver,
Speaking to the question in People v. Rogers,
In S. v. Kinder,
By express statute (C.S., 1799), a defendant on trial in this jurisdiction, charged with a criminal offense, is, at his own request, but not otherwise, competent to testify in his own behalf, and we see no valid reason why he should not be permitted, at his own request, to give evidence before the court, on the preliminary inquiry, touching the admissibility of an alleged confession, which the State proposes to offer as evidence against him. True, this may result, at times, in producing embarrassing situations for the judge, especially where the evidence is conflicting and the witnesses are unknown to him, nevertheless the question of the competency of evidence in this jurisdiction is one for the judge, and not for the jury, to decide. S. v. Maynard,
For the error in declining, as a matter of law, to hear the prisoner on this preliminary inquiry, a new trial must be awarded.
There are other exceptions appearing on the record worthy of consideration, but as they are not likely to arise on another hearing, we shall not consider them now.
New trial. *664