35 Iowa 541 | Iowa | 1872
Confessions which are not voluntarily made but are extorted, through hope or fear caused by inducements held out to the prisoner, are not competent evidence against him. Whether confessions proposed to be introduced in evidence against a prisoner are of the character just indicated, is a question to be determined by the court. It is therefore the duty oí the court to receive preliminary evidence upon the competency of confessions under this rule, and thereon determine the question of their admissibility. 1 Greenl. Ev., § 219; 1 Phillips’ Ev. (Cow. & Hill’s and Edwards’ Notes), 542-3. The court erred in refusing to admit the evidence offered as to inducements held out to defendant under which the confessions were made.
III. The following among other instructions was given to the jury: “ Deliberate and voluntary confessions of guilt corroborated by other proof of the fact that the crime confessed has been committed by some person, are among the most satisfactory proofs of the defendant’s guilt;
Confessions drawn from the prisoner by hope or fear are, as we have seen, inadmissible as evidence against him. If evidence of such confessions was before the jury, it should have been disregarded, and it was tbe duty of the court to liave instructed the jury to that effect. But the jury was told that confessions not voluntarily made are to be received with caution and may he disregarded; they should have been directed to disregard them without any qualification. See authorities just referred to and those cited in "Wharton’s Am. Criminal Law, § 685.
There are other points made by the defendant’s counsel which need not be considered, as the judgment of tbe district court, for the errors above pointed out, must be
Reversed.