State v. Lloyd

152 Wis. 24 | Wis. | 1913

TimliN, J.

The accused Converse W. Lloyd, informed against as Con W. Lloyd, was a fire insurance agent at Ash-land, Wisconsin, representing among other fire insurance companies the five companies named in the information. The accused Jacob V. Smeaton was a director, secretary, treasurer, and manager of the Lake Superior Lumber & Box Company, a corporation. These two men were charged in the information with conspiracy to cheat and defraud the five insurance companies therein named by false pretenses and “by false and privy tokens and subtile means and-devices.” It is charged that on September 21, 1909, in furtherance of said conspiracy, five policies of insurance, one in each of the named companies, were by Lloyd issued to Smeaton’s said corporation, covering property which was not in existence but had been wholly destroyed by fire on the day next preceding. That false -and fraudulent proofs of such pretended loss were thereafter made and delivered to the fire insurance companies, which relied thereon and, being deceived thereby, paid the sum of $11,616.85 for such pretended loss. When the case was called for trial and before the jury was sworn, Lloyd moved to quash the information as to him upon the ground that he had been compelled, in -an examination before the state fire marshal held at Ashland on the 9th day of August, 1910, to be a witness against himself, contrary to the Eifth amendment to .the constitution of the United States and to sec. 8 of art. I of the constitution of the state of Wisconsin, and that the complaint -and information in the case were predicated principally upon the testimony extorted from the accused in that examination. On the hearing of this motion there was offered in evidence and considered the information, an affidavit of Lloyd, a subpoena duces tecum issued by the state fire marshal and served on Lloyd> the testimony elicited *27from Lloyd on tbe examination before tbe state fire marshal, and a statement by tbe district attorney that in preparing tbe complaint be used this testimony of Lloyd, together with that of other witnesses whose evidence bad been taken by tbe fire marshal, and tbe complaint so prepared was predicated upon tbe testimony of Lloyd as well as upon other testimony.

Upon this showing tbe learned circuit court made an order quashing tbe information and discharging tbe accused Lloyd. Immediately thereafter tbe district attorney nolled tbe prosecution as against tbe accused Smeaton. Tbe motion, tbe affidavit of Lloyd, tbe subpoena, the testimony of Lloyd, tbe ruling of tbe circuit court, tbe statement of tbe district attorney, and tbe nolle as to Smeaton are presented by a bill of exceptions. There is considerable discussion in tbe briefs relating to tbe Eiftb amendment to tbe constitution of tbe United States, which provides, among other things, that no person shall be compelled in any criminal case to be a witness against himself. This Fifth amendment does not apply to prosecutions in state courts, and we may leave it out of consideration except in so far as judicial interpretation thereof by tbe learned federal courts may be advisory upon tbe interpretation of tbe similar provision found in our state constitution. Brown v. Walker, 161 U. S. 591, 16 Sup. Ct. 644; Maxwell v. Dow, 176 U. S. 581, 20 Sup. Ct. 448; Barron v. Baltimore, 7 Pet. 243; Twitchell v. Comm. 7 Wall. 321.

Sec. 8 of art. I of tbe constitution of this state, which provides, among other things, that no person shall be compelled in any criminal case to be a witness against himself, no doubt confers tbe right and privilege upon any person to refuse to give evidence which will or may incriminate him. He may, however, waive this privilege, -and it is generally held to be waived where be produces evidence or answers questions without making tbe objection that tbe evidence called for has this tendency; but it is quite another question whether, assuming *28that the constitutional right of a person has been invaded by compelling answers tending to incriminate that person, he can have an information quashed and be discharged from further prosecution where the preliminary complaint and information are based in part upon evidence so elicited and in part upon other evidence. Can this constitutional privilege, in the absence of an immunity statute, have the effect of not only excluding the evidence wrongfully elicited, but barring conviction upon any other evidence in a prosecution based upon information founded in part upon evidence thus unlawfully extorted and in part upon other evidence ?

It is relevant to consider the nature of the motion which the accused elected to make. A motion to quash an indictment is in the nature of a plea in abatement, and a ruling upon such motion quashing the indictment or information is ordinarily no bar to a prosecution of the same person for the same offense upon a new indictment or information. State v. Peterson, post, p. 44, 139 N. W. 512. Precedents may be found like U. S. v. Edgerton, 80 Fed. 374; Boone v. People, 148 Ill. 440, 36 N. E. 99; and People v. Haines, 6 N. Y. Crim. 100, 1 N. Y. Supp. 55, where indictments were quashed because the accused was called and required to testify before the grand jury which returned the indictment against him on the evidence so elicited. There are also cases like Mencheca v. State (Tex. Crim.) 28 S. W. 203, and Spearman v. State, 34 Tex. Crim. 279, 30 S. W. 229, holding that such examination of the accused before the grand jury is no ground for a motion to quash the indictment. There is also a line of precedents holding that no indictment will be quashed for the reception of incompetent evidence by the grand jury unless it be shown by the moving party that the indictment rests solely upon such incompetent evidence. Chadwick v. U. S. 141 Fed. 225, 72 C. C. A. 343; People v. Sexton, 42 Misc. 312, 86 N. Y. Supp. 517; and in 17 Am. & Eng. Ency. of Law (2d ed.) 1283, a long1 list of cases is *29■cited in support of tbis rule. Mr. Wigmore in his work on Evidence (vol. 3, sec. 2250 et seq.) and in other writings (5 Harv. Law Rev. 71) has rendered a great service to the public, and to the legal profession in particular, by his learned and masterful exposition of the origin and scope of the constitutional provision in question. The constitutional rights •of the citizen secured to him by the provision in question .should be carefully guarded, hut it is safe to say that it was never intended by the framers of the constitution that this •clause should be so construed and applied as to make it principally the buckler and shield of crime or so as to furnish an ■easy means of escape from deserved responsibility for criminal conduct. It may be freely conceded that there is great inherent difficulty in adopting and following consistent rules which will subserve both purposes. In the nature of things "there must often arise under such provisions close borderline- cases calling for keen discrimination and frequently "turning upon questions of fact. It has been suggested by writers who deal with problems of government that the presence of this constitutional provision in the federal and most state constitutions and the broad scope that has been by judicial interpretation given to it has some causal relation to the great number of crimes in this country or the inefficiency of the machinery for detection and punishment thereof.

This court has never carried the construction of this provision of the constitution so far as to merit the criticism of these publicists regarding the general judicial treatment of the clause in question. The voluntary testimony of a party accused of crime given on his'preliminary examination may foe put in evidence against him by-the state on his trial. State v. Glass, 50 Wis. 218, 6 N. W. 500. The right to avail oneself of this privilege by- refusal to answer is personal to the accused, and he himself must assert it. Ingalls v. State, 48 Wis. 647, 4 N. W. 785. Evidence voluntarily given by the accused at a coroner’s inquest is admissible *30against him. Schoeffler v. State, 3 Wis. 823. Persons who have once testified to incriminating matters without asserting their privilege may upon a second or a further examination assert the privilege against second or further disclosure. Emery v. State, 101 Wis. 627, 78 N. W. 145. It is proper for the judge to inform a witness of his right to refuse to answer, and under some circumstances the judge is bound to do so. Id. But under ordinary circumstances, where no statute requires it and where the witness is possessed of ordinary intelligence and is under ño duress, even when the questions are searching and inquisitorial in character, there is no duty upon the part of the questioner or upon the part of the tribunal holding the inquiry to inform the witness of his constitutional privilege. To say there is such duty in a case of that kind is to add to the. constitutional requirement. The cases of Dickerson v. State, 48 Wis. 288, 4 N. W. 321; Mack v. State, 48 Wis. 271, 4 N. W. 449; and State v. Glass, supra, support this conclusion, for there the witnesses were apparently not instructed by the examining magistrate or by the coroner respecting this constitutional privilege. In the absence of such instruction they gave incriminating testimony under oath upon interrogatories, and this testimony was held to have been afterward properly received in evidence against each. These cases are therefore in line with State v. Duncan, 78 Vt. 364, 63 Atl. 225, and Regina v. Coote, 12 Cox, Crim. Cas. 557. Therefore in the instant case there was no duty resting upon the state fire marshal to first advise the accused of his constitutional privilege in order to make the incriminating answers of the latter competent evidence against himself. It seems to be conceded that ch. 228, Laws of 1907, as amended by ch. 211, Laws of 1909, is unconstitutional in so far as it attempts to confer the judicial power of issuing subpoenas duces tecum and punishing for contempt upon the state fire marshal, ’and the concession is apparently well made. Gough v. Dorsey, 27 Wis. 119; Van Slyke v. *31Trempealeau Co. F. Mut. F. Ins. Co. 39 Wis. 390; Matter of Sims, 54 Kan. 1, 37 Pac. 135; Whitcomb's Case, 120 Mass. 118. But other provisions of these statutes are not so dependent upon the invalid portions thereof that the whole act must fall. Such subpoenas may still be issued by any of the judicial officers mentioned in sec. 4053, Stats., returnable before the state fire marshal, and a very effective investigation so carried on. The state fire marshal is therefore a ministerial officer of the state authorized to make investigations, and under no greater duty to inform persons interrogated by him or under his directions of their constitutional privilege of refusing to make incriminating answers or produce incriminating evidence than is the coroner or an examining magistrate. The mere fact that he was clothed with apparent but not real authority to punish for contempt and to compel the attendance of witnesses and compel their answers makes no difference if the witness failed to claim his privilege and if no actual coercion was employed. The examination returned to this court and preserved in the bill of exceptions shows for the most part no coercion. Some questions the accused refused to answer upon other grounds, and as to some questions the examiner employed argument to induce answers, but in no case did the accused claim his constitutional privilege. It may be that a few answers of the witness will be held inadmissible upon the trial because not a voluntary confession, but this is another and a different question.

The constitutional rights of the citizen against being compelled to incriminate himself are amply protected by upholding him in his refusal to give such evidence, and by rejecting the incriminating evidence which he is ordered or compelled to give notwithstanding his refusal, when this evidence is offered against him. Cases may arise, it is true, in which the witness claimed his privilege, the claim was denied and he testified, and this testimony so given furnished the only means by which other testimony upon which his conviction *32was procured was discovered. Tbis is ratber a fanciful condition, but its occurrence is possible. In sucb case, in order to exclude tbe testimony so discovered, tbe accused must show that it was discovered in tbis way. Upon a motion to quasb an information because based upon incriminating answers extorted from tbe accused and upon other facts discovered only through means of these' incriminating answers, tbe burden is upon the party moving to quasb tbe information to make tbis -appear. It does not appear in tbe instant case, ratber tbe contrary. It is not necessary to tbe protection of tbe accused in bis constitutional rights that tbe information be quashed in tbis case. Tbe accused, if guilty, may be convicted upon bis own admissions voluntarily made in tbe examination before tbe state fire marshal or upon other evidence tbe discovery of which is not necessarily due to any self-incriminating and forced answers of tbe accused. All tbe rights of accused can be taken care of by rulings upon evidence during tbe trial. Tbe learned circuit court erred, in quashing tbe information upon motion of tbe accused.

Mention was made upon tbe argument of tbe fact, which appears also from tbe bill of exceptions, that tbe prosecution for conspiracy was nolled as against Smeaton after tbe information was quashed upon motion of Lloyd. Tbis affords no reason for affirming tbe order of the court below, because, while it requires two or more persons to commit tbe offense of conspiracy, one of these may be tried and prosecuted alone for the offense. Casper v. State, 47 Wis. 535, 2 N. W. 1117; People v. Olcott, 3 Johns. Cas. 512; People v. Richards, 1 Mich. 216, 51 Am. Dec. 75 and note; State v. Jackson, 7 S. C. 283, 24 Am. Rep. 476; People v. Tweed, 5 Hun, 382; Hutchins v. Hutchins, 7 Hill (N. Y.) 104.

It follows that tbe order in question must be reversed, and tbe cause remanded for further proceedings according to law.

By the Oowt. — It is so ordered.

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