Lead Opinion
Joseph Hughes, convicted of felony murder by a New York court in 1958, has sought federal habeas corpus because of the receipt in evidence at his trial of two written confessions alleged to have been involuntary.
The indictment was for causing the death of Spinaci, the proprietor of an Italian delicatessen store, who was wounded during a robbery in Buffalo, N. Y., and later died. No objection was made to the admission of the confessions at the trial. The jury convicted of felony murder with a recommendation of life imprisonment; the judge sentenced Hughes to death. On appeal to the New York Court of Appeals the question of the voluntariness of the confessions was raised for the first time; the court affirmed without opinion, People v. Hughes,
After the decision in Jackson v. Denno,
Hughes was arrested on November 21, 1957, the day after the robbery, and was taken directly to Buffalo Police Headquarters. He is a Negro, then twenty-one years old, with only a fifth-grade education; he had been sent three times to reform school. His home was in Jamestown, N. Y.; he had been in Buffalo about a week and was unemployed. At the police station he was questioned intermittently by three to five police officers for a period of not more than an hour. Four officers then took him to a hospital where Spinaci was in serious condition, sustained by tubes and plasma bottles. Sparcino, an Italian-speаking ambulance driver, consulted with the wounded man but apparently was unable to obtain a positive identification; an episode occurred during the hospital visit about which we shall have more to say below. Hughes was then returned to police headquarters between midnight and 12:20 A.M. on November 22 and was questioned by the District Attorney оf Erie County; the questions and answers were taken down by typewriter and signed. The questions, which were asked slowly so that the typist could record the conversation,
Arraignments in Buffalo were customarily held commencing at 2 P.M. Hughes was again questioned about 2:15 P.M. by a desk lieutenant. A short narrative statement was taken, which Hughes signed about 2:55 P.M. He was then arraigned on a charge of robbery.
Hughes testified that, in the course of his, initial questioning before being taken to the hospital, and again after his return, he requested and was denied the use of a telephone to call his sister in Jamestown, to ask her to try to get a lawyer for him. Four police officers testified they did not recollect any such request; the testimony of two went further, indicating belief that no request had been made. One officer said the practicе was to allow a person under interrogation to make one telephone call, but another was not sure that this applied to long-distance calls.
The state judge concluded that “the People have sustained the burden of proof on the issue of voluntariness, and the proof establishes beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant’s will was not overborne and that the statements * * * were voluntarily and freely given.” Accordingly he denied coram nobis. This ruling was affirmed without opinion, People v. Hughes,
Noting that all these actions by the state courts ante-dated Miranda v. Arizona,
Hughes manifests no desire to resort again to the New York courts. This is understandable since he would have scant prospect of success. New York has not chosen “to effectuate * * stricter standards” than those laid down in Escobedo v. Illinois,
If the case could be properly disposed of upon the points on which it was argued, we would nevertheless affirm the denial of the writ. Hughes makes none of the attacks on the factual determinations of the state court that are enumerated in 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d), which in the main codified Townsend v. Sain,
The legal issue, as the Supreme Court has frequently instructed, “is whether the defendant’s will was overborne at the time he confessed.” See Lynumn v. Illinois,
The bases urged upon us to show that Hughes’ “will was overborne” are the lack of warnings and the alleged refusal to allow him to telephone his sister. While the Court has made clear that failure tо advise the accused of his privilege against self-incrimination is a factor to be taken into account in passing on the voluntariness of a confession, this alone can hardly be sufficient. If it were, the promise of Johnson v. New Jersey that Escobedo and Miranda would not be applied so as to “seriously disrupt the administration of our criminal laws,”
What we find troubling about the case is another point which is disclosed by the record but has not been fully developed. Sparcino testified at the trial, without objection, that during the confrontation at the hospital, “I asked Mr. Hughes if he would point the gun at Mr. Spinaci, and asked him if he would repeat what he said in the store, and he said, ‘This is it. Scoop it up.’ ” Cross and redirect examination brought out that two or three minutes later Hughes looked at the gun and said “What are you doing to me ?”
What seems not to have been sufficiently appreciated is how far Hughes’ statement in course of the reenactment differed from the common police practice of instructing a prisoner to utter in thе presence of a witness words recalled by the latter as having been spoken at the scene of the crime, see United States v. Wade,
The present record is insufficient for a satisfactory determination whether the hospital statement was involuntary.
We therefore reverse the order denying the writ and remand the case with instructions to Judge Foley to hold an evidentiary hearing as to the episode in the hоspital room and then to render an appropriate judgment.
The court is indebted to Peter S. Paine, Jr., Esq., for his services as assigned counsel on Hughes’ behalf.
Notes
. Since the state courts have entertained Hughes’ federal claim, we have no occasion to consider the effect of the lack of objection at triаl. See Irvin v. Doud,
. The attorney who represented the defendant on appeal testified that when he interviewed Hughes in Sing Sing Prison, Hughes told him he had asked to call his sister in Jamestown but had been told the Police Department did not allow long distance calls.
. Appárently more was said, but the trial judge limited the testimony to these two statements.
. In the statement taken by the District Attorney, Hughes described the episode in the store by saying that when Spinaci had turned to get some article, Hughes drew his gun and said “Just the cash.” Spinaci threw a bottle, and Hughes fired.
. Of course the hospital statement would also have been inadmissible, but there is no need for considering this.
Concurrence Opinion
(concurring):
Although I acquiesce in the rеmand to Judge Foley, I do so only on the theory that all court decisions should be based upon as full and accurate factual foundations as possible. Referring to the hospital room incident, Judge Foley himself said: “This incident may need further legal exploration and explanation.”
As Judge Foley has said: “In the past we [the district сourt] reviewed the original trial record to fulfill the duty of independent examination of the involuntariness claim.” His fear that “now there will be necessity to canvass and examine both the trial record and the post conviction hearing record” is probably well-founded.
Judge Foley’s thought “that the State Courts should have first chance tо review alleged errors under new rulings, and the opportunity to recanvass in the interests of comity should be afforded even if there is doubt reconsideration will be entertained” is in accord with my views. And were it assured that federal courts would evidence that respect for the decisions of the highest State courts that comity should сommand, I would follow Judge Foley’s “without prejudice” decision and affirm. However, as he so well knows, there would be no finality were this course pursued and he would only be faced with the same problem at a later date.
I do not agree with my colleagues’ suppositions as to the proof. From the present record, I find no basis for the assumption that Hughes did not understand what he was being asked or as to what was the common police practice of instructing prisoners.
Finally, since the whole point of the remand is to develop the facts and permit the judge to decide the question of voluntariness in the light of such facts, I do not concur in the majority’s infеrences as to what Hughes might or might not have thought under the' circumstances. Hughes may have been “young,” “uneducated,” the town may have been “strange,” silence warnings may not have been given, and his long-distance phone call request been denied, but these facts per se do not “require a conclusion that a confession was involuntary” or negate voluntariness. As to the incident in the hospital room, I do not give it the significance which my colleagues seem to attach to it. Even as to this incident they say that there was no force or threat and that Sparcino “used words of request and not of command.” These, of course, are factors to be considered but again by the trial court on remand — not by us.
