HARRY L. WASHBURN V. STATE
No. 28,338
Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas
October 3, 1956
State‘s Motion for Rehearing Overruled February 27, 1957. State‘s Second Motion for Rehearing Overruled (Without Written Opinion) March 27, 1957.
The Governor of Texas issued his Executive Warrant, regular on its face, ordering the arrest of appellant and his delivery to the named agent of the state of California, to be returned to that state to answer a criminal complaint there pending against him.
Application for habeas corpus was filed and granted and at the hearing the Executive Warrant under which appellant was arrested was offered in evidence.
This appeal is from the order remanding appellant to custody for extradition to California and presents the following contentions: No evidence was presented (1) disclosing a requisition by the demanding state, as provided for in Sec. 3 of
Under the rule re-announced in Ex parte Hoover, No. 28,797, this day decided, (page 251, this volume) we overrule the contention that the respondent was under the burden of proving the identity of the relator or of offering in evidence the requisition referred to in the Executive Warrant.
The other evidence introduced at the hearing was not such as destroyed the prima facie case made by the introduction of the Executive Warrant, regular on its face, issued by the Governor of Texas.
The judgment is affirmed.
Tom Moore, District Attorney, Waco, Aubrey D. Stokes, District Attorney, San Angelo, Runge, Hardeman, Smith & Foy, Special Prosecutors, San Angelo, and Leon Douglas, State‘s Attorney, Austin, for the state.
BELCHER, Judge.
The conviction is for murder; the punishment, life imprisonment.
In view of our disposition of the case a statement of the facts is not deemed necessary.
Appellant contends that the trial court erred in permitting the state to call Andrew H. Nelson, a co-defendant, to the witness stand in the presence of the jury and require him to claim his privilege against self-incrimination and refuse to testify. He also insists that error was again committed in allowing the state to propound questions to said witness in the presence of the jury which pointed to his connection with the appellant in the commission of the offense here charged.
The state takes the position that no error is shown on the
The state‘s contention in this respect cannot be sustained because the record shows only an offer of immunity by the prosecuting attorney. It fails to show the approval of the trial court. Proof of this additional fact is essential in order to establish immunity.
At the beginning of the trial Woodie Zachry, an attorney, informed the trial judge that he represented Andrew H. Nelson, that he had been summoned as a witness for the state, and that he had advised him not to testify. When Andrew H. Nelson was called as a witness Mr. Zachry stated to the court that Nelson was a co-indictee in the case and he objected to him testifying on the ground that it might incriminate him. In response to Mr. Zachry‘s statement the prosecuting attorney said that the state was prepared to offer Andrew H. Nelson immunity from any prosecution involving the transaction in this case, but the record fails to show that the trial court consented to or approved this offer.
When the examination of Andrew H. Nelson as a witness began, he stated his name and then said, “I refuse to answer any questions.” In answer to the next question he stated that he refused to answer on the ground that it might tend to incriminate him.
Following the witness Nelson‘s plea of self-incrimination and the state‘s offer of immunity the state sought to further interrogate him. Appellant objected to the state asking him any questions in the presence of the jury on the ground that it was by innuendo placing matters in the record that it could not show by him directly, which was overruled. Appellant requested the court to retire the jury in order to determine the nature of the questions which the state sought to propound to him and such request was refused. The questions then propounded in the presence of the jury pointed to and inquired about the witness Nelson‘s association and participation with the appellant in making plans and preparations to kill the deceased‘s husband. Among such questions he was asked about the purchase of dynamite while accompanied by the appellant, their testing of it by exploding a portion of it by the use of electric wires at-
At the conclusion of the state‘s interrogation of the witness Nelson the court at the request of the appellant instructed the jury not to consider any of said questions for any purpose. Appellant then moved for a mistrial on the ground that the injury to him could not be removed by the court‘s instruction, which motion was denied. The state then offered evidence over appellant‘s objection which corroborated and supported the facts and circumstances embraced in a number of the questions propounded to the witness Nelson.
Testimony was offered that Andrew H. Nelson was then under indictment as an accomplice to the murder of Mrs. Helen Harris Weaver, the victim of the homicide in this case.
The trial court committed error in permitting the state to call the witness Nelson, a co-defendant, to the stand and require him to claim his privilege against self-incrimination and refuse to testify in the presence of the jury. Such refusal to testify was prejudicial because it could be used as an incriminating fact against the appellant.
18 Texas Jur. 238, Sec. 142, reads as follows:
“Unless the witness has agreed to turn state‘s evidence, the prosecution ought not to place him on the stand; to do so and wring from him a refusal to testify, affording to the jury an opportunity to consider the refusal as a circumstance of guilt, has been said to be ‘certainly prejudicial.’ ”
In Rice v. State, 123 Texas Cr. Rep. 326, 59 S.W. 2d 119, 121, we said:
“By a proper bill of exception it is shown that H. E. Bell,
” ‘Every man has a constitutional right to decline to give testimony which would incriminate him, and it is held that, if he declines to testify, no inference of guilt may be drawn from his refusal to answer. Owen v. State, 7 Texas App. 334. Certainly, if no inference of guilt can be indulged against the man who declines to testify, none could be drawn as to the guilt of a codefendant. Appellant should not in any way be held accountable for the refusal of McComber to give testimony. If the state‘s purpose in putting this witness on the stand was to compel or invite his refusal to testify, in order to use this as an incriminating fact against appellant, the state was guilty of an injustice.’ ”
See, also, Garland v. State, 51 Texas Cr. Rep. 643, 104 S.W. 898; Messenger v. State, 81 Texas Cr. Rep. 465, 198 S.W. 330; Rice v. State, 121 Texas Cr. Rep. 68, 51 S.W. 2d 364; Lackey v. State, 148 Texas Cr. Rep. 623, 190 S.W. 2d 364; Johnson v. State, 158 Texas Cr. Rep. 6, 252 S.W. 2d 462.
Further, the nature of the matters embodied in the questions propounded to the witness Nelson conveyed to the jury in the nature of testimony the information and knowledge apparently possessed by him of the killing. These questions together with the state‘s testimony which corroborated and supported the matters embraced in a number of them emphasized and aggravates the witness Nelson‘s refusal to testify before
The complaints as to the indictment herein have been given careful study and are, as we see them, without merit.
Other contentions presented by the appellant will not be discussed as they will not likely arise on another trial.
For the errors pointed out the judgment is reversed and the cause is remanded.
Opinion approved by the Court.
WOODLEY, J., not participating.
ON STATE‘S MOTION FOR REHEARING
DAVIDSON, Judge.
The contentions urged in the motion for rehearing by the state have given us much concern.
The state stresses that this record does not affirmatively show that the witness Nelson was a co-indictee with appellant in this case and therefore was not in position to claim self-incrimination. In that connection it is urged that the proof relied upon to show that Nelson was a co-indictee was only a statement by counsel in his objection to the questions propounded by state‘s counsel to the witness.
As to this matter, note is taken of the fact that the wife of the witness Nelson testified as follows:
(“Q. You are the wife of Andrew H. Nelson?) A. I am.
(“Q. And he stands charged by indictment in San Angelo
It is insisted that this testimony amounts to only an expression of an opinion and conclusion by the witness. The correctness of the state‘s contention in this respect need not be determined, for we have concluded that the questions propounded by the state to the witness Nelson all strongly tended to show that Nelson was, in fact, criminally connected with the murder accusation.
Taken in connection with the testimony of the wife, these questions were sufficient to warrant the unchallenged conclusion that the witness Nelson was a co-indictee with the appellant.
As was pointed out in the original opinion, after it was made clear that the witness Nelson refused to testify as a witness upon the grounds of self-incrimination state‘s counsel continued his interrogation of the witness and thereby, in much detail by the questions propounded, got before the jury the inference not only that Nelson was an accomplice but that appellant was guilty with him in the commission of the offense charged.
The questions so propounded effectually suggested that not only was Nelson guilty but also that appellant was guilty of participation in the murder of the deceased.
When the showing was properly made that Nelson could not be compelled to testify as a witness in the case because of his claim of self-incrimination, the state—under the authorities cited in our original opinion—should not have been endeavored, by further questioning of the witness, to get before the jury facts, circumstances, or conditions which it could not prove by the witness, himself.
The fact that the trial court, after the questions had been propounded and the injury done, withdrew the questions from the jury‘s consideration tends strongly to indicate that the questioning of the witness was wrong in the first instance.
To hold that the conduct of the state in propounding the questions to the witness Nelson was not error would require that we overrule the cases holding to the contrary.
The state‘s motion for rehearing is overruled.
(WOODLEY, Judge, not participating.)
