Biggs v. State

167 N.E. 129, 201 Ind. 200, 64 A.L.R. 1085, 1929 Ind. LEXIS 25
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedJune 25, 1929
DocketNo. 24,417.
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 167 N.E. 129 (Biggs v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Biggs v. State, 167 N.E. 129, 201 Ind. 200, 64 A.L.R. 1085, 1929 Ind. LEXIS 25 (Ind. 1929).

Opinion

Myers, J.

Appellant, in the court below, by affidavit, was charged with feloniously stealing “three bushels of white field- corn” of the value of $2.40. §2452 Burns 1926; Acts 1905 p. 584, §378, as amended, Acts 1907 p. 86. He was tried before a jury, convicted and sentenced by the court to imprisonment in the State Prison for a period of from one to eight years, fined $1 and disfranchised for one year. From that judgment he appealed, and in this court has assigned as errors the action of the Starke Circuit Court in overruling his motion to require the sheriff of that county to return to him his *202 shoes taken from him .by force, and to suppress their use as evidence at the trial, and in overruling his motion for a new trial. The ruling on the motion to suppress the evidence is also assigned as one of the causes for a new trial. Evidence was heard in support of the motion, and from a special bill of exceptions we learn that on June 2, 1923, appellant was arrested and lodged in the Starke County jail. Thereupon a search of the person of the accused was made by the sheriff, who requested appellant to take off his shoes, which he did, but replaced them on his feet contrary to the sheriff’s demand that they be delivered to him. The sheriff then threatened to blackjack appellant, but when this threat failed of its purpose, the sheriff called to his assistance four other men, three of whom, including the sheriff, held the accused while the other two removed his shoes. The motion for the return of the shoes and to suppress was overruled, and, over appellant’s objections, they were introduced in evidence at the trial.

This being a criminal case, appellant makes the point that, under the circumstances narrated, the search of his person and the seizure of his shoeswereunreasonable, and, by their admission in evidence, he was compelled to be a witness against himself in violation of his constitutional guaranteed rights under the Fourth and Fifth Amendments of our federal Constitution, and Art. 1, §§11 and 14, Constitution of Indiana.

(1) Looking to the foregoing amendments, it must be kept in mind that the first 10, including the fourth and fifth, are not concerned with state action (Minn. & St. Louis R. R. Co. v. Bombolis [1916], 241 U. S. 211, 217, 36 Sup. Ct. 595, 60 L. Ed. 961, Ann. Cas. 1916E 505, L. R. A. 1917A 86), and since the question we are called upon to answer involves the acts of a local officer alone, the Fourth and Fifth Amend *203 ments are not applicable to the facts of this case, and no further attention need be given them.

(2) As to the state constitutional inhibitions, appellee is relying upon a statement of the sheriff at the trial to the effect that appellant voluntarily surrendered his shoes. This testimony is so extravagantly out of line with other statements of the witness, and the testimony of all the other witnesses who assisted him in the shoe-removal incident, that there is no escape from the conclusion that appellant's shoes were taken from him by force. But even if it be conceded that appellant, on demand of the officer, surrendered his shoes to him, such action on the part of appellant would not amount to a waiver of his constitutional protection. Meno v. State (1925), 197 Ind. 16, 164 N. E. 93. He had, however, been lawfully arrested and was in the Starke County jail at the time his shoes were forcibly taken from him at the* command of the sheriff.

Tracks made by persons near the Ream corn crib, from which, in the opinion of witnesses, corn had been taken, had a distinctive appearance and corresponded with the peculiar features of the shoe tracks made by appellant in the presence of those engaged in locating the thief. Under these circumstances and the fact that appellant had been arrested, we have no hesitancy in holding that the sheriff was justified in searching the person of appellant without a search warrant. Such action on the part of the officer in charge of the prisoner must be allowed, not only as a precaution against the presence of weapons or instruments of escape, but also for any articles which would tend to connect the accused with the crime alleged to have been committed. Ha verstick v. State (1925), 196 Ind. 145, 147 N. E. 625; Thornton v. State (1903), 117 Wis. 338, 93 N. W. 1107, 98 Am. St. 924; Myers v. State (1894), 97 Ga. 76, *204 25 S. E. 252; State v. Graham (1876), 74 N. C. 646, 21 Am. Rep. 493.

In the instant case the shoes in question were in plain view of the sheriff, who was advised as to the similarity of the tracks made by them and the ones made near the Ream crib. An article obviously in sight excludes the thought of a search for it. Hence we conclude that no search warrant was necessary for authority of the sheriff to search the person of the prisoner.

Now, as to the claim that appellant was “compelled to testify against himself.” If appellant had been compelled to do or say anything out of court that might tend to connect him with the crime, there would be room for the insistence that he was compelled to testify against himself and a basis for the asserted violation of our state Constitution. Cooper v. State (1888), 86 Ala. 610, 6 So. 110, 4 L. R. A. 766, 11 Am. St. 84. In the instant case, it was the shoes and not the accused that testified. It was the distinguishable feature of the heels of the shoes, especially the heel of the right shoe, observable by inspection, that gave evidence connecting the wearer with having made the tracks at or near the crib from which the corn was alleged to have been stolen. Beyond question, it was the shoes alone that could be considered as furnishing the link in the chain of circumstances connecting appellant with the larceny. The shoes were admissible in evidence and the value or weight to be given it was first for the jury in determining the facts, and second for the court in ruling on the motion for a new trial, when one of the causes assigned was insufficient evidence.

(3) Appellant insists that the court erred in giving of its own motion instruction No. 4, which told the jury that “if the state has proved that the corn described in the affidavit was stolen, and that such corn was, immediately after the larceny, found in the exclusive posses *205 sion of the defendant, then the law imposes upon him the burden of accounting for his possession and showing that such possession was innocently acquired, and that if he fails to do so or gives a false account of his possession, the presumption arises that he is the thief.”

It is true, as claimed by appellant, there was no evidence before the jury justifying this instruction. Corn alone was the subject of the present alleged larceny and none was found on the premises occupied by appellant. It affirmatively appears without contradiction that the alleged stolen corn was discovered a half mile distant from the home of the accused in the crib of his brother Abe Biggs.

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Bluebook (online)
167 N.E. 129, 201 Ind. 200, 64 A.L.R. 1085, 1929 Ind. LEXIS 25, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/biggs-v-state-ind-1929.