Brister v. State

26 Ala. 107
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedJanuary 15, 1855
StatusPublished
Cited by88 cases

This text of 26 Ala. 107 (Brister v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brister v. State, 26 Ala. 107 (Ala. 1855).

Opinion

RICE, J.

— The indictment is for a capital offence, and was found in the Circuit Court of Perry, against the plaintiffs in error and divers other slaves. The trial of the plaintiffs in error, on their application, was removed to the Circuit Court of Bibb, under the provisions of sections 3608 to 3616 inclusive of the Code. These plaintiffs have been in actual confinement ever since the indictment was found. When they were brought into the Circuit Court of Bibb for trial, they objected to going to trial, “ on the ground that a copy of the indictment had not been served on them or their counsel two entire days before the trial.” But it being shown to the court that a copy of the copy of the indictment set out in the transcript sent up by the clerk of the Circuit Court of Perry was delivered by the clerk of the Circuit Court of Bibb to the counsel of the plaintiffs in error at the preceding term of the Circuit Court of Bibb, the court overruled the objection, and the plaintiffs in error excepted.

If the ground of objection had been, that a copy of the indictment had not been delivered to them two entire days before the trial, and no other proof of delivery had been adduced than that above shown, we should, without hesitation, have reversed the judgment; for the right is conferred, by section 3576 of the Code, upon every person indicted for a capital offence, if he is in actual confinement, to have a copy of the indictment delivered to him at least two entire days before the day appointed for his trial.—The United States v. Curtis, 4 Mason’s Rep. 232; Smith’s Com. on Stat., pp. 685-6. But our duties as a court for the correction of errors committed by inferior tribunals aro defined by law, and confine our examination to the action of the court below upon the objection as there made. We cannot allow to the prisoners the benefit [126]*126of an objection they did not make below, and of which they deprived themselves by the objection which they did make.

The rule is, that we can indulge no presumption adverse to the correctness of the action of the primary court, but must make all intendments in its favor not inconsistent with the record.—Morris v. The State, 25 Ala. 57. We cannot, therefore, know or say that the court below would not have sustained the objection, if the ground of objection had been that a copy of the indictment had not been delivered to the prisoners two entire days before the trial.. The form in which the ground of objection was stated — “ that a copy of the indictment had not been served on them or their counsel two entire days before the trial” — was treated by the court below as a waiver of the right of the prisoners to have a copy delivered to them, if a copy had been served on their counsel two entire days before- the trial; and therefore, on proof being made to the court that a copy had been delivered to their counsel by the clerk more than two days before the trial, the court overruled the objection as made by the prisoners. We cannot decide that the court erred in this. JYon constat, the State might have proved a delivery of a copy to the prisoners themselves, more than two days before the trial, if the objection had been put on the ground that a copy had not so been delivered to them. They relieved the State from the necessity of making such proof, by placing their objection on the ground selected by themselves. — 93d Maxim in Law Grammar, p. 76.

When the trial of such a case as this is removed, as this was, section 3615 of the Code provides, that the prisoners “ must be tried on the copy of the indictment ”, certified in the manner directed by section 3613. In such case, the copy so certified becomes so far an original, in the court to which the trial is removed, that a copy of such copy when delivered to the prisoners will have all the effect that a delivery of a copy of the actual original could have.

2. The transcript furnished by the clerk of the Circuit Court of Perry in this case, to the Circuit Court of Bibb, duly certifies a copy of the caption of the grand jury, the indictment, with the endorsements thereon, and all entries relating thereto, and the order for the removal of the trial, and [127]*127all other orders in the canse, as required by section 8613 of the Code. There was no error in overruling the objection made by the prisoners to going to trial before the Circuit Court of Bibb on said transcript.

3. In Hawkins v. The State, 9 Ala. 137, it was decided, that if there is a joint indictment, and joint, trial of several persons, each may challenge the whole number of jurors to which he would be entitled if tried separately ; and that no man ought to sit as a juror, upon a joint trial, who was not, in the estimation of all the prisoners, indifferent as to all. This decision is. sustained by high authority, and is fully approved by us. There is, therefore, no error in the rulings of the court below as to the challenge of jurors.

4. It has been long settled in England, that in a criminal prosecution, the crown officer is not bound to join in- a demurrer to evidence tendered by the defendant.—1 Chitty’s Grim. Law 623 (mar. page). The right of a prisoner to compel the State to join in a demurrer to evidence is not given by the common law, or by statute, or by the constitution; and we hold, (as the General Court of Virginia has heretofore held,) that neither the State nor the party accused can be permitted, except by mutual consent, to withdraw, by a demurrer to evidence, the trial of the cause from the jury to the court. Doss v. The Commonwealth, 1 Gratt. R. 557.

5. Where the court commits an error by admitting evidence, which, at the time of its admission, was not admissible, such error is cured, if the record affirmatively shows that the evidence so admitted became admissible by reason of other testimony subsequently introduced.— Lawson v. The State, 20 Ala. 65. This principle disposes of the several exceptions taken by the prisoners during their cross-examination of the witness Pool, — provided the confessions of the prisoners (if proved literally) do not appear to us to have been inadmissible confessions; which is a matter we shall examine as soon as we add a few words relating to the exceptions last above named.

The record shows, that, “ on re-examination, said Pool testified, that he had testified to the substance of all that each of said defendants stated on that occasion, but that they may have stated something that he did not recollect.” This was as much as the law exacted, to entitle him as a witness to [128]*128testify to any voluntary and admissible confessions of tbe prisoners; and all the exceptions taken to the testimony of Pool are unavailing to the prisoners, unless the record shows us that the confessions of the prisoners are such as the law rejects.

6. We how proceed to the consideration of the important subject of confessions. We shall treat it with becoming caution, and shall confine ourselves as much as possible to the language used by what we deem the highest and best authorities on the subject.

In the first place, we shall state the general rules which should govern the judge in deciding upon the competency — * the admissibility of confessions.

Before any confession can be received in evidence, in a criminal case, it must be shown that it was voluntary — that is, that it was made without the appliances of hope or fear, by any other person.

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Bluebook (online)
26 Ala. 107, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brister-v-state-ala-1855.