Bryant v. State

13 S.E.2d 820, 191 Ga. 686, 1941 Ga. LEXIS 376
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedJanuary 15, 1941
Docket13552.
StatusPublished
Cited by109 cases

This text of 13 S.E.2d 820 (Bryant v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bryant v. State, 13 S.E.2d 820, 191 Ga. 686, 1941 Ga. LEXIS 376 (Ga. 1941).

Opinion

1. "To make a confession admissible, it must have been made voluntarily, without being induced by another, by the slightest hope of benefit or remotest fear of injury." Code, § 38-411. Before an alleged confession or incriminatory statement can properly be admitted in evidence, there must be a prima facie showing made by the State or elicited by the court that it was freely and voluntarily made, without hope of reward or fear of punishment. If such preliminary proof fails to meet the requirements of the statute, it is the duty of the court to exclude the confession from evidence. Where such proper preliminary proof has been made, the confession or incriminatory statement becomes admissible; but the defendant is privileged to attack such showing by proof that the confession or incriminatory statement was not voluntary or was made with hope of benefit or fear of injury. In that event, the question as to the voluntary character of the confession becomes one for the jury.

(a) In the instant case, with respect to the alleged original confessions made to the officers — since such a prima facie showing was made by the unequivocal testimony of the officers, and since the proved facts and attendant circumstances elicited by the defendant on cross-examination of these witnesses in no wise directly disputed their testimony, but at most merely presented an issue to be resolved by the jury as to whether or not the evidence as to the surrounding facts and circumstances thus elicited could be taken to impair the unequivocal preliminary proof, the court did not err in admitting the confessions made to the officers, or in refusing to exclude them on subsequent motion, but properly left it to the jury to determine whether or not such confessions and incriminatory statements were in fact voluntarily made.

(b) With respect to the subsequent confessions and incriminatory statements made to other persons, it is the rule that the question as to whether or not such subsequent confessions and statements, themselves wholly unexceptionable, were made under previous undue influences still operating on the mind of the defendant, is not a question of law for the court, but one of fact for the jury. Accordingly, as to these subsequent confessions and incriminatory statements, the court did not err in refusing to exclude such evidence and in submitting to the jury the question as to its voluntary character.

(c) Although the facts in evidence will be examined to determine whether or not they show a conviction by use of a coerced confession, in violation of the due-process clause of the 14th amendment to the Federal constitution (Code, § 1-815), or the provision in the State constitution against self-incrimination (art. 1, sec. 1, par. 6; Code, § 2-106), when such a question has been properly raised and presented, yet, where a prima facie case as to the voluntary character of the confession has been made, it is not within the power of this court to usurp the function of the jury in passing upon an issue, and to override their verdict supported by legal evidence and upheld by the judge in refusing a new trial, or to reverse a ruling admitting the confession in evidence, unless the evidence requires but one rational inference, that the confession was *Page 687 unlawfully obtained. Under this and the preceding rulings, the judge did not err in refusing to exclude from evidence the alleged illegal confessions and incriminatory statements of the defendant.

2. The court did not err in excluding from evidence accusations and sentences in a city court against a witness for the State, who on cross-examination testified that he had never been in jail on any charge before the one on which he was then serving a sentence: first, since the offenses did not involve moral turpitude, the accusations were inadmissible to prove general bad character; and second, since testimony merely that a witness has been in jail is irrelevant (Beach v. State, 138 Ga. 265, 75 S.E. 139; Whitley v. State, 188 Ga. 177, 179 (5), 180, 3 S.E.2d 588, and cit.; Reid v. State, 49 Ga. App. 429, 176 S.E. 100, and cit.), and "a witness may not be impeached by simply showing that he had made a statement not material to the issue," such evidence was inadmissible to controvert the witness. Green v. State, 43 Ga. 368 (2); Mitchum v. State, 11 Ga. 615 (8); Clarke v. State, 41 Ga. App. 556 (153 S.E. 616); Poland v. Osborne Lumber Co., 37 Ga. App. 212 (139 S.E. 734).

3. The court did not err in excluding testimony of two witnesses, as to whether in their investigations at pawnshops they had found "any trace" of the pistol with which the alleged homicide had been committed, and whether they had found "where [the pistol] came from there," since, the weapon being in the possession of police officers at the time of the investigation, the expected answers of the witnesses would have rested upon hearsay.

4. There was no error in excluding, as hearsay, the testimony of a newspaper reporter as to what the solicitor-general told him "of the solution of the . . killing at that time." The expected answer was inadmissible also as expressing a mere opinion that some one of three men then under arrest had fired the fatal shot, the defendant not then being in custody. See Green v. State 112 Ga. 638 (37 S.E. 885), and cit.; Woolfolk v. State, 81 Ga. 551 (8 S.E. 724); Tiller v. State, 96 Ga. 430 (3), 433 (23 S.E. 825); Beach v. State, 138 Ga. 265 (2) (supra).

5. The court properly refused permission to counsel for the defendant to read and comment, in his final argument to the jury, on an extract from a book entitled "Convicting the Innocent," relating to other criminal cases which involved the innocence or sanity of other accused persons, the methods of obtaining confessions in those cases, and the report of a Federal commission on lawlessness in law enforcement, together with facts in those extraneous cases and investigations, and the opinions of the author and physicians as to such matters. See Jones v. State, 166 Ga. 251, 254 (142 S.E. 866); Quattlebaum v. State, 119 Ga. 433 (46 S.E. 677); Johnson v. State, 95 Ga. 685 (22 S.E. 694).

6. The use of the word "onus" instead of burden in stating that it was for the accused to establish his contention of alibi, "not beyond a reasonable doubt, but to the reasonable satisfaction of the jury," could not reasonably have misled them, especially in view of the immediately succeeding explanation, that "if the evidence as to alibi . . has established to your reasonable satisfaction that the defendant was elsewhere *Page 688

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Bluebook (online)
13 S.E.2d 820, 191 Ga. 686, 1941 Ga. LEXIS 376, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bryant-v-state-ga-1941.