Cayson v. State
This text of 139 So. 2d 719 (Cayson v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court of Appeal of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
Jesse CAYSON and Doyle Cayson, Appellants,
v.
STATE of Florida, Appellee.
District Court of Appeal of Florida. First District.
*720 John S. Berry, Tampa, and R. Worth Moore, Tallahassee, for petitioners.
Richard W. Ervin, Atty. Gen., and Reeves Bowen, Asst. Atty. Gen., for appellee.
PER CURIAM.
We consider an application of appellants, Jesse Cayson and Doyle Cayson, filed March 12, 1962, for an order permitting them to file in the Circuit Court of Okaloosa County a petition for writ of error coram nobis.
The Caysons were indicted in the Circuit Court of Okaloosa County on a charge of murdering one Les Wilson, and in November, 1958, were convicted and sentenced to a term of life imprisonment in the state penitentiary. The judgment of conviction was affirmed by this court in February, 1960.[1]
The application under consideration is supported by three affidavits and two reports of an extra-judicial polygraph examination of appellants. We accord no legal effect to the latter. By the application, reports and supporting affidavits it is alleged that on August 25, 1961 eighteen months after the affirmance by this court of the judgment of conviction Mr. Thomas D. Beasley, the attorney who represented *721 the applicants at the trial and on the appeal, had a conversation with a newspaper reporter and the sister and brother-in-law of the applicants at the home of the latter at DeFuniak Springs, Florida, in the course of which Mr. Beasley made statements substantially as follows: That he, Beasley, was in possession of "new" and "direct" evidence concerning the shotgun slaying of Les Wilson; that he had knowledge of the same "long before the trial" of the Cayson brothers; that he became informed thereof by a client he was retained to defend in a case prior and unrelated to the trial of the Caysons; that he was given information by said client which implicated the client himself in said murder; that he refused to divulge the name of said client because he was bound by his "oath as a lawyer" not to disclose privileged communications between himself and his client; that upon being asked whether said client gave him a story matching that given by state witnesses during the trial of the Caysons in 1958, Beasley responded, "Entirely different"; that Beasley stated, on the basis of the information allegedly given to him by said undisclosed client, that the Caysons were not criminally implicated in the murder of Les Wilson; that upon being asked whether he believed there was any bribery of vital state witnesses in said murder trial, Beasley replied affirmatively, without stating the name of any person; that Beasley stated he believed someone (not identifying the person) had exerted influence upon this court to procure per curiam affirmance of the conviction; that Beasley stated he had knowledge of the shotgun used to kill Les Wilson; and that upon being asked if his unnamed client was "Johnnie Steele", Beasley replied, "I have no comment."
It is inappropriate to review in this proceeding the substantial evidence upon which the judgment of conviction was based or to dignify by extensive comment the vague statement attributed to Mr. Beasley, impugning the integrity of this court. We note that the affidavit of the newspaper reporter, one Duane Bradford, was made at Tampa, Florida, before Agnes M. Burress, a notary public, rather than before some proof-taking official at DeFuniak Springs, Florida, where the alleged conversation with Beasley is said to have taken place, and that said affidavit bears distinctive earmarks of having been framed by or under the scrutiny of an attorney at law. If such is a fact, the attorney would have been well advised to consider his obligation, as a member of the bar and officer of the court, to protect and defend the court and its judges against unwarranted, irresponsible, and inexact aspersions of the character mentioned, which might have been done by simply refusing to be associated with the preparation of such a document, much less participating therein. Any lawyer with a modicum of experience recognizes that pratings of the character stated are all too common in the mouths of some attorneys, negligible in number, who have failed to deliver some promised result in the trial of law suits, civil as well as criminal.
In view of our disposition of the application for writ of error coram nobis which turns on factors other than the alleged statement of Mr. Beasley directed toward this court, that phase of the affidavit of the newspaper reporter is immaterial to the result. We hope, of course, that Mr. Beasley did not make the statement attributed to him and that the affiant incorrectly construed whatever statement, if any, Mr. Beasley did make; but we emphasize that it is inconsequential whether he did or did not make it. The individual judges of this court know they were not subjected to any pressure whatever in the performance of their duty; and in any event, it is obvious that the judges have no means of defense against such vague and irresponsible mouthings than to so conduct themselves generally that the bench, bar, and public as a whole will give no credence to such. In regard to the fact that we handed down a per curiam affirmance of the conviction, suffice it to say that after *722 the record of the testimony produced at the trial had been meticulously examined by each participating member of this court and full and complete consideration given to all issues of law before this court and to the argument of counsel, there remained no doubt whatever as to the sufficiency of the evidence to support the conviction and the lack of reversible error. Although the facts were somewhat theatrical and such as to create an avid public interest, the appeal was devoid of any novel question of law indicating that a definitive opinion would contribute to the jurisprudence of this state. It is elemental that under such circumstances it is appropriate for an appellate court to render a per curiam affirmance as was done in this case. We found nothing then or now to remotely indicate that appellants did not have the services of competent, energetic, and diligent counsel.
Under established procedure an appellate court does not issue writs of error coram nobis in cases appealed to and disposed of by it. It is authorized only to examine an application for permission to file a petition for the writ, and to determine therefrom whether sufficient facts are alleged which, if established by competent proof, would entitle the applicant to the writ. If the application is found to be sufficient, an order is entered by the appellate court granting the applicant permission to file a formal petition for a writ of error coram nobis in the court where the judgment under assault was rendered.[2]
In determining the sufficiency of such an application, the allegations of fact contained therein must meet certain established tests before permission will be granted. It must show an error of fact for which the statute provides no other remedy. It must show that the fact did not appear of record, or was unknown to the court when judgment was pronounced; and the fact must be such that if known would have prevented the judgment. It must show that the unknown fact could not have been known to the party by the exercise of reasonable diligence in time to have been otherwise presented to the court, or that he was prevented from so presenting it by duress, fear or other sufficient cause.[3]
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139 So. 2d 719, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cayson-v-state-fladistctapp-1962.