Commonwealth v. McClanahan

155 S.W. 1131, 153 Ky. 412, 1913 Ky. LEXIS 853
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedApril 25, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 155 S.W. 1131 (Commonwealth v. McClanahan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Commonwealth v. McClanahan, 155 S.W. 1131, 153 Ky. 412, 1913 Ky. LEXIS 853 (Ky. Ct. App. 1913).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Settle

Affirming.

Notwithstanding its success in convicting appellee of house-breaking under an indictment charging him- with that crime, appellant, Commonwealth of Kentucky, being dissatisfied with the ruling of the Circuit Court in excluding certain evidence offered by it on the trial, of an alleged confession of his guilt made by appellee, by this appeal seeks a review of that ruling.

The evidence in question consisted of a conversation or conversations had with appellee by J. B. Sheeran, a detective and police officer of the City of Newport, after the arrest of the former and while he was in the custody [414]*414of that officer. When objection was made to the evidence of Sheeran, the trial court required the jury to be taken from the room in charge of the sheriff, and in their absence had the detective state the conversation he had with appellee, which was thereupon declared incompetent by the court and not permitted to go to the jury, to which the Commonwealth at the time excepted.

The conversation occurred in the presence of Sheeran’s partner, Cottingham, and was in part heard by Lieutenant Bloomfield, of the city police force.

It appears from the record that appellee was jointly indicted with one Omer Norman, for feloniously breaking into and stealing from the office of the Crystal Ice Company, $64.00 in money; also that appellee at the time Sheeran talked with him was under arrest for disorderly conduct, of which he was guilty, while, riding in an automobile he had rented, and that Sheeran, because of information he had received as to appellee’s having been seen about the lee Company’s premises, his well known pecuniary inability to hire an automobile and his bad reputation, was led to suspect that he had obtained the money with which to hire the automobile by stealing it from the office of the Crystal Ice Company; therefore, in following out the supposed clue thus obtained, Sheeran proceeded to interview and question appellee for the purpose of ascertaining whether he was guilty of the housebreaking referred to. The conversation in which was made the alleged confession, was held in what is known as the “detective’s room” after appellee had been confronted by Norman, and resulted in a full confession of his guilt of the housebreaking and Norman’s participation therein.

The testimony of Sheeran as to the questions he put to appellee and the answers of the latter thereto, together with his explanation of the means employed to obtain the confession, take up twelve pages of the bill of evidence, for which reason it cannot be reproduced in the opinion without unduly extending its length.

It is apparent from Sheeran’s testimony that he set out to procure from appellee a confession of his guilt and his first step was to obtain from him, by questioning him, certain statements to the effect that one Conoth, who had been arrested with him, had hired the automobile. He then interviewed Conoth who contradicted the statements of the appellee, which contradiction Sheeran immediately reported to appellee. This was followed by a continua[415]*415tion of his interrogation of him until he got from him the statement that he had himself hired the automobile at the price of $3.00 and had obtained the money by selling some furniture. Thereupon Sheeran told him he could not have hired the automobile at such a low price. In the course of the conversation Sheeran informed appellee of some one’s breaking into the Crystal Ice Company’s office and the taking of the money therefrom, and asked him if he did it; appellee then denied that he had done so, but later admitted it after being contradicted in the manner indicated.

It was denied by Sheeran that he made to appellee any promise or offered him any reward to induce the confession of his guilt, or that it was made as the result of threats or coercion from him.

Evidence as to the confession thus obtained of appellee was excluded by the trial court on the ground that its inadmissibility is declared by an act of the Legislature, approved March 19, 1912, entitled “An act to prevent sweating process of prisoners arrested charged with crime, and to prevent the admission as evidence of confessions obtained by such process in the State of Kentucky,” which provides:

(1) “That what is commonly known as ‘sweating’ is hereby defined to be the questioning of a person in custody charged with crime in an attempt to obtain information from him concerning his connection with crime or knowledge thereof, after he has been arrested and in custody, as" stated, by plying him with questions or by threats or other wrongful means, extorting from him information to be used against him as testimony upon his trial for such alleged crime.
(2) “It shall be unlawful for any sheriff, jailer, marshal, constable, policeman or other officer, or any peace officer, or any person having in his custody any person charged with crime, to sweat such person or permit any other person so to do, while such prisoner is in charge of such officer or in the custody of the law, charged with an offense.
(3) “ That no confession obtained by means of sweating as defined herein, shall be permitted as evidence in any court of law in this State, but shall be deemed to have been obtained by duress, if it be shown that such confession was made after the arrest of the party charged with crime, and while he was in custody of the law.
[416]*416(4) “Any person violating the provisions of this act shall, upon conviction, he fined in an amount not less than one hundred dollars nor more than five hundred dollars, or confined in the county jail not less than ten nor more than sixty days, or both such fine and imprisonment in the discretion of the court or jury trying the case.
(5) “All laws or parts of laws in conflict with this act are hereby repealed.
“This act shall take effect from and after its passage.”

The constitutionality of this statute is questioned by counsel for the Commonwealth and he also argues that the methods employed by Sheeran are not within the scope of its condemnation. Neither of these contentions can be sustained.

It will be observed that the “sweating” prohibited by the act may be done by the mere questioning of the person under arrest charged with crime concerning his connection therewith or knowledge thereof, if it be done for the purpose of extorting from him (i. e., inducing an unwilling or involuntary giving of) information to be used against him on his trial for such alleged crime. In enacting this statute it was the purpose of the Legislature to strike a blow at the modern methods, less harsh than threats, intimidation or promises of benefits to be conferred, condemned by the common law, that are employed by detectives and arresting officers to obtain information and confessions from those suspected of guilt or implhcated in crime.

Just as three centuries ago the use of the rack and other tortures for compelling confessions of guilt were abolished in England, there is now a tendency to do away with the “sweat-box” and other like methods that are calculated to make such confessions, other than spontElHGOUS

In Ammons v. State, 80 Miss., 592, 18 L. R.

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Bluebook (online)
155 S.W. 1131, 153 Ky. 412, 1913 Ky. LEXIS 853, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-mcclanahan-kyctapp-1913.