Cross v. State

142 Tenn. 510
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedApril 15, 1920
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 142 Tenn. 510 (Cross v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cross v. State, 142 Tenn. 510 (Tenn. 1920).

Opinion

Mb. Justice McKinney

delivered the opinion of .the Court.

The plaintiff in error, Ben Cross, was indicted and convicted of murder in the first degree, and the jury fixed his punishment at twenty-one years in the State penitentiary. He has appealed to this court, and has assigned errors.

On the trial of the case the State undertook to prove that the plaintiff in error, before the trial, had made a written confession of his guilt. In the absence of the jury the court heard the evidence as to • said alleged confession, and it appearing that said confession was not made freely and voluntarily, hut was induced by hope or fear, the court, very properly, held that the evidence as to the confession was incompetent.

In Deathridge v. State, v Sneed, 79, this court said: “But if the confession be the result of hope or fear, induced or incited by a person having power over the prisoner, it becomes incompetent; for, in such case, it can have no tendency to prove that the prisoner is guilty of the crime.”

In Strady v. State, 5 Cold., 307, the court said: “But a confession forced from the mind by the flattery of hope or the torture of fear, comes in such a ques[512]*512tionable shape, when it is to be considered as the evidence 'of guilt, that no credit ought to be given to it; and, therefore, it is rejected.”

In Self v. State, 66 Baxt., 253, it was said: “But unless confessions are made freely and voluntarily, without the influence of hope or fear, they are not received as competent evidence.”

The State, in its cross-examination of the plaintiff in error, over the objection of his counsel, was permitted by the court to ask him if he had not made a written statement to which he replied that he did not remember making it. He was then asked, over the objection of his counsel, if he did not make the oral statements admitting his guilt of the murder committed in the manner detailed in the written confession, and replied that he did not remember making such statement.

The trial judge admitted this evidence as an impeachment of the witness, and in rebuttal, over his objection, permitted the witnesses Wood and Rice to testify that he made said confession to them.

This action of the trial judge is assigned as error, and we think both upon principle and authority this evidence was incompetent and highly prejudicial to the plaintiff in error. The effect of its admission was to permit the State to prove indirectly what the court had held it could not prove directly. We are unable to understand how evidence which is entitled to no credit, and which does not tend to prove the guilt of the prisoner, can be competent for the purpose of contradicting statements made by the accused on the [513]*513witness stand. If the statements drawn from the accused, while in custody, by the flattery of hope, or by threats, are entitled to no credit as being truthful statements of what occurred, by the same parity of reasoning such statements can have no force as contradictions of the testimony of the plaintiff in error on the witness stand. The same reasons which forbid their admissibility in the one instance Avould make them incompetent in the other. It would certainly be unjust to impeach a witness by testimony which had been wrongfully obtained. The exclusion of the confession by the court was, in effect, holding that the same had been improperly obtained. If it were thus obtained — that is, by force, or by threats, or by influence of hope — -it was not the free voluntary statement of the accused, and it would be most cruel to say that the witness is discredited, and that he is not entitled to be believed because of the confession made by him under such circumstances.

In Harrold v. Oklahoma, 169 Fed., 47, 94 C. C. A., 415, 17 Ann. Cas., 868, Judge Sanborn, in a very able opinion, in which the authorities are reviewed, says: “A person charged with crime, shall at his own request, but not otherwise, be a competent witness and his failure to make such request shall not create any presumption against him nor be mentioned at the trial.

“Now the confession of this defendant was incompetent evidence against him. Did the fact that he availed himself of the privilege accorded to him by this statute make it competent? If so, did that fact [514]*514make all incompetent evidence admissible against Mm? Did it make the confession and all other facts tending to establish his gnilt provable against him by hearsay? Did' it make his disclosure regarding his guilt if any, to his attorney for the purpose of Ms defense, admissible in evidence against him? All these questions must be answered in the negative, because the reason of the rule, and, therefore, the rule itself, apply with at least as much force to an involuntary confession after, as before, it is derned by the testimony of the accused. When it is offered by the prosecutor in chief, it is incompetent evidence to overcome the simple presumption of the defendant’s innocence, because it is unworthy of belief. It cannot be more worthy of belief, or more competent to overcome both that presumption and the testimony of the defendant, after he has denied that he ever made it.” (Citing authorities.)

“The privilege granted to an accused person of testifying on Ms own behalf would be a poor and useless one indeed if he could exercise it only on condition that every incompetent confession induced by the promises, or wrung from Mm by the unlawful secret inquisitions and criminating suggestions, of arresting or holding officers, should become evidence against him.. ’ ’

In People v. Yeaton, 75 Cal., 415, 17 Pac., 544, the holding of the court is succinctly contained in the syllabus (75 Cal.), which is as follows:

“The defendant in a criminal prosecution, who is a witness in her own behalf, cannot be compelled, on cross-examination, to testify to statements made by [515]*515her out of court, which amount to a confession of the crime, unless it he first shown that the confession was voluntary. And this is. so, although the evidence he offered by the prosecution, not as a confession, hut merely as contradictory statements, for the purpose of impeaching the witness.”

In Shephard v. State, 88 Wis., 185, 59 N. W., 449, the court said:

“The confession was rejected because it was extorted. It was unfair to the accused, and should not he proved against him, and is condemned by the court and ruled out. When the defendant was asked if he made that confession and denied it, the same witnesses who extorted the confession, and whose testimony was disallowed on that account, are allowed to testify to the confession, however wickedly and wrongly it was obtained, on the exceedingly narrow theory ■ that it is not admitted as a confession, hut merely to contradict the witness. The confession is allowed to go to the jury, and have its effect in convincing the defendants, and override the ruling of the court that it was inadmissible as evidence against him, for such a petty reason. The confession is just as objectionable as evidence, and as incompetent and hurtful, when offered in one way as in another. If no other evidence on the ground of contradicting the defendant as a witness could be found, he had better have gone uncon-tradicted than that his legal rights as a prisoner should be so violated and his conviction obtained by such unlawful testimony.

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Bluebook (online)
142 Tenn. 510, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cross-v-state-tenn-1920.