Espetia v. State

199 Tenn. 696
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 9, 1956
StatusPublished

This text of 199 Tenn. 696 (Espetia 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
Espetia v. State, 199 Tenn. 696 (Tenn. 1956).

Opinion

Me. Justice Buewett

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The plaintiff in error was indicted, tried and found guilty of the homicide of Mary Elizabeth Warren. The jury fixed the grade of the homicide as murder in the first degree and inflicted a punishment of 30 years’ imprisonment. He has seasonably appealed, briefs have been filed and arguments heard. We now have the matter for determination.

A number of errors are assigned. After having read the record, the briefs, the authorities cited in the briefs and others, we have concluded that at the present time the sixth assignment of error must be sustained. The sustaining of this assignment of errors of necessity demands that we make no comment in reference to the facts or other questions herein raised because as we see it under this assignment of errors the cause must be reversed and remanded for a new trial.

The sixth assignment is to the Court’s charge with reference to the weight to be given to plaintiff in error’s [698]*698confession. The portion of the charge complained of in this regard is as follows:

“The Conrt instructs the jury that if oral or written statements voluntarily made by the defendant have been proven in this case, you may take them into consideration, with all the other facts and circumstances proven.
“What the proof may show you, if anything, that this defendant has said against himself, the law presumes to be true, but anything that he has said in his own behalf, you are not obliged to believe, but you may treat the same as true or false when considered with a view to all other facts and circumstances in the case.
“In statements made at the time of arrest, you may take into consideration the condition of the mind of the prisoner owing to his arrest, and whether he is influenced by motives of hope or fear to make the statements.”

The portion of this charge complained of is the middle paragraph above. The gravamen of the attack on the charge is the phrase “the law presumes to be true, * * By the use of the word “presumes” the law requires a deduction by the trier of fact. Camper v. State, 187 Tenn. 511, 216 S. W. (2d) 18. Then too, the obvious reading of the context of this charge or portion of the charge is to the effect that the jury must believe anything that the defendant has said against himself to be the truth while anything else that he said they are not obliged to believe but may take it as true or false depending on whatever view they take of the matter. The general rule on the subject is stated in 20 Am. Jur., Sec. 488, p. 425, to be:

[699]*699“When a confession is admissible, the whole of what the accnsed said upon the subject at the time of making the confession is admissible and should be taken together; and if the prosecution fails to prove the whole statement, the accused is entitled to put in evidence all that was said to and by him at the time which bears upon the subject of controversy including any exculpatory or self-serving declarations connected therewith.' It is for the jury, to say what weight shall he given to the several parts of the statement, for they may well believe that part which charges the prisoner, and reject that which tends to exculpate him.” (Emphasis ours.)

And again at page 1080' in Sec. 1227 the same author says:

“The weight of a confession is always to be determined by the jury; and where the confession is admitted, the jury must consider it in the light of all the surrounding circumstances and in connection with all the other evidence in the case.”

Among the many notes cited as authority for this statement is a comparatively recent annotation on it in 167 A. L. E.. at page 390. Wharton on Criminal Evidence, Sec. 644, page 1078 is to the same effect as is 23 C. J. S., Criminal Law, Sec. 1233, page 798.

Thus when the court charges the jury that they must believe or it is the law that whatever a man says against himself in a confession is true but the other things are not necessarily so, this, it seems to us to a great extent, invades the province of the jury as to what weight that body should give to the testimony. Thus such an instruction should not be given in view of our constitutional inhibitions, Tennessee Constitution, Art. 6, Sec. 9, in this State against telling the jury what weight [700]*700they shonld give specific facts. Under this instruction a jury is arbitrarily told to take a part of the confession as true while they may reject another part. In confessions or statements of the kind voluntarily made by the accused the jury must take the whole of this statement or confession and weigh it as they weigh the other evidence, rejecting some part if they desire to do so and giving credit to other pa'rts of the statement if they have a sufficient reason to do so under all the evidence as it is introduced. Of course it is a general rule, and based on good reason, that an accused may offer proof to contradict a confession and these things are things for the jury to weigh. See American Jurisprudence, supra.

This Court in its very early history reached this same conclusion in Tipton v. State, 7 Tenn. 308. The principle was again reaffirmed in Young v. State, 10 Tenn. 292. The Court then again some forty years later followed the cases last cited in Crawford v. State, 44 Tenn. 190, where at page 194 it was said:

“But, if, after the whole statement is given in evidence, the prosecutor can contradict any part of it, he is as liberty to do so; and then the whole testimony is left to the jury for their consideration, precisely as in other cases where one part of the evidence is contradictory to another; for, it is not to be supposed that all the parts of a confession are entitled to equal credit.
“The jury may believe that part which charges the prisoner, and reject that which is in his favor, if they see sufficient grounds for doing so. If what he said in his own favor is not contradicted by evidence offered by the prosecutor, nor improbable in itself, it will naturally be believed by the jury, and they are not authorized arbitrarily to reject it; but [701]*701still, they are not bonnd to give it weight on that account, bnt are at liberty to judge of it like other evidence, by all the circumstances of the case; 1 G-reenleaf’s Ev., Sec. 218.”

In Shipp v. State, 128 Tenn. 499, 161 S. W. 1017, the trial court had done, to all intents and purposes, what this instruction does, directed a verdict on a confession of guilt under a plea of not guilty. This Court held it reversible error and that the confession as a whole was for the jury.

We have read many cases on the subject, all of which are of similar import. Many of these cases may be found in the notes to the text above cited. We see no reason to refer to any of them. This question is not too foreign to the question considered by this Court in Camper v. State, supra [187 Tenn. 511, 216 S. W. (2d) 19]. In the Camper case the trial court charged the jury that;

“where one is accused of a crime and makes no denial thereof, when he has opportunity to do so, a presumption of guilt arises from his failure to make a denial of the charge. ’ ’

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Related

Deathridge v. State
33 Tenn. 75 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 1853)
Young v. State
10 Tenn. 292 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 1829)
Shipp v. State
128 Tenn. 499 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 1913)
Camper v. State
216 S.W.2d 18 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 1948)

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Bluebook (online)
199 Tenn. 696, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/espetia-v-state-tenn-1956.