Gammel v. State

163 N.W. 854, 101 Neb. 532, 1917 Neb. LEXIS 139
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 10, 1917
DocketNo. 20054
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 163 N.W. 854 (Gammel v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gammel v. State, 163 N.W. 854, 101 Neb. 532, 1917 Neb. LEXIS 139 (Neb. 1917).

Opinions

, Dean, J.

Phillip H. Gammel, aged about 65 years,, urns convicted in the district court for Dodge county of the crime of rape upon the person of Hazel Gammel, charged in the complaint as being under the age of 15 years and not previously unchaste. The trial proceeded to verdict and judgment of conviction, and, defendant being unable to procure a supersedeas bond, he was lodged in the penitentiary, there to serve a sentence of 12 years. He has brought the case here alleging that he did not have a fair and impartial trial, and that there are other errors in the record entitling him to a new trial.

Defendant’s plea of “not guilty” was withdrawn, and he filed a motion to quash the information, for the alleged [534]*534reason that he neither had nor waived a preliminary examination. The motion alleged that the error complained of appeared on the face of the record, and that the case therefore came within the provisions of section 9084, Rev. St. 1913: “A motion to quash may he made in all cases, when there is a defect apparent upon the face of the record, including defects in the form of the indictment or in the manner in Avhich an offense is charged.”

The transcript of the proceedings before the justice of the peace on this feature of the case contains the following recital: “Now on this 13th day of October * * * said defendant Avas arraigned in open court and entered a plea of guilty to the first, second, third, fourth, fifth, and sixth counts of said complaint and to said complaint as a whole. It was therefore considered and adjudged by me that said defendant be held for trial to the district court of Dodge county, Nebraska, at the present term thereof.”

This court has held that, where an accused person is brought before an examining magistrate and voluntarily pleads that he is guilty of the crime charged against him, he thereby Avaives his right To preliminary examination. Latimer v. State, 55 Neb. 609.

At the trial the justice testified, in substance, that Avhen the- complaint was read to defendant in his court he answered, “I plead guilty, but I am an innocent man,” arid that the county attorney then said to him: “That doesn’t go. I have got to have from you, Mr. Gammel, a plea of guilty or not guilty; which is it?” To which defendant responded: “I plead guilty, but it is all wrong.” The deputy sheriff testified on cross-examination that he understood from the defendant’s statements that he protested that he Avas innocent, but that he would “plead guilty to end it all.”

The chief of police of Fremont testified on cross-examination : “Q. Do you know the exact words Mr. Gammel used in the matter of his making response when asked to plead to this complaint? A. Yes, sir; I think so. While he pleaded guilty to the complaint * * * as a whole, he [535]*535intimated he was innocent, and he wanted to get done with it all and have it over. Q. I dop’t want the intimation or your understanding of what took place there, I want the exact words, Mr. Peterson. A. I think he said he was innocent, but he plead guilty. Q. And while he pleaded guilty he said he was innocent, did he not? A. Yes. Q. And he said that he pleaded guilty in order that it might be ended? A. Yes, that in substance.”

The sheriff testified that when the complaint was read to the defendant he “inferred that he was not guilty.” While he denies making any attempt to have the defendant plead guilty to the complaint, he testified on cross-examination : “Q. Well, Mr. Condit, that is a custom of your office, is it not, for you to try and get men that are charged with crime to plead guilty whether they are guilty or not? A. In some cases. Q. Isn’t that the custom in all cases to get men to plead guilty when you catch them and they are charged with a crime? A. In some cases it is.”

Elsewhere in the record it is shown that in a period of time that is not given, 36 out of 49 persons convicted of a felony in Dodge county pleaded guilty through the efforts of the sheriff.

From the foregoing it does not appear that defendant voluntarily pleaded guilty, and there is no pretense that he waived, nor that he was given, an .examination. His answers to the questions propounded to him in the justice court cannot properly be held to be a waiver, nor can they be held to be a voluntary confession. Under the circumstances attending this case, we suggest, but not in the way of criticism, that it would perhaps have been better practice for the examining magistrate to have given to defendant the examination for which the law provides. The preliminary examination is a valuable right given by the law to the accused, and. he cannot properly be deprived of that right except by his own voluntary act. It will not be contended by any person that, even though the accused stands charged with one of the most heinous offenses [536]*536known to the calendar of crime, lie is not nevertheless entitled to a fair and impartial examination and trial.

In the justice court the county attorney, the sheriff, his deputy, and the chief of police were all properly present. The accused does not appear to be learned in the law, and it appears he was not represented by counsel. He seems there to have been confused, whether from fright, pr from the enormity of the crime with which he was charged, or because of the alleged abrupt conduct of the officers in whose charge he was, or from some other cause which does not clearly appear. At all events, his plea in the justice court was not apparently the voluntary expression of a normal mind.

Inhere are other substantial errors complained of for which the case must be reversed. In the present state of the record, we do not base the reversal on the ground of a lack or waiver of examination. Defendant should have raised his objections by a plea in abatement as the statute plainly provides.

There is substantial conflict in the testimony with respect to the age of the accusing witness, the state maintaining that, at the time of the commission of the alleged offense, she was about two months under 15 years, while there is testimony of two or more witnesses on the part of defendant that she was then between 16 and 17 years of age. The defendant testified that when he and his wife, who were itinerant evangelists, received her into their family from an orphanage, in December, 1901, that they were informed by the management of the institution that she was then a year and a half old.

There is also testimony in the record which renders it doubtful that the prosecuting witness was chaste at the time of the alleged commission of the offense. On this. point defendant requested the following instruction, numbered 6 in the record, which was refused by the court: “The jury is instructed that, where the prosecutrix is over 15 years of age at the time of the alleged commission of the crime, in order to establish the defendant’s guilt as [537]*537charged, it is necessary for the state of Nebraska to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that the prosecutrix was not previously unchaste.”

In view of the conflicting testimony with respect to the age of the prosecuting witness and with respect to previous chastity, the jury should have been instructed upon the points embodied in the requested instruction. If she was over the age of -15 at the time of the alleged crime with which defendant is charged, the burden was on the state to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that the prosecutrix was previously chaste. Burk v. State, 79 Neb. 241.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
163 N.W. 854, 101 Neb. 532, 1917 Neb. LEXIS 139, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gammel-v-state-neb-1917.