Grammer v. State

172 N.W. 41, 103 Neb. 325, 1919 Neb. LEXIS 61
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 27, 1919
DocketNo. 20610
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 172 N.W. 41 (Grammer 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
Grammer v. State, 172 N.W. 41, 103 Neb. 325, 1919 Neb. LEXIS 61 (Neb. 1919).

Opinions

Rose, J.

In the district court for Howard county, Alson B. Cole and Allen Vincent Grammer, defendants, were charged in a single information with murder in the first degree, Cole as principal and Grammer as accessary before the fact. The state’s case may be summarized as follows: Lulu Vogt, a widow having considerable means, was the mother-in-law of Grammer, who was prompted by a desire for an inheritance from her to his wife. He planned the murder and agreed to give Cole $500 for committing it. During the night of July 5, 1917, Cole, pursuant to a previous understanding with Grammer, went to the home of Lulu Vogt, made the false statement that her daughter' had been accidentally injured, enticed Lulu Vogt into an automobile, took her from her home and feloniously shot and [327]*327killed her in Howard county. Grammer aided and abetted the murder.

It appears that, at different times and places, each made a confession giving details of the parts played by both. Defendants were arraigned, pleaded not guilty, and went to trial together without any demand by either for a separate trial. After the jury had been impaneled, Cole changed his plea to guilty. The trial court held it was the province of the jury to fix at death or life imprisonment, the punishment for murder in the first degree, and for that purpose proofs showing the details of the homicide were admitted in evidence' against Cole after he had pleaded guilty. Grammer was tried and convicted. The jury fixed the extreme penalty for both defendants, and the trial court imposed upon each the sentence of death. Grammer alone prosecutes error.

In addition to complaints that disqualified jurors were erroneously impaneled, there is an assignment of error in the following form:

“The court erred in failing to instruct the jurors that they must not be prejudiced by the 'voir dire examination of talesmen’

The published confessions of defendants and other reports of their guilt had reached many excused tales-men, some of whom, during the course of the voir dire examination, expressed the opinion that defendants were guilty. Statements of this nature were made in the presence of jurors already selected for the trial. The procedure in this respect, the disqualifications of jurors, and the failure of the trial court to instruct the jury to disregard such expressions of guilt are subjects of extended^ argument. Notwithstanding opinions of guilt based on rumors or reports, each juror qualified himself by his answers on his voir dire examination, and the record fails to show an abuse of discretion on the part of the trial 'court in ruling on the qualification •of jurors. Besides, Grammer did not exhaust his peremptory challenges/ A juror may serve impartially [328]*328and base his findings alone on evidence admitted at the. trial under proper instructions, though he had been prompted by rumors or reports to express the opinion that accused was guilty, and such expressions of opinion by excused talesmen under the same circumstances are not necessarily conclusive proofs of prejudice or disqualification. From the charge as a whole, the jury knew that preconceived prejudice or rumor, outside of the evidence adduced at the trial should have no place in their deliberations or verdict. There was no prejudicial error in the impaneling of the jury or in the failure to warn them' directly “not to be prejudiced by the voir dire examination of talesmen.”

It is insisted that the failure of the trial judge to order separate trials for Cole and Grammer is a ground for reversal. There was no demand for separate trials, and there was no error, therefore, in the failure to grant them.

Error in overruling objections to questions propounded to witnesses for the state in laying the foundation for the admission of Grammer’s confession is assigned as a ground for reversal. The nature of these questions is indicated by those following: “State whether or not any'force was used to get him to make that statement.” “You may state whether or not any promises were made to him to get him to make that statement.” “You may state whether or not any inducements were held out to Mr. Grammer to get him to make that statement.” The objections are that the questions are leading, suggestive, and call for a conclusion. The circumstances under which the confession was made are disclosed by the evidence. Grammer exercised the privilege of cross-examination. The law applicable has been recently stated as follows:

“It is not error to permit a witness to testify that a confession was voluntary, as being an opinion or conclusion, if the circumstances of the confession are in evidence. Similarly, a question whether any promises, threats, or inducements were made to defendant, [329]*329before he made the statements sought to be proved, is not objectionable as calling for a conclusion.” 16 C. J. 733, sec. 1510.

This assignment of error is therefore overruled.

Assigned error in the overruling of objections to the admission of the confession of Grammer is argued at some length. The substance of the objections is -there was no foundation excluding the hypothesis that, the confession was involuntary, it being asserted that the state’s witnesses were erroneously permitted to testify to mere conclusions in' answering incompetent questions. The confession is in writing. . It gives the details of Grammer’s connection with the homicide. It was signed by him in presence of witnesses who testified that it was voluntarily made. There is ample proof that it was obtained without threats or promises to inspire either hope or fear. The foundation, therefore, was sufficient. State v. Kilduff, 160 Ia. 388; Sparf v. United States, 156 U. S. 51, 15 Sup. Ct. Rep. 273; 2 Wharton, Criminal Evidence (10th ed.) sec. 646; 16 C. J. 728, sec. 1494. The trial court properly admitted Grammer’s confession under the following rule:

“A proper predicate for the admission of a confession ’ is laid where the witness to whom it was made testifies that neither he, nor any one else in his presence or hearing, made any promises or threats to defendant.” 16 C. J. 734, sec. 1512.

Testimony inculpating Cole, including his confession, is condemned as prejudicial to Grammer. Ea,ch made a confession in writing. The facts were set out at length. In most essential respects the details were the same. Corroborating circumstances confirmed the truth, of the confessions. Cole was first to confess. "With his confession Grammer was confronted. When Grammer knew its contents, reciting as it did that Cole had been hired by Grammer to commit the murder, Grammer, according to the testimony of one. of the witnesses, said that it was true. If the witness told the truth — a ques[330]*330tion for ihe jury — Grammer admitted the truth of Cole’s confession and made it his own. It was therefore admissible in evidence against Grammer. Since the jury were called upon to fix the penalty, details of the felonious acts of Cole were admissible in evidence against him, though he had pleaded guilty. In protecting Grammer from the testimony against Cole, the trial court went further than the requirements of the law.

Laughter and applause by auditors during the trial are condemned as grounds for a new trial.

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Bluebook (online)
172 N.W. 41, 103 Neb. 325, 1919 Neb. LEXIS 61, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/grammer-v-state-neb-1919.