Hamburg v. State

35 So. 2d 324, 203 Miss. 565, 1948 Miss. LEXIS 307
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedMay 10, 1948
DocketNo. 36776.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 35 So. 2d 324 (Hamburg v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hamburg v. State, 35 So. 2d 324, 203 Miss. 565, 1948 Miss. LEXIS 307 (Mich. 1948).

Opinion

L. A. Smith, Sr. J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

Appellant was jointly indicted with others for the murder of Mr. Emmett Buckley. He obtained a severance, was tried and convicted, and sentenced to electrocution. Upon appeal here he assigns several errors, but we discuss only those assignments which we consider serious enough to merit discussion.

Mr. Buckley, a State Senator, was walking to his home in Enterprise late at night, when appellant, and some other young men passed him in a truck, as he was passing-over a long bridge spanning the Cliickasawhay River. At the instigation of appellant, the truck was stopped *569 near the end of the bridge, and he borrowed a knife from one of his companions. They all alighted from the truck, and went back and met Senator Buckley for the purpose of robbing him, or as appellant put it in his confession, “They were aiming to get the money and dump the man.” As stated, the bridge was across the Chickasa-whay River. Deceased attempted to defend himself with a small pocket knife, and also screamed for help. In the scuffling, appellant stabbed Senator Buckley fatally, whereupon all of the youths, having become frightened by his outcries, fled without robbing their victim. The resident of a nearby home, aroused by the screams, and a nephew of the Senator, attracted by the noise, went to the scene, and carried him to the neighboring home, but he died in a few minutes. Certain clues led to appellant, Who was arrested, and confessed. No point was made against the admissibility of the confession either in the lower court or here.

At the trial, defense was interposed on the ground of appellant’s insanity, the proof offered in support thereof being that he was epileptic. Conceding that the conflicting testimony sufficiently established him to be afflicted with epilepsy, yet all of the witnesses, psychiatrists, medical doctors, and lay witnesses alike, agreed that he knew the difference between right and wrong. According to our decisions, this was sufficient to establish his legal sanity, as relating to the perpetration of the crime charged against him. Nelson v. State, 129 Miss. 288, 92 So. 66. In the very recent case of Wilson v. State, 201 Miss. 627, 30 So. (2d) 62, we held that the test of a defendant’s sanity is whether he had sufficient mental capacity at time of commission of homicide to distinguish between right and wrong, regardless of whether' defendant was partially insane. Since there is no testimony in this record justifying any conclusion that appellant was legally insane, even partially, we are constrained to overrule this contention. Compare also Carter v. State, 199 Miss. 871, 25 So. (2d) 470, at page 472.

*570 ■Appellant filed a motion for a new trial, and during the hearing thereof witnesses were introduced, and the motion overruled, at a time when the defendant was in jail, and, therefore, not present in court. No objection was raised against proceeding in his absence, by his attorney, who, of course, filed the motion and examined the witnesses on behalf of his client, the appellant. On the authority of some earlier cases, appellant urges here that this procedure, in appellant’s absence, was prejudicial error, and that neither appellant nor his attorney could waive it. On the other hand, the Attorney G-eneral argues that it was not prejudicial error entitling appellant to reversal, since his presence was waived by his attorney, who had a right to do so; and since nothing occurred during the hearing of the motion to the prejudice of appellant. We have receded from our earlier view, as expressed in the cases cited by appellant. Thomas v. State, 117, Miss. 532, 78 So. 147, 149, Ann. Cas. 1918E, 371.

Section 2519, Code 1942, a rescript of the statutes in the Codes of 1906 and 1930, and Hemingway’s Code, in its pertinent part, reads as follows: “In criminal cases the presence of the prisoner may be waived, and the trial progress, at the discretion of the court, in his absence, if he he in custody and consenting thereto.” In the case at bar, during the hearing of the motion for a new trial, one witness in answer to a question not addressed to the point at issue, and with no purpose relating thereto, stated that the defendant was in jail. The trial judge thereby was appraised of his absence. His attorney-caused the hearing to progress in the absence of appellant, and no prejudice to his cause appears to have been suffered by him on account of thereof. The trial Judge, aware -of the absence, in his discretion did not suspend proceedings until appellant was present; the appellant, at a time when he was in custody, waived by his counsel his right to be present; and was not harmed thereby. The “progress” of the hearing, in appellant’s absence, during the *571 consideration of the motion for a new trial, was justified under the statute.

In the Thomas case, supra, we held that the statute is constitutional and valid; announces a reasonable rule; promotes fair and impartial trials, and is conducive to administration of justice; does not deny any constitutional right, simply permits its waiver, and, that cause would not be reversed unless it be shown that, because of his absence, defendant did not receive a fair trial. A long list of cases from many other states, holding in harmony with our views in the Thomas case, is cited therein. The rule is no different in a felony case and a capital case, under the statute. We declared in the Thomas case: “The statute here makes no exception or distinction between felonies and capital cases. In fact, all capital cases are classed as felonies.” We dealt with this same question in Winston v. State, 127 Miss. 477, 90 So. 177, 179, involving a homicide, where we said: “We think there is no merit in this contention because Section 1495, Code of 1906” (as construed in the Thomas case) “provides that the presence of the prisoner may be waived.” We further held that “unless we can say from the record that the appellant is prejudiced by his presence being waived, we will not reverse the case.”

In Odom v. State, 172 Miss. 687, 161 So. 141, a robbery case, a felony, the motion for a new trial was heard in the absence of a defendant in custody. This, it is said, was by consent of appellant’s counsel, as in the case at bar, and that Section 1276, Code 1930, permits this to be done where the defendant was not prejudiced, citing Winston v.- State, supra. In the case now before us, also, no prejudice to appellant resulted from hearing his motion for a new trial, due to his absence, as we have stated.

From what we have said, ante, it follows that this assignment of error will be and is overruled.

The appellant also complains that “Mr. Hamrick, one of the State’s witnesses, who testified for the State was also one of the bailiffs who attended the jury during this *572 trial and stayed all night with the jury in the same room of the court house two nights during the trial which influenced the jury and was unfair to appellant and that neither the appellant nor his attorney knew that Mr. Hamrick would be a witness for the State when he was sworn in as bailiff and to allow said bailiff to remain with the jury and also to testify for the State is reversible error.” This was one of the grounds for a new trial in the motion therefor, which was overruled by the trial judge.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
35 So. 2d 324, 203 Miss. 565, 1948 Miss. LEXIS 307, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hamburg-v-state-miss-1948.