Hamilton v. State of Indiana

184 N.E. 170, 205 Ind. 26, 1933 Ind. LEXIS 59
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 30, 1933
DocketNo. 25,480.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 184 N.E. 170 (Hamilton v. State of Indiana) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hamilton v. State of Indiana, 184 N.E. 170, 205 Ind. 26, 1933 Ind. LEXIS 59 (Ind. 1933).

Opinion

Treanor, C. J.

Appellant was convicted of the offense of burglary in the second degree. The alleged errors relied upon for reversal consist of the court’s action in excluding certain offered testimony of appellant as a witness in his own behalf on direct and redirect examination and in refusing to give appellant’s tendered instruction number 1.

Appellant contends that the offered testimony was a “material and culminating part of the testimony in support of appellant’s theory” that he was forced to be present at the time of the alleged burglary as a part of a general design and scheme of a Mrs. Graves to carry out threats that she would “ruin his reputation and close the doors of society against him from Maine to California.” Appellant testified that about two weeks after the burglary he had a talk with a Mrs. Graves in which something was said about the burglary, and he offered to testify that at that time she made the following statement:

“Well, Fleedy, I got you; you’re ruined. I’m the one that gave Ryan the $250.00 and he got the information and got the gang that took you to this bakery where the burglary was committed. If you get out of it, I am going to have you arrested here in Chicago for operation of a confidence game on me and I’ll get you anyhow.”

*28 This evidence would be clearly inadmissible unless it could be said to come within one of the exceptions to the hearsay rule. Appellant contends that the evidence was admissible as the declaration of a co-conspirator during the existence of a conspiracy. His defense was that he did not willingly engage in the commission of the offense but that by means of duress and threats his participation was compelled as one of the objects of a conspiracy between the Mrs. Graves whose statement, made about two weeks after the crime, was offered in evidence and excluded, and three men who were present at the scene of the crime and forced appellant to participate therein.

Appellant was entitled to present competent evidence of duress and compulsion as a defense to the charge for which he was on trial and if a conspiracy existed to exercise duress and compulsion upon appellant to enforce his participation in the burglary the acts and declarations of the parties to such conspiracy, during its pendency and in furtherance of its objects, would be admissible. Eacock v. State (1907), 169 Ind. 488, 82 N. E. 1039. The statement of Mrs. Graves, as the declaration of a co-conspirator, would be admissible if the trial court believed that prima facie proof had theretofore been made of the existence of a conspiracy between Mrs. Graves and the three men to compel appellant’s participation in the burglary, but would not be admissible to prove the existence of a conspiracy in the absence of such prima facie proof.

“. . . It is a rudimental principle that agency, conspiracy, or the like, cannot be proved by the declarations of the alleged agent or conspirator. To make admissions of an alleged conspirator evidence, there must be some evidence, although it need not be strong, of the existence of the conspiracy.” Dye v. State (1891), 130 Ind. 87, 29 N. E. 771, 772.

*29 Appellant had testified that he had been forced and compelled to be present at the scene of the burglary by three men who participated in the offense and he contends that at the time the question was asked calling for the statement of Mrs. Graves it had been shown in evidence that a conspiracy existed and “that appellant was entitled to have the jury hear all the acts and declarations of the conspirators, in order to determine whether or not said conspiracy did, in fact, exist, and as evidence in support of appellant’s defense of duress and compulsion.” Appellant testified concerning the acts and declarations of the three men who, he alleged, compelled him to participate in the burglary, and if such testimony constituted “proof sufficient in the opinion of the trial judge to establish prima facie the fact of conspiracy” between the three,men and Mrs. Graves, then the offered declaration of Mrs. Graves as a co-conspirator should have been admitted, providing the conspiracy was still pending at the time the declaration was made.

“. . . Nothing said or done by one of the conspirators in the absence of the others, after the common design has been fully consummated, can be used as evidence against the others or effect them in any way.” Card v. State (1886), 109 Ind. 415, 9 N. E. 591, 593.
“Statements or admissions of co-conspirators subsequent to’the commission of an offense at a time when the conspiracy is ended or the offense committed for which the conspiracy was formed are not admissible against the defendant on trial.” Kahn v. State (1914), 182 Ind. 1, 5, 105 N. E. 385, 387.

But whether such testimony was sufficient to establish prima facie the fact of conspiracy, and whether, if established, it was still in existence at the time Mrs. Graves made the declaration sought to be introduced, was a question peculiarly for *30 the consideration and decision of the trial court. (Card v. State, supra.) The question as to whether sufficient compulsion and coercion had been exercised upon appellant, by threats of present and immediate violence made at the time he participated in the burglary, to excuse him was for the jury to decide, but it was a question for the court whether the proof of the existence of a conspiracy to coerce the defendant to participate in the burglary was sufficient to justify the admission of declarations of Mrs. Graves as admissions of a co-conspirator. Before this court can say that a motion for a new trial, based upon alleged error in excluding evidence, should have been granted it must clearly appear from the record that the excluded evidence was admissible and that its exclusion was both erroneous and prejudicial. When, as in the instant case, the admissibility of the offered testimony depends upon the finding of a preliminary fact from evidence then before the trial court, this court will not disturb the lower court’s ruling upon the question of admissibility unless there is no evidence to support the finding of the trial court as to such preliminary fact. An examination of the record indicates that the trial court would have been warranted in finding that no evidence had been introduced which tended to prove that Mrs. Graves was a party to a conspiracy with the three men who participated in the burglary, and, consequently, it was not error to exclude the evidence of appellant as to what Mrs. Graves had said to him.

Appellant also insists that the statement made to him by Mrs. Graves was admissible when he testified on redirect examination. It appears that on direct examination appellant had been asked' whether he had had a “talk with Mrs. Graves” and whether she said anything about “Ryan and the $250.00” and “this burglary.” Appellant answered *31 affirmatively and then offered to testify to the entire conversation, which offer was rejected by the trial court. On cross-examination appellant was asked whether a Mr. Hart heard any of Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
184 N.E. 170, 205 Ind. 26, 1933 Ind. LEXIS 59, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hamilton-v-state-of-indiana-ind-1933.