Lee v. State

155 So. 123, 115 Fla. 30, 1934 Fla. LEXIS 1462
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedMay 25, 1934
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 155 So. 123 (Lee v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lee v. State, 155 So. 123, 115 Fla. 30, 1934 Fla. LEXIS 1462 (Fla. 1934).

Opinion

Ellis, J.

The two cases entitled as above may be considered together.- Five persons,, named Claude Barton, Edward Lee, Cecil Long, Arthur Guest and Ray Kirby, were jointly indicted on December' 12, 1932, for the murder of Orlo Brown on July 13, 1932. There were .two Counts in the indictment. The first charged the five accused persons with the murder in the first degree as principals in the first degree; the second count charged Barton as. principal in the first degree and the others as principals in the second degree. See Henry v. State, 81 Fla. 763, 89 South. Rep. 136. . ' •

In behalf of Edward Lee a motion was- made to quash the indictment. The motion was overruled. The order was made the basis of an assignment of error. There were nine errors assigned in his case. The same motion’was made in behalf of Ray Kirby and overruled. The order was not made the basis, .of an assignment of error- in his case, although he assigns fortyrfive errors. .

*33 In behalf of Lee it is urged that the indictment was bad because it does not allege that the man slain was a human being. There was no error in the order. See Whitman v. State, 97 Fla. 988, 122 South. Rep. 567; Pell v. State, 97 Fla. 650, 122 South. Rep. 110; 10 Ency. Pl. and Prac. 146.

In the case of Reed v. State, 94 Fla. 32, text page 45, 113 South. Rep. 630, Mr. Justice Brown gave in passing a short form of indictment for murder which he thought would contain under our statute all the necessary elements of a charge of murder in the first degree, omitting the allegation that the deceased was a human being. The case was referred to approvingly on that point in the Pell case, supra; and in the Whitman case, supra, while the point was waived, the court nevertheless considered it and definitely stated that in such an indictment it is not necessary to allege that the deceased was a human being.

Lee and Kirby and Barton entered pleas of not guilty to the indictment. Guest and Long also pleaded not guilty. Each record shows that Lee, Kirby and Barton were found guilty of murder in the first degree with recommendation to the mercy of the court. Each record shows the judgment of conviction and sentence of each defendant to life imprisonment in the State prison at hard labor. The judgment was entered on March 25, 1933. On the same day Lee took a writ of error and on December 18th following Kirby took a writ of error.

Prior to the trial and after the pleas of not guilty entered by each of the five defendants, the State, by the Assistant State Attorney, applied to the court for and obtained’ an order of severance as to Cecil Long and Arthur Guest, two of the defendants. Barton also applied for a severance as to him, but the application was denied.

*34 Six names of persons as witnesses for the State appeared upon the back of the indictment when filed.

Lee, by his counsel, moved the court for an order directing the State Attorney to furnish a full and complete list of all the witnesses which the State expected to call to testify on behalf of the State, which motion was denied. That order is the basis for the second assignment of error in Lee’s case, and is noted in the brief in his behalf as one of the questions of law involved. The motion is not contained in the bill of exceptions, where it should appear, and is not authenticated to this Court by" a certificate of the Judge that it was the motion actually presented. Therefore, as the averred facts in the motion do not prove themselves apd no affidavit was made in support of it, and counsel saw proper not to cause it to be placed in the bill of exceptions, where it properly belongs and where it would have .received the Judge’s certificate of authentication, we are at some loss how, in view of the gravity of the charge, the serious nature of the case, the matter should be treated.

Clearly the motion and the ground on which it rested are not before us. We have several times called attention to the Act of the Legislature which purports to authorize the insertion in the transcript of the record proper matter which occurs in pais and should be set out in the bill of exceptions (Sec. 4612 C. G. L. 1927.) and stated that such matters should be authenticated by the certificate of the Judge. See Branch v. State, 96 Fla. 307, 118 South. Rep. 13, 69 A. L. R. 1169; Jarvis v. State, filed April 19, 1934.

It is so much easier and much more consistent with principle and the orderly administration of justice by an appellate court, which speaks only from an authenticated record, to follow the course prescribed by the rules of this Court in the preparation of a cause for consideration. The *35 Clerk’s certification of what transpires at the trial has no more authenticity or officiality about it than the certificate of the sheriff, an attorney at law participating as counsel in the case, or a bystander, would have.

It lies only in the power of the trial judge, or, in case of his refusal to certify, in the power of three bystanders acting within the direction of the statute, to give authenticity to evidence claimed to have been taken and transactions alleged to have occurred during the progress of the trial of a cause. This Court has the power to speak only from a duly certified record. A matter which occurs at the trial is matter in pais, not of record, and only becomes a part of the record when incorporated in a bill of exceptions duly authenticated by the judge’s signature, or that of three bystanders in the circumstances named by the statute, Sec. 4616 C. G. L. 1927, and filed. Then the clerk may copy the bill of exceptions in the transcript and certify to the transcript as being a true and faithful- copy of the record.

How much more orderly, systematic and accurate may a cause be presented to this Court on the record when these principles and rules are observed than when a so-called transcript is made up in a desultory, confused, conglomerated manner without reference to sequence of events and chronological order. This Court’s function primarily and fundamentally is to correct errors that may have occurred in a cause either in the record proper or in transactions in pais or at the trial. To do the work accurately and with reasonable speed the transcript of the record should be made up in an orderly, systematic manner so that the Court may have succinctly but clearly a correct conception of what actually transpired.

The order of the court which is of record recites that a motion was made for a list of witnesses expected to be *36 called by the State. The indictment showed the names of six witnesses which the State expected to call. On the face of the record, therefore, there was np error in the court’s order, but an examination of the bill of exceptions shows that the names of the six witnesses written on the back of the indictment were not the names of the witnesses by whom the State expected to prove the material elements of the crime charged against the three defendants, Kirby, Barton and Lee; that the State in fact relied upon two of the five defendants indicted, namely, Guest and Long, as to whom a severance had been obtained by the State.

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155 So. 123, 115 Fla. 30, 1934 Fla. LEXIS 1462, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lee-v-state-fla-1934.