Nickels v. State

106 So. 479, 90 Fla. 659
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedDecember 1, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by106 cases

This text of 106 So. 479 (Nickels 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
Nickels v. State, 106 So. 479, 90 Fla. 659 (Fla. 1925).

Opinions

[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *Page 661

[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *Page 662 Having been adjudged guilty of the crime of rape and sentenced to death, plaintiff in error, hereinafter referred to as the defendant, seeks reversal of the judgment by writ of error.

To a previous judgment of conviction and similar sentence which followed a former plea of guilty, a writ of errorcoram nobis was denied by the circuit judge. On writ of error, the order of the circuit judge denying a writ of error coramnobis was affirmed by this court; but on a rehearing subsequently granted the order was reversed. See Nickels v. State, 86 Fla. 208; 98 South. Rep. 497, 502; 99 South. Rep. 121. A new trial followed, resulting in the judgment of which the defendant now seeks a reversal. *Page 663

The offense of which the defendant was convicted was committed in the city of DeLand on December 7, 1921. When attacked, the victim resisted her assailant with the utmost vigor and determination and a violent struggle between them occurred in the bath room of the victim's home, in which room the actual attack was precipitated and consummated. The testimony indicates that the victim was wearing, among other things, two rings. During the course of the struggle, the assailant forcibly removed one of these rings, but was unable to remove the other, a wedding ring. The struggle continued unabated until unconsciousness on the part of the victim intervened as her assailant was about to consummate his carnal attack upon her. Immediately after the accomplishment of the latter purpose and while the victim lay upon the bath room floor, her hands bound by a towel, her assailant visited other parts of the house where he procured several other articles of jewelry and personal paraphernalia. After thus occupying himself for about ten minutes he returned to the bath room where the victim still lay, and after speaking briefly with her there, fled the scene. The perpetrator of the offense escaped apprehension at that time.

On December 12th, 1921, the defendant was arrested in Jacksonville as he was leaving a pawn shop, suspicion having attached to him by reason of his possession of the jewelry and other articles taken from the person and home of the victim at the time of the attack upon her. The defendant was lodged in the city jail in Jacksonville, and on December 14, 1921, was visited in his cell there by an attorney at law, an official court reporter, the chief of police, assistant chief of police and keeper of the city jail of Jacksonville.

The following colloquy then occurred between the attorney and the defendant, in the presence of the other persons mentioned, the attorney asking the questions, the defendant *Page 664 answering them, as hereinafter indicated, and the official court reporter taking down all that was said by either the said attorney or the defendant. The others present said or did nothing with the exception of the reporter, who asked the defendant how he spelled his name. At the time, the defendant was under arrest, and suspected of but not yet actually charged with or indicted for the crime above mentioned: Q. (by the attorney) "You are under arrest here by the Police Department, and you are going to be charged with rape. We want to know if you want to make a statement as to what you did, and with the understanding that you are not compelled to make any statement unless you want to. It is entirely optional with you. We want you to understand that you have the privilege of refusing to make any statement if you want to. If you do make a statement, it will be used against you in the event that you are indicted by the Grand Jury of Volusia County, charged with rape, when you are given a trial upon that charge in that county. Do you want to make a statement?" A. (by the defendant) "Well, yes, sir, I can do it, sir, if you want me." Q. "All right; I want you to tell the Chief of Police here; this is a deputy court reporter of the Fourth Judicial Circuit, and Mr. Kirby Poster, Jailer, and my name is W. A. Hallowes, Jr. With that understanding from you that you are willing to make the statement, we want you to tell us just exactly what occurred; what you did down in DeLand, starting from the beginning or it, right on through." A. "Well, when I was in DeLand, I was only there for a short while and I asked a gentleman where I could get a sporting woman. He said he would get me one for two dollars. I told him I didn't have the money. And I had about a dollar and eighty cents, something like that, and he says, 'Well, give me a dollar and I'll show you where her house is.' So, he carries me to this house and I gave him the dollar. He told me to go in as a plumber. So, I did. I *Page 665 had never seen this woman before. So, when I went in, I cut her water and I left her house and I went to find this fellow and he couldn't be found. So, I went back to this house. I went in the bath room, and she was telling me about some water that kept running and I tried to fix it for her. And she came in the bath room the first time and talked to me, and then went out. And then she came back the second time, and I grabbed her and she screamed; and she told me to quit, said her mother-in-law lived next door. And she called for her mother-in-law again. I threw her down. And then she told me, she says, 'Well, it's up to you, I will let you go your way.' " Q. "What did you do?" A. "Well, I jazzed her." Q. "By that, do you mean you had carnal intercourse with her?" A. "Yes, sir." Q. "Did you have sexual intercourse with this woman?" A. "No, sir." Q. "What did you mean by the remark that you had carnal intercourse with her; what do you mean?" A. "Well, I had an intercourse with her, sir. That's what I mean." Q. "You had sexual intercourse with this woman." A. "Yes, sir."

Replying to a series of further questions by said attorney the defendant then related in detail how he grabbed his victim and threw her down, striking her several times with his fist when she screamed; the details of his carnal attack upon her, repeatedly admitting his carnal intercourse with her; how after accomplishing the latter he tied her hands with a towel so as to keep her in the bath room and give him time to escape, after which he proceeded to other parts of the house where he obtained the jewelry and some other articles found upon his person when arrested; and how he escaped apprehension and fled from the scene of his crime to Jacksonville. Although the defendant twice stated in the early part of his confession that his victim ultimately yielded after he had struck her several times, the following statements also appear in a subsequent portion thereof: Q. *Page 666 (by the attorney) "She didn't consent to you having intercourse with her?" A. (by the defendant) "No, sir." Q. "You did this against her will? I want you to tell the truth about this thing." A. "Yes, sir, I am telling the truth." Q. "Did you have intercourse with her against her will?" A. "Why, yes, sir, I suppose so." Q. "You know whether it was or not?" A. "I asked her and she said no, her mother-in-law lived next door." Q. "Did you have intercourse with this woman against her will?" A. "Yes, sir." Q. "She did not consent for you to have intercourse with her?" A. "No, sir." Still later in the confession the following appears: Q.

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Bluebook (online)
106 So. 479, 90 Fla. 659, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nickels-v-state-fla-1925.