Skaggs v. State

113 S.W. 346, 88 Ark. 62, 1908 Ark. LEXIS 132
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedOctober 19, 1908
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 113 S.W. 346 (Skaggs v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Skaggs v. State, 113 S.W. 346, 88 Ark. 62, 1908 Ark. LEXIS 132 (Ark. 1908).

Opinions

Hiuc, C. JL

(after stating the facts). 1. The first point upon which the Attorney General confesses error is the absence from the court room, of the presiding judge. The record on this point reads as follows: “While defendant’s counsel was making his argument to the jury, the judge stepped across the hall from the court room to the water closet, and was absent from the court room for the space of about 'two minutes, and while out of the court room T. S. Osborne, a regular practicing attorney of the bar, sat in the judge’s chair at the request of the judge. No objection was made to this, and no exception taken to it during the trial.”

The authorities are not entirely harmonious as to the eifect of the absence of a judge from the bench during the progress of a trial. The subject may be found reviewed in Horne v. Rodgers, 111 Ga. 362, s. c. 49 L. R. A. 176; Ellerbee v. State, 75 Miss. 522, s. c. 41 L. R. A. 569. This court had the subject before it in Stokes v. State, 71 Ark. 112, and the court followed the language of Judge Chalmers in Turbeville v. State, 56 Miss. 793, a leading case on the subject. The Turbeville decision is applicable here, as shown by the following excerpts: “During the arguments of counsel to the jury, the judge left the bench and stepped into a room immediately adjoining and in the rear of the bench, and separated from it only by the thickness of the wall, through which a door opened. He placed a member of the. bar on the bench, with instructions to call or notify him' if needed. He remained in this room, thus absent from the bench, and distant from it, as the bill of exceptions shows, five or six feet, during the greater portion of the time consumed in the several addresses of counsel to the jury. It does not appear whether the door which opened from the bench, or rostrum, into this room (styled the judge’s retiring room) was closed or open while the judge was thus absent. * * * If we could consider this statement of the facts as showing such absence from ■the room on the part of the judge as constituted even a temporary relinquishment of the control of the court and of the conduct of the trial, we should'unhesitatingly reverse the judgment. There can be no court without a judge, and his presence, as the presiding genius of the trial, is as essential during the argument as at' any other time. We do not mean to say that he must actually listen to every word that falls from the lips of counsel while they are addressing the jury, for this might impose a burden too heavy to be borne, but we do mean that the conduct and control of the argument within legitimate limits is confined to him as a judicial duty, and cannot be by him devolved upon another. While he will not be precluded from changing his seat to any portion of the room he may prefer, or from temporarily engaging in conversation, or reading or writing, he must remain within the hearing of counsel, so as to be able instantly to assert his authority, if demanded by anything that may occur. While it will rarely be necessary or proper for him to interfere with counsel, instances may arise that will require it;-and, moreover, the conduct of the jurors, spectators, or officers of court may be such as 'to demand the instant interposition of his authority. * * * The bill of exceptions in this case fails to show clearly that there was any relinquishment by the judge of •the functions of his office, or any such bodily absence as prevented their instant assertion when demanded; and we decline, on this account, to reverse the judgment.”

It is thus seen that the determining test is whether the judge has lost control of the proceedings. If he has done so, even if it be but for a short time, the integrity of the trial is destroyed. Applying that principle here, the record fails to show that the judge was out of hearing of the proceedings of the court when he stepped across the hall to a closet for a brief space of time. It does not disclose the distance from the court room to the closet, or whether the doors were opened or closed, or whether the proceedings could or could not be heard by him! The matter then before the court was the address of the defendant’s counsel to the jury. The trial having taken place in June, and the doors between court rooms and halls at that time of the year being usually left open, it may Veil be inferred that the judge was within the hearing of the proceedings of the trial and within the reach of it so that he could instantly have asserted his authority. On the other hand, it may have been that the doors were closed, or that the closet was in such a position that he was withdrawn entirely from hearing the proceedings, and was unable to instantly control them — in which event it would vitiate the trial. The burden is on the appellant to show affirmatively that the judge had lost.control of the trial; and this record fails to show that, leaving it, at best, a matter of conjecture as to whether or not he had removed himself for a brief period of time from the immediate presence of the proceedings where he could not exercise his legitimate functions as presiding judge of the court.

II. The next confession of error is for the giving of the fourth instruction, which is as follows: “If you find from the evidence that the defendant made a confession that he had committed the crime of rape on the person of Margaret Irene Taylor, that alone would not be sufficient to authorize you to convict; but the confession of defendant, if made, accompanied by proof that the offense was actually committed, will warrant a conviction; and if you find from the evidence beyond a reasonable doubt that defendant made the confession of the crime, and that the crime was committed, you should convict.”

The Attorney General says that under Duckworth v. State, 83 Ark. 192, and Thomas v. State, 85 Ark. 138, this instruction is erroneous.

This is not an instruction on the weight of the evidence, and is not obnoxious to the objection for which the instructions were condemned in those cases. The court left it to the jury to say whether or not the appellant made a confession, and told them that, if they found that he did make a confession, such fact alone would not authorize them to convict, but that they must also find that the offense was committed, which was tantamount to saying that they could not convict the defendant because he made the confession, but that they must go further and find that his confession was true before they were authorized to convict. There was really no dispute in the evidence about the fact that the defendant had made a confession, and that it was a confession in open court. The instruction as a whole fairly submitted to the jury to find beyond a reasonable doubt whether the defendant made a confession, and whether the crime was committed; in other words, whether the confession was true.

While the form of the instruction cannot be commended, prejudicial error is not found in it. If specific objection had been made to it, its awkward form could and should have been corrected. The real question in the case was, not whether the confession was made, but whether the crime was committed; and the instructions on the only real issue were clear and sound. In one respect the instruction is more favorable to the defendant than he was entitled to. It is based on the. theory that his confession in the examining court was an extrajudicial confession, and needed corroboration, pursuant to section 2385 of Kirby’s Digest: “A confession of a defendant, unless made in open court, will not warrant a conviction, unless accompanied with other proof that such offense was committed.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
113 S.W. 346, 88 Ark. 62, 1908 Ark. LEXIS 132, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/skaggs-v-state-ark-1908.