State v. Branham

13 S.C. 389, 1880 S.C. LEXIS 63
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedApril 21, 1880
DocketCASE No. 862
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 13 S.C. 389 (State v. Branham) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Branham, 13 S.C. 389, 1880 S.C. LEXIS 63 (S.C. 1880).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

McGowan, A. J.

The defendants were convicted upon an indictment for bui’glary and larceny, at July Term of. the court for Richland county, 1879, and sentenced to confinement in the penitentiary at hard labor for the term of six years. The indictment charged that the offence was committed by taking seventeen pieces of bacon from the smoke-house of Nick C. Joiner, February 9th, 1879. The proof was, that the taking was a year before, February, 1878, and the owner of the property was N. G. Joiner. The defendants were arrested April, 1879, and carried before a trial justice, and a preliminary examination was held at Eastover. One of the witnesses for the state was caught by the trial justice in a “crooked tale,” and the trial justice spoke angrily to him and threatened “ if he did not stop shenanegan and tell the truth, he would send him right up to jail.” Defendants were asked what they had to say for themselves, and were told that “ if they desired to make a statement it was their privilege to do so, and they were warned that whatever they said would be taken for them or against them, as it might be.” Defendants then made confession, each charging- the other and one Tempe Brown, with the crime. Harris said he stopped in a low, wet place and Branham and Tempe Brown went to the smokehouse and brought the meat down to him and he helped to carry it off. [A low, wet place is about three hundred and seventy-five yards from the smoke-house. The track of three persons led from the smoke-house to the low, wet place.] Branham said he went with them and stopped under a wagon shed; that Harris and Brown came to him and told him “ the house had been dug under,” and to come and get the meat. He said he refused lo go and they went and got the meat, and that he helped them to carry it off. These statements were reduced to writing by the trial justice, read over to and signed by the respective defendants and the trial justice, which paper was in court. Parol testimony was received to prove the confessions. [Defendants excepted.] Defendants then moved to strike out the confessions, on the ground that they were improperly obtained, which motion was [392]*392refused and defendants excepted. No evidence was introduced on the part of the defence.

, Defendants made motions for a new trial and in arrest of judgment, and failing therein.appealed to this court on the following grounds:

1. “ That the presiding judge erred in receiving parol testimony of the alleged confession of defendants, the rule being when prisoners conféss before examining magistrates it is the duty of the latter to take the confessions in writing, and the writing alone is evidence of the confessions, unless it appears that the writing is lost or destroyed.

2. “That his Honor erred in allowing the confessions, the circumstances surrounding the confessions being such as to make them inadmissible.

3. “ That there is fatal variance between the allegations of the indictment and the proof, in this: the indictment alleges the offence on February 9th, 1879, and the proof is that the offence was committed February 9th, 1878, and the indictment should have so charged.

4. “ That the verdict is contrary to the law and the evidence.”

The last exception, that the verdict is “ contrary to the law and the evidence,” does not charge any specific error, and, therefore,' .cannot be considered. The sufficiency of the proof to charge the prisoners as principals was properly addressed to the Circuit iudge upon a motion for a new trial. The alleged misnomer as to the owner of the property, Nick C. Joiner for N. Gr. Joiner, does not appear to have been objected to in the court below, or brought to the attention of the judge, either in the pleadings or orally. No reference is made to it in the grounds of appeal, and the matter is not before this court in such form that we can consider it. The other grounds of appeal will be considered in the inverse order in which they are stated.

As to the variance between the indictment and the proof as to the time the offence was committed. No statute of limitations is in the case, but simply a question of pleading. It is not necessary to prove the precise day or even year laid in the indictment, except where time enters into the nature of the offence, or is made part of the description of it. State v. Anderson, 3 Rich. 176; State v. Porter, 10 Rich. 148.

[393]*393But it is ingeniously argued that as there is a time limited in the act of 1878 (16 Stat. 631) to go into effect, to wit, “sixty days from its passage,” time becomes essential to an indictment under that act. It does not appear that this indictment is under the act of 1878.- It reads, “ against the form of the act of the general assembly in such case made and provided, and against the peace and dignity of the state,” ,&c. But no particular act is referred to, and we conclude that it was not under the act of 1878, for the reason that the punishment under that act is “imprisonment during the life of the prisoner,” and these defendants were imprisoned only for “six years.” We assume that the indictment was under Section 32, Chapter CXXIX., (Gen. Stat. 720,) being substantially the re-enactment of the act of 3866. If this indictment were under the act of March 22d, 1878, the judgment would have to be arrested, for the reason that the act was not passed until the offence was committed, February 8th, 1878. The criminal law is so tender of the rights of the citizen that it will not allow him to be tried and punished under a law ■ which was not in existence at the time the offence was committed, especially if the subsequent law increases the punishment. That would be unconstitutional because expostfacto.

Accepting this view, it is then argued that the defendants could not be indicted and punished under the aforesaid section of the general statutes, for the reason that the act of 1878, being on the same subject, was a substitute for and a repeal of that law. That the defendants could not be tried and punished under the act of 1878, because it was passed after the offence, nor under the aforesaid section of the general statute, because that was repealed by the act of 1878, and there being no law under which they could be punished, consequently they must go free — as did the defendant convicted for cow-stealing, in the case of State v. Thomas, 14 Rich. 164. We do not think the cases are analogous. In the case of Thomas, as here, the offence was committed before and tried after the change of the law, and there was no authority under which he could be punished, for the reason that it was held that the act of 1866, upon the subject of cow-stealing, operated as a repeal of the act of 1789, upon the same subject. But no such result can happen in this case. The act of 1878 [394]*394does not operate as a repeal of so much of the aforesaid section of the statutes as relates to burglary. Nor did the said section repeal the offence of burglary at common law. The act of 1878 does not expressly repeal anything. It contains no repealing clause, but simply increases the punishment of one convicted of “the crime of burglary at common law.” That, .itself, is an express legislative declaration that the offence of burglary at common Jaw had not been repealed. If the act of 1878 operates as a repeal, it must be by implication. Such repeals are possible, but they are not favored.

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Related

State v. Von Dohlen
471 S.E.2d 689 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1996)
Shirley v. State
411 S.E.2d 215 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1991)
State v. Rogers
83 S.E. 971 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1914)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
13 S.C. 389, 1880 S.C. LEXIS 63, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-branham-sc-1880.