State v. Burnett

141 N.W.2d 221, 30 Wis. 2d 375, 1966 Wisc. LEXIS 1061
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedApril 12, 1966
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 141 N.W.2d 221 (State v. Burnett) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Burnett, 141 N.W.2d 221, 30 Wis. 2d 375, 1966 Wisc. LEXIS 1061 (Wis. 1966).

Opinion

Fairchild, J.

Four issues are presented: (1) Was a confession improperly admitted in evidence, either because Burnett was unable to appreciate his constitutional rights and therefore incapable of waiving them when he made the confession, or because he was not represented by counsel when interrogated? (2) Was Burnett prejudiced by the court’s submitting the voluntariness of the confession to the jury? (3) Was the jury chosen from an improper array? (4) Were Negroes systematically excluded from the jury list ?

(1) The confession. Charles De Luca and a young lady were in a parked automobile in South Shore Park about 12:30 a. m., October 13, 1945. Men came to the car, required them to get out, and in a struggle which developed near the car, De Luca was fatally wounded.

Chester Wright testified that in October, 1945, he and Burnett and a man named Scott were staying at a rooming house in Racine. On the night in question, after doing some drinking, they drove to the park in Scott’s car. There had been conversation about robbery. Wright *379 had a gun and Burnett a knife. Wright and Burnett left Scott’s car and came up to De Luca’s, one on each side, and forced the couple out. Wright took De Luca’s wallet. They marched the couple away from the car so that the three men could have a head start in getting away. Suddenly De Luca turned and knocked Wright down, and they scuffled. Burnett told Wright to shoot, but Wright had dropped his gun. Apparently in an effort to aid Wright, Burnett cut De Luca from the back, and cut Wright’s right hand, which was then on De Luca’s shoulder. They then ran to Scott’s car, went back to the rooming house and got their things, and drove to St. Joseph, Michigan, by way of Chicago. The car became disabled on the highway, and a police officer noticed and talked to them. Later the police picked them up.

Burnett described the same episode. He denied, however, that he had stabbed De Luca, or made any use of his own knife. He testified that he did attempt to intervene in the fight, but his testimony suggests that De Luca must have had a knife with which he cut Wright’s hand, and that Wright must have got hold of the knife and stabbed De Luca. After interrogation at St. Joseph, Burnett had signed a statement, the admissibility of which is challenged. In the statement Burnett admitted that after Wright and De Luca scuffled and fell down, Burnett came up and “swung” his knife. He was unable to say how many times he hit De Luca, but on one of the times he swung it, he hit Wright on the hand and cut him.

Racine police officers who were in the vicinity of the De Luca car at the time of the event heard the screams of De Luca’s companion and came on the scene soon after the men had left. In the course of their investigation, they happened to check at the rooming house, noticed blood which apparently came from Wright’s wound, obtained descriptions of the men and the license number of the ear, and sent out an all-points bulletin.

The three men were picked up just before 3 a. m., and were placed in cells at the jail at St. Joseph. They were *380 questioned about 9 a. m. by Leo Cook, an FBI Agent, and Sheriff Ervin Kubath. The two-page statement was written by Cook and signed by Burnett.

Before the statement was admitted in evidence, the court heard testimony in the absence of the jury. At the close of that hearing, the court summarized the testimony and stated that “such a prima facie showing has been made as to entitle the statement to have the consideration of the jury and it will be allowed.” When the case was submitted to the jury, the court instructed that in order to be considered, the statement must be the free and voluntary statement of the defendant, and gave further instructions upon the issue of whether the statement was free and voluntary. Thus the court appeared to follow the practice in this state prior to the decision of the supreme court of the United States in Jackson v. Denno. 2 This practice submerges in the ultimate verdict the finding on the issue of voluntariness, and, as held in Jackson, is inadequate to insure a reliable and clear-cut determination of voluntariness, as required in order to afford due process of law. Such requirement, however, is satisfied by the so-called “orthodox rule, under which the judge himself solely and finally determines the volun-tariness of the confession, or . . . the Massachusetts procedure, under which the jury passes on voluntariness only after the judge has fully and independently resolved the issue against the accused.” 3 In Jackson itself, the supreme court did not order a new trial, but left that question to be decided after a separate determination of the issue of voluntariness by the state court.

Judge DuRocher, in ruling upon motions after verdict in the instant case, made it plain that he had been convinced by the evidence that the statement was “the free and voluntary product of the unconstrained will of the defendant” and that defendant “appreciated and was capable of appreciating his right to remain silent.” *381 We consider that the procedural requirement, of Jackson, that there be a reliable and clear-cut determination of voluntariness has been fulfilled. The issue now before us is not merely, however, whether Judge DuRocher’s finding was against the great weight and clear preponderance of the evidence. “. . . since the question is whether a constitutional right has been violated, it is the subject of our independent determination on this review.” 4 In such determination we give appropriate weight to the trial judge’s advantage in determining credibility of witnesses by virtue of his opportunity to hear and observe them, but we are mindful of our obligation to be satisfied, from the totality of circumstances disclosed by the record, and applying due-process standards, whether or not Burnett’s statement was voluntary.

Remarkably, in view of the lapse of nineteen years, the state was able to produce as witnesses, Agent Cook, former Sheriff Kubath, Louis Hardy, an assistant district attorney of Racine county in 1945, and Walter Becker, the then undersheriff of Racine county. The latter two had accompanied the then sheriff, now deceased, to St. Joseph. After waiver of extradition, they brought Burnett, Scott and Wright back to Racine.

Cook testified that the three men were interviewed separately in the sheriff’s office. Burnett was cooperative and very readily stated the facts. The individual interrogations did not extend over forty minutes. The sheriff asked a few questions, and was the only other person present. Cook told Burnett at the outset who he and the sheriff were, that Burnett did not have to furnish information and anything he did say could be used against him in court. The first paragraph of the statement signed by Burnett asserts that he had been so told. Burnett read the statement before he signed it. Cook testified that Burnett appeared remorseful and desirous of getting the information “off his chest;” that Burnett *382

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Bluebook (online)
141 N.W.2d 221, 30 Wis. 2d 375, 1966 Wisc. LEXIS 1061, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-burnett-wis-1966.