State v. Connally

182 So. 318, 190 La. 175, 1938 La. LEXIS 1279
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMay 30, 1938
DocketNo. 34880.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 182 So. 318 (State v. Connally) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Connally, 182 So. 318, 190 La. 175, 1938 La. LEXIS 1279 (La. 1938).

Opinion

HIGGINS, Justice.

The defendant was charged, tried and convicted of breaking into and entering a dwelling house with intent to steal on December 18, 1937. After his conviction, but before being sentenced, the attorney appointed by the court to represent the defendant, who was in indigent circumstances, filed an exception to the jurisdiction of the court ratione materiae on the ground that the accused was under seventeen years of age at the time of the commission of the alleged offense. After the introduction of evidence on the issue and argument, the district judge overruled the exception and denied a motion for a new trial, which was pleaded in the alternative. A bill of exception was duly reserved.- The defendant was sentenced to five years of hard labor in the penitentiary and he appealed.

Under the provisions of Sections 52 and 53 of Article 7 of the Constitution of 1921 and Section 7 of Act No. 83 of the Extra Session of the Legislature of 1921, the district court is without jurisdiction ratione materiae to try for a criminal offense an accused, who, at the time the act was committed, was less than seventeen years old. Such violation of the law constitutes delinquency and the defendant can only be proceeded against as a delinquent juvenile. It is immaterial that at the time of the trial the accused was seventeen years old because the governing factor is his age on the date he committed the offense and he cannot be prosecuted as a felon. State v. Grayson, 170 La. 111, 127 So. 382; State v. Walker, 178 La. 635, 152 So. 315.

In the case of State v. Malone, 156 La. 617, 100 So. 788, the Court said (page 789):

“The accidental arrival of the seventeenth anniversary of his birthday before his trial no more operated to deprive that court of jurisdiction over him than it operated to magnify his offense and subject him to the jurisdiction of the district court. The delinquent child is not to be punished, but he is nonetheless to be reformed; and that reformation is to be under the eye of the juvenile court.”

On the trial of the exception, Nancy Clark Connally, the mother of the accused, testified that she was first married to Obie *179 Johnson and the sole issue of their union was a male child, Willie B. Johnson, who was still living; that Obie Johnson died on December 30, 1918, and she then married Willie Mason by whom she had only one child, a boy, Ernest Mason, who was also known as Ernest Connally, the defendant in this case; that Ernest was born on February 1, 1921 and she remembers the date, because her father died on December 22 or 23, 1920, at which time she was in an advanced stage of pregnancy and unable to attend the funeral; that she also recalls the date from having written it in her Bible but was unable to produce this Bible because her sister’s children had destroyed it; that Dr. H. J. Yoist, a colored physician, and aunt Rachael waited on her at Ernest Mason’s birth; and that she subsequently married Connally and her son became known as Ernest Connally. She states that the only child born to her on February 1, 1921 was the accused and that she had never had a child by the name of “Elsie” or “Eloise”, and that the only girl she ever gave birth to was her daughter, Rosalie Ladell, who was eleven years old at the time of the trial. She admitted that this little girl was born while she lived in concubinage with one Jack Ladell.

The birth certificate shows that Dr. Yoist attended Nancy Clark, wife of Willie Mason, at the birth of a child born to her and Willie Mason on February 1, 1921, by the name of “Elsie”. Nancy says that this certificate was in fact and truth the recordation of the birth of Ernest Mason and that the doctor, in filling out the attending physician's statement, erroneously wrote the name “Elsie” Mason and indicated the sex of the child as “female”, and that these mistakes are obvious ones for no other child was born of her marriage with Willie Mason, except Ernest Mason. The father, the physician and the midwife were all dead at the time of the trial.

The records of the registrar of vital statistics at Alexandria, Rapides Parish, show the birth of a “female” child by the name of “Eloise”, born of the union of Nancy Clark and Willie Mason on February 1, 1921.

The mother’s testimony is corroborated in all important respects by that of Nathan Taylor, a distant relative, Phylis Clark, her sister-in-law, and Isabel Jackson, her stepmother, all of whom lived in the same neighborhood with the mother for many years before and after the birth of the accused. They are emphatic in their statements that Nancy Clark never gave birth to a female child by the name of “Elsie” or “Eloise”, and that there was never a female child born of her union with Willie Mason. They fixed the date of the birth of Ernest, the accused, by different happenings in their lives and all of them recalled the fact that Nancy was unable to attend her father’s funeral in December, 1920, because of her delicate condition.

Jack Ladell, one of the defendant’s witnesses, testified that, after Willie Mason died, he lived with Nancy Clark Mason as his common law wife, or in concubinage, for about seven years and that of their relations there were two children born, Rosalie Ladell, a girl who was eleven years *181 old at the date of the trial, and Vincent, a male child. He states that there never was a female child born to them by the name of “Elsie” or “Eloise” and that the only daughter Nancy had was the one by him. He says that the accused is not his son. On cross-examination, he testified that he had lived with Nancy for approximately seven years and then separated from her for about six years, and lived with another woman for about five or six years, and that Ernest, the accused, at the time he started living with the child’s mother, was about two years old.

The State offered the testimony of the two arresting officers, who stated that the accused told them he was nineteen years of age.

A former employer of the accused stated that in 1935 and 1936 he paid the accused the wages of a man during the time he worked on his place and that he looked to be about sixteen or seventeen years, of age then. He further stated that he determined Ernest’s age from his physical appearance.

The district judge in his per curiam states that the accused appeared to be more than seventeen years of age, because of his height and weight and his cunningness in performing the burglary indicated intelligence greater than that possessed by the average seventeen year old boy. He pointed out that by adding the estimates of time given by Jack Ladell, the accused would be nineteen or twenty years of age, which corroborated the testimony of the arresting officers, and that, in his opinion, the accused was above the age of seventeen years at the time of his unlawful act. He further stated that the birth certificate apparently records the birth of a sister of Ernest, who was born when he was about two years old.

In State v. Walker, supra, where the facts were similar to those of the instant case, this Court set aside the conviction and sentence without prejudice to the rights of the State to proceed against the defendant in the Juvenile Court, saying:

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Related

State v. Brockner
21 So. 2d 499 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1944)
State v. McDonald
20 So. 2d 6 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1944)
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188 So. 737 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1939)

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Bluebook (online)
182 So. 318, 190 La. 175, 1938 La. LEXIS 1279, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-connally-la-1938.