State v. Floyd

177 S.E. 375, 174 S.C. 288, 1934 S.C. LEXIS 205
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedNovember 27, 1934
Docket13951
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 177 S.E. 375 (State v. Floyd) 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. Floyd, 177 S.E. 375, 174 S.C. 288, 1934 S.C. LEXIS 205 (S.C. 1934).

Opinions

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Justice Blease.

Erom his conviction and sentence to death on a charge of rape, in the Court of General Session for Lexington County, the defendant Clarence Floyd, has appealed to this Court.

*291 The crime charged against the appellant, who, in this opinion, will be referred to as the defendant, was alleged to have been committed in Lexington County-on the night of Saturday, August 5, 1933. He was arrested the following Monday night, August 7th. A true bill was returned by the grand jury on September 11th, and the defendant was arraigned on that day. That procedure has long been in vogue in this State. The Courts of General Sessions, where criminal cases of serious character are tried, convene in the counties of our state, generally, but three times in each year. Being without counsel, the Presiding Judge, Honorable William H. Grimball, appointed four members of the Lexington Bar, McKendree Barr, Esq., Milo Smith, Esq., and Messrs. Hall & Hall, all of whom are highly regarded, to represent him. A defendant charged with a capital offense in this State for many years has been, and is now, entitled to three days after arraignment, if he demands it, before his trial is entered upon. We assume the proper demand was made in this case, for the trial was not begun until September 14th. It was concluded the following day.

Within the time required by the statute, notice of intention to appeal on the part of the defendant was given by N. J. Frederick, Esq., of the Columbia Bar, who was not of counsel in the trial Court, and that attorney has represented the cause of the defendant in this Court. For some reason, not explained to the Court, there seems to have been considerable delay in docketing the case for hearing here. Apparently, the Solicitor, legal representative of the State has not insisted that the defendant and his counsel comply strictly with the rules of the Court. Evidently, too, the Solicitor, in the matter of the appeal, has been exceedingly fair to the defendant. That officer stated at bar of the Court that he had once considered the making of a motion in the Court, under the rules, to dismiss the appeal, on the ground that it was frivolous and without merit, but, upon *292 reflection, since the result to the defendant was so very grave, he had concluded not to make that motion, preferring for the Court to give full hearing to the appeal.

The transcript of record contains only the exceptions and the testimony in full at the trial. There were seven witnesses in chief for the State. The defendant testified, and presented five witnesses in his defense. Every witness desired by the defendant to testify in his behalf, evidently, was present at the trial and did testify. There is not the least suggestion in the record, and none has been made in the argument in behalf of the defendant in this Court, that there was a failure to have in the trial Court any witness whom the defendant thought might give testimony beneficial to him. The State offered five witnesses in reply, one of whom, however, had testified in chief. The examination of the witness on the part of the State was. conducted by the Solicitor. The examination of the witness in behalf of the defendant was conducted by Mr. Barr and Mr. Hall. The cross-examination of the State’s witnesses by these gentlemen seems to us to have been quite thorough. We have especially noted that the cross-examination of the prosecutrix and her male companion, to whose testimony we hereafter refer very fully, on the part of Mr. Barr, a lawyer of considerable experience, and who is aggressive, was quite vigorous. Evidently, this attorney had some doubt as to the truthfulness of the testimony of these witnesses, and he did not hesitate to let them, especially Sutton, recognize the doubts he had.

It is to be noted that the exceptions make no complaint of error in the admission or rejection of evidence, or that there was any erroneous instruction to the jury on the law. There is not anywhere the slightest intimation that the presiding Judge was other than entirely fair to the defendant. To us the record indicates that he was very careful to safeguard every right of the accused. There is no suggestion that any member of the trial jury was prejudiced *293 against the defendant; and there is no charge that the jury, as a whole, was not composed of competent persons, drawn, summoned, and impaneled in a legal manner. Neither is it charged, as often has been done in cases of this character, that the defendant was unduly hurried to trial, Or that he was tried in a hostile atmosphere. There is not any intimation anywhere that the venue of the case should have been changed from Lexington County, where the alleged crime occurred, and where the trial was had. It is not hinted in the record that the accused was denied the right of counsel in the broadest and most liberal interpretation of that guaranty to him, both under the Federal and State Constitutions. We are bound to assume, therefore, that in all respects the trial of the case was conducted in a thoroughly legal and orderly manner, and that no constitutional right of the defendant, state or federal, was violated.

The four exceptions refer mainly to the facts, as adduced in the evidence, and are as follows :

1. “There is no evidence to convict defendant on the charge of rape.”
2. “The charge of rape is too palpably the after-thought of the man companion of the alleged victim, for reasons best known to himself, to support a verdict and sentence of death.”
3. “The story of the manner and method of the commission of the act is not only too fanciful, chimerical, fairy-like, and contradictory not to raise a reasonable doubt, but is contrary to natural laws and the physical facts.”
4. “The burden of disproving the alibi of defendant was on the State, and this it has failed to do.”

The exceptions present only two legal propositions. One of those, referred to in the fourth exception, that the state has the- burden of disproving the defense of alibi, is, perhaps, a little inaptly stated in the exception, but it is in practical accord with the present rule, adhered to in this State, as to the effect of that defense. This *294 Court, in the case of State v. McGhee, 137 S. C., 256, 135 S. E., 59, for the first time expressly declared that an alibi was not an affirmative defense, as it had been theretofore long held. In the McGhee case, the opinion of Mr. Justice Cothran in State v. Deschamps, 134 S. C., 179, 131 S. E., 420, on the matter of alibi, was adopted, and since the decision in the McGhee case, the holding there has been followed. The true rule then, quoting from the opinion of Mr. Justice Cothran, is stated in this language: “* * * the so-called ‘affirmative defense’ of alibi is not an affirmative defense at all. It is simply evidence adduced by the defendant to sustain his plea of not guilty; that he did not commit the crime for the reason that he was not at the scene of the crime at the time of the occurrence.

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Bluebook (online)
177 S.E. 375, 174 S.C. 288, 1934 S.C. LEXIS 205, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-floyd-sc-1934.