State v. Floyd

76 S.E.2d 291, 223 S.C. 413, 1953 S.C. LEXIS 49
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedJune 5, 1953
Docket16751
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 76 S.E.2d 291 (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, 76 S.E.2d 291, 223 S.C. 413, 1953 S.C. LEXIS 49 (S.C. 1953).

Opinion

Baker, Chief Justice.

At the November (1950) term of the Court of General Sessions for Sumter County, the appellant, Charles W. Floyd, and another boy were tried on an indictment con- *415 tabling two counts, the first charging rape of the prosecutrix, and the second count charging them with assault and battery of a high and aggravated nature on the person of the prosecutrix, all on the same occasion.

The jury found both defendants not guilty of the first count, but guilty on the second count. Appellant, at the time of the alleged offense, was 17 years of age, and the other defendant was 15. The trial Judge sentenced the appellant in the usual form to serve five years, but upon the service of two years, suspended the remainder and placed him on probation. The other defendant, due to his age, was sentenced to the S. C. Industrial School for boys until he reached the age. of 21, from which institution he has heretofore been released on parole, so we were informed when this appeal was orally argued. He was represented by another attorney and did not appeal from his conviction and the sentence imposed.

The brief of the appellant alleges that there are three “Questions Involved,” but the alleged first issue was not raised in the court below, and therefore not passed upon; nor do appellant’s exceptions undertake to raise such issue. It would therefore be improper for this Court to now make any holding thereabout.

As we view this case, it is not necessary that we consume any time in the discussion of the second issue raised by the appellant’s exceptions. Upon another trial of the case, this issue will not, in all probability, arise since it can easily be avoided by counsel representing the State.

The third issue, as stated by the appellant reads:

“Was the alleged ‘confession’ of the defendant obtained, and admitted in evidence in violation of the defendant’s constitutional rights?” Article 1, § 17 of the Constitution of this State, and the Fourteenth Amendment of the U. S. Constitution.

*416 The issue of whether a defendant’s constitutional rights have been transgressed by overzealous officers in the procurement of an alleged “confession,” especially when written up by such officer, is quite often a perplexing one to decide, and this is such a case. There can be no definite and fixed rule governing all cases, but each case must be decided depending upon all of the facts and attending circumstances of the particular case being passed upon.

Here we have a boy seventeen years of age who had learned that some officer or officers were in the town of Olanta, in the County of Florence, looking for him. He immediately dressed and was accompanying his informant to Olanta (the officer hereinafter referred to, and around whose conduct in the procurement of an alleged confession from appellant this appeal revolves, testified that this informant said they were going to Kingstree) when they met one, C. L. Hobbs, a Lieutenant of the rural police force of Sumter County and some other officer or officers on the dirt road leading from the appellant’s home to the highway leading to Olanta, at between 6 and 6:30 o’clock on the morning following the alleged commission of the alleged offense on the night before. Appellant’s home is about one and one-half miles from the highway. Recognizing that the car which they met contained officers, the appellant got out of the car in which he was riding and walked over to the car in which Hobbs was riding, and was placed therein and, after he procured for the officers the clothes he was wearing on the night before, was carried to the police station in Olanta. There he was questioned in a room by Hobbs for a considerable time, during which time no person other than one, J. W. Byrd, the then Chief of Police of Olanta was present, and even he was not present at all times during this questioning of appellant by Hobbs. (This is the same Byrd who has since acquired considerable notoriety by reason of his testimony in behalf of the prosecution in the recently tried case where two citizens of Marlboro County were charged with, but acquitted of the atrocious and cowardly murder of the late J. U. (Red) Watts, Jr.)

*417 While the alleged confession, which was in writing, was not procured in Olanta, but later the same day, at around 1 or 1:30 o’clock, in the Sheriff’s office at Sumter, it was procured and typed by the same officer, C. L. Hobbs, and we think it best to set out in sequence the facts surrounding the procurement of the confession.

Soon after reaching the police station or headquarters in Olanta, which was in the town hall, Hobbs took this boy (the appellant) in a room and there questioned him for a considerable period of time, but did not write down anything he said because according to Hobbs, he knew appellant was not telling the truth. During Hobbs’ questioning he talked in a loud voice, and muffled slaps could be heard on the outside of the building. Hobbs testified that the slaps heard was when he would slap his hands together in questioning the appellant, although there is a complete absence of any testimony in the record that this was his usual manner of questioning an accused. Hobbs had been a law enforcement officer for several years and was familiar with the usual requirements before a confession obtained could be used in a Court of Justice against a defendant. He admitted that in Olanta the appellant, notwithstanding his questioning and whatever his conduct was in questioning the appellant, steadfastly denied that he was guilty of having taken any protested liberties with the prosecutrix. Fie denied throughout the trial that he slapped the appellant on the leg when he was questioning him in Olanta, and denied until his final cross-examination by appellant’s counsel, that he had called this boy a liar several times or cursed at him when he was questioning him in Olanta.

Hobbs testified that before questioning the appellant at Olanta, he told him that death was the penalty for the crime with which he was charged, and warned him that any statement he (the appellant) made could be used against him, and that he didn’t have to make a statement if he didn’t want to do so; that he was entitled to the benefit of having an attorney advise him, if he so desired, and that no promises *418 of any nature were made to him. Hobbs admitted that he did not offer to get any member of appellant’s family or family connection, or a friend, to confer with him, or that he would permit him to have any conference with a member of his family or a friend.

When Hobbs was unable to get any incriminating statement from the appellant, he then carried him on to Kingstree where he and the other officer riding with him took charge of the co-defendant ■ of this defendant hereinbefore referred to, and who had been arrested by and was being held for him by the Sheriff of Williamsburg County.

We deem it well to here let it be recorded that there was a third young man, whose home was in or near Olanta, who was also arrested in connection with the offenses charged in the indictment, but while his name appeared as a defendant in the warrant that was issued on the day after these arrests were made, he was not included in the indictment.

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Related

State v. Henderson
84 S.E.2d 626 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1954)

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Bluebook (online)
76 S.E.2d 291, 223 S.C. 413, 1953 S.C. LEXIS 49, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-floyd-sc-1953.