State v. Nesmith

48 S.E.2d 595, 213 S.C. 60, 1948 S.C. LEXIS 76
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedJuly 12, 1948
Docket16104
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 48 S.E.2d 595 (State v. Nesmith) 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. Nesmith, 48 S.E.2d 595, 213 S.C. 60, 1948 S.C. LEXIS 76 (S.C. 1948).

Opinion

Fishburne, J.:

Under an indictment charging him with the felonious breaking and entering of a dwelling house in the night time, with intent to commit rape or other felony, the appellant, James Nesmith, was tried in the court of general sessions for Georgetown County at the Fall Term, 1946. *62 He was found guilty with recommendation to mercy, and sentenced-by the court to a term of imprisonment for twelve years, under Section 1138 of the Code.

On this appeal several issues are raised relating to the conduct of the trial, all of which are characterized as being technical by appellant’s counsel, but claimed to be meritorious.

Error is assigned because the appellant was denied the right of a preliminary hearing or investigation before the trial of his case as provided for in Code Section 935.

No issue arises with reference to the facts, but we think a brief statement of the factual background will tend to clarify the questions to be discussed.

Clifford Baxley, his wife and children, lived at Graves’ Station, a sparsely settled community near the railroad track. Baxley and his wife were employed, at the box plant of a manufacturing establishment known as Southern Craft. This plant was located five miles from their home. They reported for work at 10:30 o’clock p. m. for the night shift, and knocked off at 7 o’clock the following morning. They had four children: Alethia Baxley, sixteen years of age; two boys, aged eleven and thirteen years, respectively, and a girl about six years of age. On the night of August 22, 1946, which was the night the appellant is charged with breaking and entering the home of Clifford Baxley, it was occupied by the four children referred to above, and a nephew who was fourteen years of age.

About 1 o’clock in the morning of August 23rd, Alethia Baxley was awakened by a noise in her room close to the bed. Thinking that it was one of the children, she got a flashlight from under her pillow, turned it on and discovered appellant standing at the foot of the bed, partly undressed. She screamed, and he hurriedly left the house by way of a window on the porch through which he had entered.

*63 The appellant is a colored man without a previous criminal record. He had been working for several months at a cement block plant located about 100 yards to the rear of the home of the prosecutrix. She had seen him several times getting drinking water from the well in the yard of her parents, and had no difficulty in identifying him. Appellant took the stand, and admitted that he gained entrance to the house by raising the sash on the porch, and was in the bedroom of the prosecutrix when she gave the alarm. He denied, however, that he was not fully clothed, and stated that he was just about drunk, had lost his way returning from a piccolo joint in the neighborhood, and thought he was in the home of his brother who lived several hundred yards away, on the other side of the railroad track.

This matter was immediately reported by Alethia Baxley to her parents when they returned home from work about 7:30 o’clock on the morning of August 23rd. The officers of the law made an investigation, and a warrant was promptly issued for the arrest of appellant. This warrant charged him with “breaking and entering the dwelling house of Clifford Baxley in the night time, intentions unknown.” No preliminary hearing was demanded by appellant following his arrest although he was represented then by the same counsel who represents him now. He was admitted to bail and while on bail continued to work at the cement block plant.

At the next term- of the court of general sessions for Georgetown County, which convened in the Fall of 1946, an indictment was presented to the grand jury, upon which they brought in a true bill which charged that appellant did feloniously and burglariously break and enter the dwelling house of Clifford Baxley on the night of August 22, 1946, with intent to commit larceny. Flower^er, at the same term of the court, and before discharge, the solicitor presented to the grand jury a second indictment wherein the appellant *64 was charged, as heretofore stated, with housebreaking in the night time, with intent. to commit rape upon Alethia Baxley, and other felonious crimes. Upon this indictment, the grand jury returned a true bill, and it was upon this indictment that appellant was tried and convicted. We should state here that when the second indictment was found, the solicitor nol prossed the first indictment herein referred to.

The case was called for trial at that term of the court. Before his arraignment, he moved to quash the indictment, and demanded the right to a preliminary hearing before a magistrate. Counsel stated in support of this motion that when the original warrant charging housebreaking was issued, he made an investigation on behalf of his client, and did not deem it necessary to demand a preliminary. That he was prepared tO' go to trial upon the first indictment brought in by the grand jury, charging housebreaking with intent to commit larceny, but felt that his client would be prejudiced if forced to go to trial upon the second indictment charging housebreaking with intent to commit rape, if he were not given the benefit of a preliminary examination on this offense before a magistrate.

The court overruled the motion, and the case proceeded to trial. The issue is now presented that error was committed in denying the appellant the right to a preliminary hearing.

This question has been before the court a number of times in kindred cases with reference to Section 935 of the Code. This section, with its amendments, provides:

“It shall be the duty of any magistrate who issues a warrant charging a crime beyond his jurisdiction to grant and to hold a preliminary investigation of the same upon demand of the defendant at any time before the trial, at which investigation the defendant shall have the right to cross examine the State’s witnesses in person or b.y counsel, * * * provided, the defendant be held by recognizance in bailable cases or committed for custody in the meantime: *65 provided, further, that whenever any defendant or defendants shall demand, in writing, a preliminary hearing it shall be mandatory upon such magistrate to grant said hearing, and the said case shall not be transmitted to the court of general sessions or submitted to the grand jury until a preliminary hearing shall have been had, the magistrate to retain jurisdiction, and the court of general sessions not to acquire jurisdiction until after such preliminary hearing : provided, further, that the demand for such preliminary hearing shall be made at least ten (10) days before the convening of the next general sessions court thereafter.” (Emphasis added.)

It will be noted that the foregoing section provides that a preliminary hearing shall be granted by the magistrate issuing the warrant upon written demand made at least ten days before the convening of the next general sessions court. Under such circumstances — that is, if a demand in writing be made at the proper time, the magistrate retains jurisdiction until such preliminary hearing shall be had.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
48 S.E.2d 595, 213 S.C. 60, 1948 S.C. LEXIS 76, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-nesmith-sc-1948.