State v. Sanders
This text of 87 S.E.2d 826 (State v. Sanders) 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.
Opinion
THE STATE, Respondent
v.
VERNON NED SANDERS, Appellant.
Supreme Court of South Carolina.
C.E. Strange, Esq., of Winnsboro, for Appellant.
*288 Robert W. Hemphill, Esq., Solicitor, of Chester, for Respondent.
C.E. Strange, Esq., of Winnsboro, for Appellant, in Reply.
June 13, 1955.
STUKES, Justice.
The eighteen-year-old appellant and Frank K. Boulware, fourteen, were jointly indicted for the murder of one Jim Sterling who was eighty-four years old and lived alone in a rural section of Fairfield county all Negroes. At the trial the defendants were separately represented and after two State's witnesses had testified the Solicitor agreed with counsel for Boulware upon a verdict as to him of guilty with recommendation to mercy; and that defendant later testified for the State. Both defendants had formerly confessed and were then in agreement that appellant struck the fatal blow while Boulware waited outside the home of the deceased. The death of the latter resulted *289 from a crushing blow on his head which was inflicted by a large, blunt instrument and a bloodstained hammer was found on the porch of the home. The evidence tended to establish robbery as the motive.
The homicide occurred on a Saturday and the lifeless body was discovered in an inside room of the house on the following Monday afternoon when industrial insurance agents went to collect a premium from the deceased. They called the nearby magistrate and the coroner was summoned. The body was removed to Winnsboro and a physician made a portmortem examination. He testified to the nature and extent of the fatal wound.
At the beginning of the trial, which resulted in the conviction of appellant and the sentence of him to death, the following transpired:
"Mr. Strange: Your Honor, the Defendant Sanders moves to separate the cases. I have learned that there is a difference between the two defendants. One might be testifying against the other, and it would place the defending attorneys in a rather awkward position to cross examine in presentation of these defendants as witnesses, and on that basis, I move to separate the cases.
"The Court: Mr. Strange, the indictment just charges the two defendants jointly with murder. I can't separate them. I will have to refuse the motion.
"Mr. Strange: All right, your Honor."
The refusal of severance is made a ground of appeal. The point cannot be sustained. Separate trials or severance of defendants jointly indicted is within the sound discretion of the trial court and only abuse of that discretion, which does not appear here, constitutes reversible error. State v. Brown, 108 S.C. 490, 95 S.E. 61; State v. Jeffords, 121 S.C. 443, 114 S.E. 415; State v. Bagwell, 128 S.C. 414, 122 S.E. 513; State v. Francis, 152 S.C. 17, 149 S.E. 348, 70 A.L.R. 1133; State v. Rook, 174 S.C. 225, 177 S.E. 143; State v. Mathis, 174 S.C. 344, 177 *290 S.E. 318; State v. Atkins, 205 S.C. 450, 32 S.E. (2d) 372; State v. McCracken, 211 S.C. 52, 43 S.E. (2d) 607; State v. Hurt, 212 S.C. 461, 48 S.E. (2d) 313; State v. McIntire, 221 S.C. 504, 71 S.E. (2d) 410.
As it turned out and by reason of Boulware's consent to verdict of guilty with recommendation of mercy as to him, which came early in the trial, the most of the trial of appellant was separate. Boulware's pretrial confession was not put in evidence although a copy of it was furnished appellant's counsel before the trial. Defense counsel was likewise provided in advance with a copy of appellant's written confession.
Another ground of appeal relates to the admission in evidence of this confession of appellant, which was obtained from him by the officers on the second following Sunday, or eight days, after the homicide.
It is first contended that the confession was inadmissible because it was sworn to by appellant before a notary public. No pertinent cases from this court are cited to the point and appellant relies upon rather old texts which were based upon decisions in other jurisdictions. The following authorities show that the rule upon which appellant relies is obsolete:
"In some cases the broad rule has been laid down that confessions made under oath are involuntary and inadmissible as evidence. Most of these, however, are explained by the fact that they arose prior to statutes making defendants competent witnesses in their own behalf, and with the removal of the disqualification of the accused as a witness for himself, the reason for the rule ceased. It is now generally recognized that an extrajudicial confession is not rendered inadmissible by virtue of the fact that it was made under oath, since the confessor is in no sense a witness. Thus, the fact that the confession was taken down in writing and sworn to by the accused does not affect the admissibility thereof. Such a confession does not become a deposition in *291 a judicial proceeding, and hence, a constitutional provision that the defendant in a criminal case shall not be compelled to be a witness against himself can have no application. A confession under oath may be an extrajudicial confession although made before a judge or magistrate, if the court is not in session at the time." 20 Am. Jur. 450, Evidence, Sec. 527. To the same effect is 22 C.J.S., Criminal Law, § 832, p. 1455.
An interesting discussion is found in Volume 3 of the 3d Edition of Wigmore on Evidence, page 302, section 849. It is shown that the origin of the doctrine lay in the early English statutes which first allowed an accused to testify at his trial, but he was not to be put on oath. This was construed as a prohibition against putting the accused on oath, whereby a confession under oath was inadmissible. The learned author concludes as follows: "But the reason was, not that there was anything fatal in the oath as such (as will be seen in next section), but simply that the statute forbade the administration of the oath, and by implication prevented the admission of statements obtained in the way thus specifically forbidden. It was thus not the oath, but the specific statutory illegality of its application, that prevented the admission; for there was no method of enforcing the prohibition except by rejecting the statement so obtained."
Without the historical background for the rule, there is no reason for the following of it in this jurisdiction. Apart from that, it would seem that the solemnity of the oath would add to the trustworthiness of a written confession. Moreover, in this case appellant voluntarily testified at the trial for which purpose, as other witnesses, he was of course put on his oath. His present contention is without merit. Compare State v. Judge, 208 S.C. 497, 38 S.E. (2d) 715, 718, where objection was made to the admission in evidence of a confession because it was not verified by the oath of the defendant, and we said: "It is not necessary that a written confession or statement be sworn to by the party *292 making same, if it be properly proven that the statement was made by such party freely and voluntarily."
A further ground of appeal is that the confession was involuntary and, therefore, inadmissible, for which the appellant mainly relies upon Harris v. State of South Carolina, 338 U.S. 68, 69 S.Ct. 1354, 93 L.Ed.
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87 S.E.2d 826, 227 S.C. 287, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-sanders-sc-1955.