State v. Silsby

146 So. 684, 176 La. 727, 1933 La. LEXIS 1596
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJanuary 3, 1933
DocketNo. 32049.
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 146 So. 684 (State v. Silsby) 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. Silsby, 146 So. 684, 176 La. 727, 1933 La. LEXIS 1596 (La. 1933).

Opinions

ST. PAUL, Justice.

The defendant was convicted of robbery. His appeal brings up five bills of exception, which, however, present only three points.

*729 A confession was introduced in evidence against him over his objection (1) that the prosecuting officer had not made mention in his opening statement to the jury of his intention to use any confession against the accused, and (2) that the confession used was not voluntarily given but extorted by threats and violence. He also complains (3) that the trial judge excluded certain evidence which he should have allowed.

We will consider these in reverse order.

I.

The defendant was indicted for this offense jointly with the three following parties, to wit, Joseph Greco, William Kelly, and Willie Martin; but this defendant was alone put on trial for the offense, the case •against his codefendants having been otherwise disposed of.

About the time of defendant’s arrest, or shortly before that, Robert Martin, Desire Ooroy, and Vincent Montalbano were arrested for a similar, but not for the same, offense.

On the trial of this defendant the corpus delicti was proven without objection, to wit, that on the day fixed in the indictment the Ewing Market Branch of the Canal Bank & Trust Company, in the city of New Orleans, was openly robbed in full daylight by four armed men, hooded or otherwise disguised.

Whereupon the state proceeded to lay down the foundation for introducing a confession by this defendant.

When the state had finished its evidence touching the manner in which the confession had been obtained, the defendant took the stand and testified that he had been deprived of sleep, water, food, and tobacco, beaten, and threatened with further beating and with death unless he confessed. Wherefore he made no confession, but in fear answered, “Yes,” to anything he was asked.

Thereupon (quoting from the bill of exception which we are now considering), “defendant offered in his behalf the witnesses Robert Martin, Desire Coroy, and Vincent Montalbano, and the original photographs showing the physical condition of these witnesses from beatings administered by the police of the City of New Orleans whilst these witnesses were under arrest, together with the witness H. J. Harvey, photographer [who took the photographs], and the report of Coroner George H. Roeling [who physically examined the witnesses], which evidence of said witnesses would corroborate defendant herein in his testimony that said confession was induced,,from h'im through fear, duress, bodily punishment, and cruel and unusual punishment, but which testimony of said witnesses and evidence so offered the court excluded and refused to allow to go before the jury, withdrawing the jury and not allowing them to hear same.”

We think the evidence was properly excluded. Proof that the police in general habitually or constantly maltreat their prisoners, or that the particular police officers who had this defendant under arrest do so, would be admissible to corroborate defendant’s testimony herein, but not proof that some other (known or unknown) officer or officers maltreated some other prisoner.

And it is just this last sort of evidence that defendant sought to offer, to, wit, the *731 testimony of Robert Martin, Desire Coroy, and Yineent Montalbano, that they were beaten by “police officers,” whose names two of them declined to give and the third was not even asked.

In other words, evidence that all police officers are of brutal character, if believed, or evidence that the particular officers who had this defendant under arrest are of brutal character, if believed, would be relevant to corroborate the testimony of this defendant that he was brutally treated, as he testified; but evidence that some other police officer, known or unknown, is of brutal character, even if believed, is wholly irrelevant for such purpose.

II.

The defendant testified that the confession was not voluntarily given, but forced from him by cruel treatment and threats; that he was deprived of sleep, water, food, and tobacco; beaten and threatened with further beating and with death unless he confessed ; that he made no confession, but merely answered, “Yes,” to anything he was asked.

He is contradicted on every point.

The .testimony on the admissibility of the confession takes up 70 typewritten pages of the transcript. An epitome of it by the state takes up 25 printed pages of its brief. We will ourselves not attempt to epitomize, but will confine ourselves to pointing out the conflicts between defendant’s testimony and that of the witnesses produced by the state.

The first two of such conflicts are over collateral matters not particularly relevant. The. offense was committed April 30, 1931. The first information against this defendant was filed July 6th (afterwards nolle prosequied and a new information filed). On Friday, July 10th, Corporal Joseph Schwehm, of the New Orleans Police Force, left New Orleans for Hot Springs, Ark., for the purpose of apprehending defendant. He left New Orleans by train at 6 o’clock p. m. and arrived at Hot Springs the next evening, Saturday, at the same hour. Defendant was arrested at 11 p. m. that night, by Corporal Schwehm and the Hot Springs police, and taken at once tO'a police station. The return trip was made by automobile, using two automobiles, one belonging to the defendant, and one to the chief of police of Hot Springs. Defendant and his captor were accompanied on the trip by the defendant’s wife, the Hot Springs chief of police and his wife, and the Hot Springs chief of detectives. They left Hot Springs at 2 o’clock Sunday morning, drove continuously'for 24 hours, and arrived in New Orleans between 2 and 3 o’clock Monday morning; the defendant having waived extradition.

Here is the first conflict: Defendant testifies he waived extradition only because he was promised by Schwehm, and made it a condition, that he would not be “third-degreed” by the police on his return. Schwehm testifies that he waived extradition because he wanted his wife and his car, which he had with him, returned to New Orleans, which he (Schwehm) agreed to and which is the reason that the return trip was made by automobile instead of by train. Defendant’s wife, who must have known, was present at the trial, but was not called to corroborate her husband.

*733 Here is the next conflict: He testified that on arrival in New Orleans, between 2 and 3 o’clock Monday morning, he was first taken to police headquarters, where he “signed extradition papers,” and was then taken in the patrol wagon (but not by Sehwehm) to the Ninth precinct station. Sehwehm testifies that he (Sehwehm) personally took the defendant directly to the Ninth precinct, the nearest, immediately upon entering the city. Sehwehm is corroborated by Police Clerk Joseph Owens, who testified that Corporal Sehwehm personally delivered the defendant to the Ninth precinct station a little after 2 o’clock in the morning (Monday, July 13th).

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Bluebook (online)
146 So. 684, 176 La. 727, 1933 La. LEXIS 1596, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-silsby-la-1933.