State v. Sublett

4 S.W.2d 463, 318 Mo. 1142, 1928 Mo. LEXIS 513
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedFebruary 18, 1928
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 4 S.W.2d 463 (State v. Sublett) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Sublett, 4 S.W.2d 463, 318 Mo. 1142, 1928 Mo. LEXIS 513 (Mo. 1928).

Opinion

*1144 BLAIR, J.

In the Circuit Court of .Jackson County and on October 19, 1926, each of the appellants entered his plea of guilty to an information charging them jointly with robbery in the first degree. The punishment of each appellant was fixed by the court at imprisonment in the State Penitentiary for a term of twenty-five' years. Judgment was entered accordingly. On the same day, appellants filed their motion to set aside their pleas of guilty. On October 20, 1926, appellants filed their joint amended motion to the same end. Upon same being overruled, an appeal was granted to this court.

The grounds set forth in the amended motion are that appellants had a good defense to the charge set forth in the information; that the information fails to charge any offense; that the pleas of guilty were procured by fraudulent statements and representations, made by the arresting officers, which appellants believed because of their youth and inexperience; that the sentence of twenty-five years’ imprisonment against each appellant was the result of bias and prejudice against appellants and violated constitutional inhibitions against the infliction of cruel and unusual punishments, and last, but not least, appellants most strenuously urged that the trial court violated their rights by accepting their pleas of guilty without first giving them an opportunity and reasonable time to consult with a friend and an attorney.

The formal charge, to which appellants entered their separate pleas of guilty, was the stealing on October 16, 1926, of $1500 in money from one J. H. Botts, by putting him in. fear, etc. On the morning of October 19th, each of the appellants signed a written confession of his participation in the robbery of a bank at Buckner, Missouri, on October 16, 1926, in which each of the appellants secured in the neighborhood of $500 in, money as his share of the loot. This robbery is presumably the robbery charged as having been perpetrated on J. H. Botts, although, we find nothing in .the record identifying the Buckner bank robbery and the robbery of J. II. Botts, as one and the same crime.

. After the confessions had been signed, the assistant prosecuting attorney called in attorney Elias Greenman and told him appellants had no counsel and asked him to represent them. Appellants were twenty, twenty-one and twenty-three years of age, respectively. Mr. Greenman was a lawyer of twenty years’ experience at the bar in Kansas City and had served two years as assistant prosecuting attorney. So far as this record discloses, he was a reputable lawyer in good standing at said bar. Mr. Greenman was informed by appellants that they had signed confessions and that they intended to enter pleas of *1145 guilty. According to Mr. Greenman’s testimony, he asked appellants if they wanted to communicate with any one and they told' him they did not. He accompanied appellants when they were taken before the court for arraignment and thereupon the court appointed him as their attorney and entered such appointment of record. Mr. Green-man waived formal' arraignment for appellants and each of them thereupon entered a plea of guilty.

Nearly ten pages of the record are used by the transcript of the examination of appellants made by the trial judfee after the pleas of guilty had been entered and before he sentenced them. Judge Austin inquired concerning the age, previous residence, family connection, former occupation, education, previous conduct, etc., of each of the appellants. He asked each one of them how he came to commit the crime. Thereupon Judge Austin reviewed the gravity of the offense and called attention to the fact that, when men enter a bank to rob it with weapons in their hands, they are not only robbers,» but potential murderers. He then imposed a term of imprisonment of twenty-five years as the punishment of each appellant.

Upon the hearing upon the amended motion to set aside their pleas of guilty, appellants were permitted to introduce testimony. There was not a word of testimony of any mistreatment of them at the hands of the officers before their confessions were procured. It appeared that they were questioned from the time of their arrest at about seven to 7:30 o ’clock in the evening until about two o ’clock the next morning. We gather from the testimony that the money was recovered from the apartment where the three appellants had been living together before the confessions were procured, because each appellant in his written confession identified the division of the money respectively allottedl to himself. Appellants claimed' that they were awakened by the officers about five o’clock next morning and told that they had better confess; that they would probably get thirty-five-year terms if they stood trial and that they would probably get lighter sentences if they entered pleas of guilty. These representations were said to have been made by the arresting officers, and not by any one connected with the prosecuting attorney’s office. Soon thereafter a confession was procured from each one of the appellants.

They said that attorney Greenman came to see them. They had not selected him and testified that they would not have selected him as their attorney had they known that he was- a close personal friend of the prosecuting attorney. Each of the appellants was shown his written confession and, over the objection of counsel, admitted that said confession was true in every particular.

The fathers of the respective appellants were brought in. They lived in close proximity to Kansas City and all appeared to be re *1146 spectable and honorable men. None of them knew of the sad plight of his accused son. Each said he would have employed counsel and would have used every means at his command to aid his son in his trouble, if he had been advised thereof.

Much is made of alleged promises of leniency if appellants would confess. Appellant Hutchings testified on this proposition as follows!:

“Q. Will you tell the court why it was they all questioned you from eight o ’clock until the following morning, and you did not make any statement until the following morning, and then did make one, what induced you to do it? A. Well, I was told I would probably get a lighter sentence if I would make a statement than if I lost the trial before a jury.
“Q. Did you believe that? A. Yes, sir.
“Q. Did you rely upon that? A. Yes, sir.
“Q. Is that what induced you to make that statement? A. Yes, sir.’.’

Appellant Sublett testified as follows:

“Q. And how long did they question you? A. They questioned me from about eight or eight-thirty until about two o’clock in the morning, until they took us up to our cells.
“Q. Until they took you up to your cells? A. Yes, sir.
“Q. Then did they question you again, and if so, when? A. Yes, sir; about five o’clock I was waked up by the j.ailer.
“Q. After sleeping about three hours, or being in bed about three hours? A.

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Bluebook (online)
4 S.W.2d 463, 318 Mo. 1142, 1928 Mo. LEXIS 513, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-sublett-mo-1928.