Swagger v. State

305 S.W.2d 682, 228 Ark. 51, 1957 Ark. LEXIS 388
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedOctober 14, 1957
Docket4879
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 305 S.W.2d 682 (Swagger v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Swagger v. State, 305 S.W.2d 682, 228 Ark. 51, 1957 Ark. LEXIS 388 (Ark. 1957).

Opinion

J. SeaborN Holt, Associate Justice.

March. 17, 1957, a jury found appellant, Eugene Swagger, guilty of the crime of assault with intent to kill [§ 41-606, Ark. Stats. 1957] and fixed his punishment at a term of 21 years in the state penitentiary. Prom the judgment is this appeal.

For reversal appellant relies on the following points: 1 and 2: The court erred in permitting the introduction in evidence the alleged oral and written confessions of the defendant. “3. The court erred in refusing to permit the defendant to pursue further the cross-examination of witness Pink Booher as to his general reputation and conduct. 4. The court erred in refusing to grant defendant permission to examine the jurors as to their intelligence of a newspaper article and radio reports of the first day’s proceeding of trial and giving a history of the case, and further erred in not granting a mistrial. (5). The court erred in refusing to give written Instruction Number 3 requested by the defendant.”

1 and 2

In these assignments appellant contends that the trial court erred in admitting his oral and written confessions in evidence, which confessions, he says, are substantially the same. We do not agree that there was error. The written confession contained these recitals: ‘‘Statement of Eugene Swagger taken at the Jefferson County Jail, Pine Bluff, Arkansas, April 14, 1956, by Deputy Sheriff, Robert Henslee and Buck Oliger. My name is Eugene Swagger, I am nineteen years old. I live with my grandmother, Lula G-ully, on Mr. Claud Bost’s farm. Last year I worked for Mr. Cady around the house cleaning the yard and house. I bought a car from Mr. Wooley but Mr. Cady told me that he did not want me to have it, for it would keep me from my work. One morning Mr. Wooley came after the car and took it away. I stayed around the farm a short time and left. I came to Pine Bluff and worked for a short time. My grandmother moved with Mr. Bost after this so I went to stay with her.

“I had been worrying about the car, so last Wednesday, April 11th I had decided to go to Mr. Cady’s and shoot him. I had a 12 gauge single barrel shotgun, so I hid it under the barn away from my grandmother. I wrapped a sack around it and left the house about 5:30 p.m., Friday April 13th, and walked to Joe Boundrant’s store on Highway 79. I hid the gun and stayed around the store until dark, then I picked the gun up and walked up the roads and back way, to Mr. Cady’s house. When I got there he and Mrs. Cady was watching television in the front room. I pulled my shoes off and waited for sometime but the room was dark and I couldn’t see Mr. Cady so well. I went to the south side of the house and got a ladder, and then went to the north side of the house to the room where Mrs. Cady stayed. I cut the screen on the window and raised it. I planned to go in the house and hide until he went to bed and shoot him, but I decided that would not work. I climbed up the ladder but did not go in. I went back around the house to where Mr. Cady slept and waited for him. After while be came in the room and went to his desk then he cut the light out and went to the bed. I waited for sometime and he got up and turned the light on and walked to the desk again, and when he got through he turned around toward the bed. I was standing outside the window near his bod so I shot him through the window. I turned around and run down the road and across the field. I stopped and put on my shoes and walked on down the road and through the fields to my home. I carried the gun to my house and hid it under the crib at the back of the house. I went in the house and went to bed. I put the shoes I was wearing in the kitchen and did not put them on again. My trousers was wet from the dew but when I got up the next morning I put them back on and was wearing them when I was arrested.

‘ ‘ This is all I know about the shooting of Mr. Cady, and the reason I shot him was because he did not want me to keep the car. I have not been mistreated by the officers in any way. They have not promised me anything to make this statement but I want to tell all about the planning and shooting of Mr. Cady at his house on the night of April 13, 1956. This was my way of getting even with Mr. Cady for not letting me keep the car.

/s/ Eugene Swagger. ”

“Witness:

/s/ Robert Henslee

/s/ Buck Oliger.”

As a result of the shooting Mr. Cady was wounded in the left side of his face and body and lost the sight of his left eye.

This court has many times held that confessions to be admissible in evidence must be freely and voluntarily made without hope of reward or fear of punishment. See McClellan v. State, 203 Ark. 386, 156 S. W. 2d 800. Swagger testified that his confessions were not freely and voluntarily made, but were in effect forced from him by the arresting officer, Pink Booher, by threats and intimidation and that Booher threatened to strike him with a flashlight. Booher and other State Witnesses stoutly denied that any threats or force was used, but on the contrary that Swagger voluntarily and freely made the confession. In these circumstances the court in chambers and beyond the hearing of the jury heard the evidence relating to the substance and voluntariness of the confessions and then submitted the question, whether they had been freely and voluntarily made, nnder the following proper instruction. “Instruction 21 — Before a confession of a defendant can be considered by you as evidence in the case you must believe from the testimony that it was freely and voluntarily made, without any threat or fear of punishment and without any promise or hope of reward. If you believe from the evidence in this case that the confession of the defendant was freely and voluntarily made by him you should consider it along with all the testimony in the case in determining the guilt or innocence of the defendant. If you believe that the confession was not free and voluntary, that it was induced by fear of punishment or promise of reward, you should not consider it for any purpose whatever. ’ ’

In a similar situation we said in McClellan v. State, supra, “This court said in the case of Brown v. State, 198 Ark. 920,132 S. W. 2d 15: ‘In many instances, where the accused is confronted with a confession which he cannot deny having made, he insists that it was not freely and voluntarily made. But that insistence does not render the confession inadmissible, where there is testimony to the effect that it was in fact, freely and voluntarily made. In such cases the practice approved by us, which was followed in the instant case, is for the court to hear the testimony in the absence of the jury as to the circumstances under which the confession was given, and if there is a substantial question as to whether it was freely and voluntarily made, to submit that question of fact to the jury, after admonishing the jury to disregard the confession unless it was found to have been voluntarily made. ’

“The court strictly followed the above rule in the trial of the present case, and practically all the testimony shows that there were no promises made with reference to this particular case by the prosecuting attorney or anyone else. The trial judge did not pass on the question as to whether the confessions were voluntarily made. He passed on the question of their admissibility alone, and submitted to the jury the question of whether they were voluntarily made.

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Related

Harkness v. State
609 S.W.2d 35 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1980)

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Bluebook (online)
305 S.W.2d 682, 228 Ark. 51, 1957 Ark. LEXIS 388, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/swagger-v-state-ark-1957.