Wynn v. State

181 S.W.2d 332, 181 Tenn. 325, 17 Beeler 325, 1944 Tenn. LEXIS 395
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedJune 10, 1944
StatusPublished
Cited by53 cases

This text of 181 S.W.2d 332 (Wynn v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wynn v. State, 181 S.W.2d 332, 181 Tenn. 325, 17 Beeler 325, 1944 Tenn. LEXIS 395 (Tenn. 1944).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice Green

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The defendant has been convicted of housebreaking and has appealed in error to this court.

The proprietor of a restaurant in Memphis, after closing his place of business about eleven o’clock at night, on his way home, was held up by three negroes at the point óf a pistol and a small sum of money and a bunch of keys were taken from his person. He received a blow in resisting the assault. The negroes left him and' he reported the matter to the police, telling them that the keys to his'place of business were taken and that it was probably the intention of those assaulting him to enter it. The officers to whom the report was made undertook to watch this place of business for a time but were called *327 away for other duties and later in the night the restaurant was entered, the safe opened, and about $2,000 in money was taken. The doors to the house and safe were opened with keys, without doubt the keys taken from the prosecutor’s person. The.safe was an old type affair, a sort of strong box, that was locked with a key. The bunch of keys was never found.

The record does not show just how suspicion of the police was directed toward the defendant, but he and two other negroes were taken into custody and charged with breaking into this restaurant. They were detained in the police station three days without being taken before a magistrate. They were held incommunicado during this time. On the third day they were taken before a magistrate and in open court pleaded guilty.

Shortly before he was taken in to the magistrate ’.s court Wynn made a confession, as did the other two negroes. In their confessions the three admitted the holdup of the prosecutor, the entry of the restaurant, and the stealing of the money, and said, that the money was carried to Wynn’s house where it was divided among these three negroes and another negro who joined them before the entry into the restaurant.

A pistol was taken from the prosecutor’s place of business and one of the negroes told the officers where this pistol could be found. Later the officers recovered the pistol from the place mentioned and it was identified by the prosecutor.'

The record abundantly shows that all three of these, negroes just after: the robbery began spending money in sums quite large for, such men* buying furniture;,; jewelry, watches, fine shoes* and other articles. - '

The three negroes were convicted in .the criminal court but Wynn alone has appealed. The chief contention made *328 in his behalf is that the confession made by him to the officers was obtained under such circumstances as to render it inadmissible, and that for this reason a new trial should be granted.

.When the confession was offered in evidence by one of the officers to whom it was made, objection was raised to its admission and the court entered into a preliminary inquiry to determine that question. This was proper practice. The admissibility of a confession is not a matter for submission to the jury. The rule was announced at an early date in this State that it was reversible error for the trial judge to submit to the jury the question as to whether the party making the confession was influenced by hope or fear. Boyd v. State, 21 Tenn., 39. This was approved in Self v. State, 65 Tenn., 244, and has been approved recently in Omohundro et al. v. State, 172 Tenn., 48, 109 S. W. (2d), 1159.

In Self v. State the Court said:

"When confessions are offered as evidence, their competency becomes a preliminary question, to be determined by the coilrt. This imposes upon the presiding judge the duty of deciding the fact whether the party making the confession was influenced by hope or fear. This rule is so well established, that if the judge allow the jury to determine the preliminary fact, it is error, for which the judgment will be reversed: Boyd v. The State, 2 Humph., 39. These are elementary principles too long established and followed to be now questioned.” (Page 253 of 65 Tenn.).

We are aware that in several'jurisdictions it is left to the jury, if the evidence is conflicting, to say whether a confession was voluntary. The cases are collected in a Note,- 85 A. L. R., 870.

*329 We adhere, however, to the rule long since established in this State, which has the support of many courts of high, repute and of authoritative writers on the law of evidence. Wigmore on Evidence, Third Edition, sec. 681'; Editorial Note, 85 A. L. it., 870. The practice is like that obtaining in determining the admissibility of a dying declaration, Dickinson v. State, 139 Tenn., 601, 202 S. W., 922, or of evidence procured in a search. Goodwin v. State, 148 Tenn., 682, 257 S. W., 79.

A confession being admitted, its weight is of course a matter for the jury. That is, the jury is to determine whether defendant made the confession and whether the statements contained in it are true. To aid them in resolving these questions the jury may hear evidence of the circumstances under which the confession was procured.

The only testimony introduced before the trial judge as' to the circumstances under which this confession was obtained showed that the defendant and the other negroes received no mistreatment while being held in custody and that their confessions were freely and voluntarily made. The officers in charge of them (and later the negroes themselves) said that they were examined three or four times at intervals. There was no continuous grilling such as occurred in Ashcraft v. State (Unreported, 1943), and on appeal in the United States Supreme Court 88 L. Ed. 858.

At the conclusion of this preliminary hearing objection was made to the admission of the confessions solely on the ground. that the defendant and the other negroes were illegally detained for about 72 hours before they were brought into the magistrate’s court. There was no suggestion in the preliminary hearing of any brutal treatment of any of these negroes. When the jury was *330 repalle.d the .confessions were read to them and th-e; defendants’thjen. testified in their own behalf..:

In.their .own testimony defendants denied any participation in the holdup .of the prosecutor or in the entry of :.his restaurant and said they knew nothing of either incident until they were arrested. They introduced some evidence of an alibi.

, The negroes, however, testified that they were cursed and whipped by the officers while bein^- held in custody and threatened with further. whippings, and that. they made the confessions to avoid more punishment.

, Testifying in rebuttal the officers denied that they made any threats or used any violence whatever on the negroes. The officers justified-the detention of the negroes before taking them.into the magistrate’s court by saying they were holding them for investigation.

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Bluebook (online)
181 S.W.2d 332, 181 Tenn. 325, 17 Beeler 325, 1944 Tenn. LEXIS 395, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wynn-v-state-tenn-1944.