Rutland v. State, 6 Div. 960.
Decision Date | 02 February 1943 |
Docket Number | 6 Div. 960. |
Citation | 11 So.2d 768,31 Ala.App. 43 |
Parties | RUTLAND v. STATE. |
Court | Alabama Court of Appeals |
Morel Montgomery, of Birmingham, for appellant.
Wm N. McQueen, Atty. Gen., and L.S. Moore, Asst. Atty. Gen., for the State.
The conviction was for petit larceny. The defendant did not testify. There was uncontroverted evidence that he confessed his guilt to the police officers. After conviction, he requested probation which was denied. In the report of the probation officer, the following appears:
The article for which he was here convicted of stealing was a Gladstone bag--a suit case--of the Birmingham Trunk Factory Inc.
The insistence that the corpus delicti was not sufficiently shown to warrant proof of the confession is not sustainable.
The law does not require that the corpus delicti be proved by direct and positive evidence. Circumstantial evidence may afford satisfactory proof thereof, and if from the facts and circumstances adduced only a reasonable inference arises that the crime has been committed, this is sufficient to justify the admission of the confession. Ratliff v. State, 212 Ala. 410, 102 So. 621; Hill v. State, 207 Ala 444, 93 So. 460; Patterson v. State, 202 Ala. 65, 79 So. 459; Matthews v. State, 55 Ala. 187, 195, 28 Am.Dec. 698; Mason v. State, 16 Ala.App. 405, 78 So 321; Crofton v. State, 27 Ala.App. 589, 176 So. 832; 22 C.J.S., Criminal Law, § 839, p. 1471 et seq.
The hereafter stated rule, quoted approvingly in the Ratliff case is applicable here, and controlling. "It must be considered as settled that inconclusive facts and circumstances tending prima facie to show the corpus delicti may be aided by the admissions or confession of the accused so as to satisfy the jury beyond a reasonable doubt, and so to support a conviction, although such facts and circumstances, standing alone, would not thus satisfy the jury of the existence of the corpus delicti." (Emphasis supplied.) Hill case, supra, page 446, of 207 Ala., page 462 of 93 So.
The learned discussion of this rule by Mr. Justice Gardner (now Chief Justice) in the Ratliff case fully sustains our holding here.
Consonant with this principle, therefore, it is our conclusion that here the corpus delicti was sufficiently proven to authorize the introduction in evidence of the extra-judicial confession of the defendant. There were facts and circumstances--though perhaps inconclusive--independent of the defendant's confession affording a just inference that the theft had been committed.
Helton was the witness (State's) who testified that the defendant confessed to him and his fellow officer, Weir, that he had stolen the suit case. His testimony, showing the voluntary character of the confession, was sufficient predicate for its admissibility. Ray v. State, 29 Ala.App. 382, 197 So. 70, certiorari denied 240 Ala. 73, 197 So. 73.
That the other officer, Weir (defendant's witness), testified that defendant was told that "if he would help us break the case and get the stuff back to the house, it was up to the house, whatever they wanted to do, and that we thought it would help him to help those people"--if construed (which we do not) to be such inducement as to render the confession involuntary--in no way precluded Helton (who contended that no inducements of any kind were made to the defendant) from giving testimony of the confession. This contradiction between the two officers did not render Helton's testimony of the confession inadmissible, but might have been a proper subject of inquiry by the jury as to the weight and effect to be given such evidence. 6 Ala. Digest, Criminal Law, k741(3); Johnson v. State, 242 Ala. 278, 5 So.2d 632.
This is because the admissibility of the confession and whether voluntary are legal questions for the court. Ray case, supra.
Appellant, in brief, argues that "the Court * * * erred by sending the jury from the Court room, out of the presence of the Court and out of the hearing of the witness H.H. Weir, when proof was being made by defendant, that a promise or hope of reward had been made to defendant." This argument is manifestly untenable because--other reasons aside--no exception was reserved (or objection made) to this action of the court. If the jury was not present when the testimony of...
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