State v. Owens

Decision Date06 August 1922
Docket Number10961.
Citation117 S.E. 536,124 S.C. 220
PartiesSTATE v. OWENS.
CourtSouth Carolina Supreme Court

Appeal from General Sessions Circuit Court of Greenville County; T J. Mauldin, Judge.

Foster Owens was convicted of car breaking and larceny, and he appeals. Appeal dismissed.

Joseph R. Bryson, of Greenville, for appellant.

Solicitor David W. Smoak, of Greenville, for the State.

MARION J.

The defendant was tried before Judge T. J. Mauldin and a jury in the court of general sessions for Greenville county May 12 1921, and convicted of car breaking and larceny.

The exceptions allege error in the admission of certain testimony tending to establish the prior commission by the defendant of other and distinct crimes of larceny. Upon cross-examination by the solicitor, the defendant's witness, L. P. Moser testified that the defendant had been on the chain gang for stealing one or more times, and that while on the chain gang for stealing he had broken loose and stolen brass from the Piedmont & Northern Railroad. No objection was interposed by defendant to the admission of this testimony. A motion for new trial was made and refused, but the alleged erroneous admission of this testimony was not assigned as a ground of that motion.

It is apparent that under the established rules of appellate practice the question thus sought to be raised is not properly before this court. The defendant has no right to complain of the admission of incompetent testimony to which no objection was made in apt time on the trial below. Even where testimony is received under objection, an appellant in this court must rely upon the specific grounds of objection assigned on the trial. Clayton v. Railway Co., 110 S.C. 122, 96 S.E. 479. Since the record shows that no objection was interposed to the admission of the alleged incompetent testimony, and that no ruling was ever made thereon by the circuit judge, the conclusion follows that the exceptions must be overruled, unless good and sufficient cause has been shown for exempting the appellant's case from the application of the general rule.

Careful consideration has been accorded the contention, earnestly urged by appellant's counsel, that the general rule should not be applied in the case at bar. The grounds of that contention are that on the trial below defendant was not represented by counsel, and that the effect of the introduction of the testimony in question was to deprive him of a fair and impartial trial in contravention of the rights guaranteed by the provisions of article 5 of Amendments to the Constitution of the United States and of section 5 of article 1 of the Constitution of South Carolina. The constitutional provisions invoked are the "due process" clauses. The limitations of article 5 of Amendments to the federal Constitution, it has long been settled, do not apply to the powers of state governments. State v. Atkinson, 40 S.C. 370, 18 S.E. 1021, 42 Am St. Rep. 877. No authority has been cited or reason advanced in support of the proposition that the admission of incompetent testimony on the trial of a defendant not represented by counsel amounts to a denial of due process of law.

Obviously as we think, in such case the "due process" provision is not applicable. The state Constitution itself (article 1, § 18) very fully sets out the primary rights guaranteed an accused in criminal prosecutions. Among these is the right "to be fully heard in his defense by himself or by his counsel or by both." In the case at bar the record discloses that the defendant was fully heard in his own defense by himself. He appears to have cross-examined intelligently the state's witnesses, to have introduced a number of witnesses in his own behalf, to have examined them effectively, to have exercised the privilege of not going on the stand himself, and, after conviction, to have made a motion for a new trial on the ground that he "could not be convicted on the uncorroborated evidence of a codefendant." The record contains the statement that "the defendant was unable to employ counsel to represent him at the trial." But the record also discloses that notice of intention to appeal was duly given, and that defendant was able to employ counsel to perfect and argue his appeal in this court. There is nothing to indicate that defendant was not entirely ready and willing to proceed with the trial of his case without counsel, and a careful examination of the record rather tends to create the impression that defendant was not a stranger to courts and their proceedings, and that he was not at all averse to exercising his constitutional right to try his own case. However much of truth there may be in the old adage that "the man who is his own lawyer has a fool for a client," it is also true that "pleading his own case" is sometimes the shrewdest appeal an accused can make to the sympathetic interest and favorable consideration of the 12 laymen who sit in the jury box. While in such cases technical rules should be applied with much less stringency, "a trial conducted by the defendant himself is...

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4 cases
  • State v. Bikle
    • United States
    • South Carolina Supreme Court
    • May 6, 1936
    ...11 L.R.A. (N.S.) 938, 122 Am.St.Rep. 559; State v. Winter, 83 S.C. [153] 156, 65 S.E. 209; State v. Ray, 91 S.C. 551, 75 S.E. 174; State v. Owens 117 S.E. [536] 537." defendant's intent to defraud was strongly denied, and the defendant requested the court to instruct the jury that such inte......
  • State v. Gregory
    • United States
    • South Carolina Supreme Court
    • July 17, 1939
    ... ... distinct crimes committed by the accused may not be adduced ... merely to raise an inference or to corroborate the ... prosecution's theory of the defendant's guilt of the ... particular crime charged. Bishop, New Crim.Proc., 1120. State ... v. Owens, [124 S.C. 220], 117 S.E. [536], 537; People v ... Molineux, 168 N.Y. 264, 61 N.E. 286, 62 L.R.A. 193. The ... objections, from the viewpoint of English jurisprudence, to ... the admission of this class of evidence are patent. Proof ... that a defendant has been guilty of another [191 S.C ... ...
  • State v. Addy
    • United States
    • South Carolina Supreme Court
    • May 14, 1947
    ... ... we are not to be understood as holding here that the evidence ... objected to with reference to the previous violation of the ... lottery law by the accused, a week prior to his arrest, was ... inadmissible. We do not find it necessary to decide the ... question, but see State v. Owens, 124 S.C. 220, 117 ... S.E. 536, and State v. Shumpert, 195 S.C. 387, 11 ... S.E.2d 523 ...          Finally, ... it is urged that the court erred in overruling the ... defendant's motion for a directed verdict of acquittal, ... made upon the ground that the evidence was ... ...
  • J.B. Colt Co. v. Freedman
    • United States
    • South Carolina Supreme Court
    • April 30, 1923
    ... ... and he only claims that was $24, and that is not much higher ... price, and he does not state in his answer what he was to ... pay. He made investigations and found that the plant was not ... giving satisfactory results in other places that ...          Joseph ... Murray and F. A. Wise, both of McCormick, for appellant ...          Ross & Owens, of McCormick, for respondent ...          GARY, ...          The ... appellant has failed to satisfy this court that his honor ... ...

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