Thomas v. State, 29423
Decision Date | 24 January 1958 |
Docket Number | No. 29423,29423 |
Citation | 147 N.E.2d 577,237 Ind. 537 |
Parties | Henry Powell THOMAS, Frank Winstead Thomas, Appellants, v. STATE of Indiana, Appellee. |
Court | Indiana Supreme Court |
Thomas J. Faulconer, III, Indianapolis, for appellants.
Edwin K. Steers, Atty. Gen., Owen S. Boling and Merl M. Wall, Deputy Attys. Gen., for appellee.
This ia an appeal from a judgment entered on a finding by the court that appellants were guilty of robbery as charged in an affidavit, and that each be imprisoned in the Indiana State Prison for not less than 10 nor more than 25 years. The error assigned here is the overruling of appellants' motion for a new trial.
The motion for a new trial challenged the admission of certain evidence received, after overruling proper objections, which detailed conversations had by one Harold Shaffer, a witness or the State. The conversations occurred at the County Jail when the appellants were in custody and present in a line-up to permit Shaffer to identify them. Some of the statements were made out of the hearing of the appellants, but neither appellant at any time made any answer to or admission concerning any of the statements.
Recently we had occasion to consider the admissibility of testimony concerning statements made in the presence of an accused when he is in custody. In Kern v. State, 1957, Ind., 144 N.E.2d 705, 706, we held: 1 See also Thompson v. State, 1944, 223 Ind. 39, 58 N.E.2d 112; Jacoby v. State. 1932, 203 Ind. 321, 180 N.E. 179. It was error to admit this testimony.
There is no merit to the State's contention that the court's ruling in admitting this evidence was not reversible error since the cause was not reversible error since without the intervention of a jury. The admission or rejection of evidence is not a matter or judicial grace; it is a matter of legal right, whether the case be tried by a judge or by a jury. Judicial discretion, a term often loosely used, does not authorize the judge to make one kind of law for one case and another for a different case. As Dean Wigmore, in his treatise on Evidence observed, 'Now Discretion, in this strict sense, is by our law not conceded to any trial judge on points of evidence, except perhaps in 'ex parte' and interlocutory proceedings. The whole spirit of our law requires the observance of precedents. The propriety of improving our system in this respect is a large question, which need not be here opened; the tenor of our law is plain. It is in this view that the following utterances were made:
'1824, Taylor, C. J., in State v. Candler, 3 Hawks 398: 'The superiority of our law [of evidence] consists in its laying down the rule, with its proper exceptions and limitations, and leaving nothing to the discretion of the Court.'
' ' 1 Wigmore, Evidence (3rd Ed.) § 16, p. 310.
Appellants had filed a notice of alibi pursuant to §§ 9-1631 to 9-1633, Burns' 1956 Replacement. The State takes the position this was an intent to impeach the testimony of the prosecuting witnesses in advance. This position is untenable. When an accused files a notice of alibi he is in fact complying with a statutory condition precedent to the...
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