DocketNumber: No. 11,903.
Judges: Butler
Filed Date: 12/19/1927
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
THE plaintiffs in error, Arthur Osborn and Jasper Raymond Noakes, were found guilty of murder in the first degree and sentenced to death.
Fred N. Selak resided in a cabin near Grand Lake, in Grand county. On July 25, 1926, Nair, his employee, sought him at his cabin, but did not find him. The condition of the cabin aroused the suspicions of Nair, who reported to the sheriff that Selak was missing. A search was begun. Osborn and Noakes were taken into custody by the sheriff. Osborn was 22 years old at the time; Noakes, 20. They are cousins, and lived with Osborn's father in the neighborhood of Selak's cabin. Noakes and Osborn were brought to Denver. Both of them confessed. The trial was held in Hot Sulphur Springs March 7, 8, and 9, 1927. At 1:30 p.m. on the 7th, before the jury was selected, the defendants filed a joint sworn application, stating that their defense would be "insanity or mental irresponsibility," asking to be permitted to defend as poor persons, and requesting the court to order process for the attendance of "some competent alienist to be designated by the court." The court granted the application, and ordered that Dr. Howell T. Pershing, of Denver, be called and expense of the people, at $100 per day and expenses, as a witness for the defendants. A recess was taken until the next morning *Page 7 to enable Dr. Pershing to be present during the taking of the testimony. At the conclusion of the people's case, at 4:27 p.m. on the 8th, the court took a recess to 9 a.m. the next day to enable the defendants' attorneys to confer with Dr. Pershing. The next morning, having been advised by the doctor that in his opinion the defendants were not insane, that they knew the difference between right and wrong, and had the intellectual capacity to choose between them, and to do the right and resist the wrong, the defendants applied for an order for the attendance of Dr. Leo V. Tepley, of Denver, as an expert witness in their behalf on the question of insanity. This application was denied.
Three assignments of error are argued: (1) The court's refusal to order, at the expense of the people, the attendance of Dr. Tepley as an expert witness in behalf of the defendants; (2) the alleged failure of the people's witnesses to identify the defendants; and (3) the admission of the confessions.
1. Years ago, in England, defendants in criminal cases were not, even at their own expense, entitled to process to compel the attendance of witnesses in their behalf. It was because of this injustice, and to prevent a recurrence of the practice, that our bill of rights (Const. art. 2, sec. 16) provides that in criminal prosecutions, the accused "shall" have the right to have process to compel the attendance of witnesses in his behalf. That provision is mandatory. But to have such process at the expense of the public, is another matter. Section 7121, C.L., provides: "Whenever any person, indicated in a court of the state of Colorado, shall make affidavit setting forth that there are witnesses whose evidence is material to his defense; that he cannot proceed to trial without them; that they are within the judicial district in which the court is held, or within one hundred miles of the place of trial; and that he is not possessed of sufficient means and is actually unable to pay the fees of such witnesses, the court in term, or the judge thereof in *Page 8 vacation, if it appears to said court or the judge thereof that the evidence of such witnesses would be material in the trial of the cause, may order that such witnesses be subpoenaed, if found within the limits aforesaid. In such case the costs incurred by the process and the fees of the witnesses shall be paid in the same manner that similar costs and fees are paid in case of witnesses subpoenaed in behalf of the people."
The statute says "may" order, not "shall" order. In Nesteroff v. People,
Applications for the procurement of witnesses in behalf of defendants, at the cost of the people, should be made at the earliest opportunity, and not withheld until the case is actually called for trial. Pittman v. State,
There was no evidence of the distance between Denver and Hot Sulphur Springs by railroad, and the contention is made that the court cannot take judicial notice of the distance. McConnell v. Schultz,
As Denver is more than 100 miles from the place of trial, measured by the only route available for travel at the time of the application for a subpoena and at the time of the trial, the court had no power to order process to compel the attendance of Dr. Tepley as a witness in behalf of the defendants at the expense of the people.
In obtaining the order summoning Dr. Pershing from Denver at public expense, the defendants obtained more than they were entitled to under the law; not only because he was summoned from a distance greater than 100 miles, but also because the defendants were not entitled to have an expert witness summoned at an expense to the public greater than the statutory witness fee and mileage. There is no statute providing for fees of medical witnesses or alienists in excess of those allowed non-expert witnesses. Board of County Commissionersof Larimer County v. Lee,
Dr. Pershing examined the defendants and their parents, and arrived at the conclusion that neither of the defendants was insane. The defendants' counsel, Mr. Lee, in his testimony, said that Dr. Pershing "is a man of great learning and high repute and undoubted integrity, fairness and ability." These qualities were enlisted in behalf of the defendants at the expense of the public. The court did not err in refusing to order the attendance of Dr. Tepley also.
2. The defendants were sufficiently identified. These defendants were the identical persons taken into custody, charged with the murder of Selak, and they have been in custody ever since. They were the ones who made the confessions. It is not contended that they are not. The *Page 12 record recites that they were present in court during the trial; and, under the practice, they must have been. It is the practice for those on trial for murder to sit next to or close to their counsel at the counsel table within the bar, and it is not suggested that the defendants in this case did not do so. They must have been observed by the jury. That the jurors knew they were the defendants, is shown by the fact that the jurors desired to know "which is Noakes and which is Osborn." Counsel say that the jurors should have been given the information they sought. The jurors made the request after they had retired to deliberate. Thereupon the court said, "If there is no objection, I will have the defendants brought in and have them identified." But counsel for the defendants objected to this being done, and the court remarked: "Very well; we will not do it then." It is suggested that if the jurors had known which was Noakes and which was Osborn, they might have imposed a lighter penalty upon one than upon the other. But the part that each took in the homicide was clearly shown by the evidence, and the jurors were fully advised thereof. In denying the motion for a new trial, the court said, with reference to this matter: "The court desires to make a statement as to the lack of identification which is being pressed at this time. It is the very distinct recollection of the court that Mr. Lee questioned one of the jurors, in the presence of the court after agreement and after the jury had been discharged, at which questioning informally in the Judge's chambers, this juror, in the presence of at least one other juror, made the statement that the jury had taken a vote and secret ballot to be sure whether or not they each and every one knew and understood which was Osborn and which was Noakes, and that they agreed absolutely on the first ballot as to which was which, and that they thoroughly understood which was which before they balloted as to their guilt or innocence; and this having come to the attention of the court, the court is convinced that no prejudicial error occurred *Page 13 from that source." This assignment of error is without merit.
3. It is said that the confessions of the defendants were not voluntary, and therefore should not have been admitted. The circumstances attending the confession of Noakes are substantially as follows: Noakes was brought to Denver on Saturday, August 14, and placed in an ordinary cell in the jail. On Monday, the 16th, shortly before noon (around 10 or 11 o'clock), he was brought to the office of the Denver chief of police (Reed), and on being questioned by the chief for 10 or 15 minutes, denied all connection with Selak's disappearance. Under order of the chief, he was then placed in solitary confinement in a cell, "not any different from any other cell, except it is dark." It had no bunk in it. "There was nothing in there; the four walls, the floor and the ceiling, and dark." The chief testified that he placed Noakes in solitary confinement because he did not want anyone to talk to him. In the afternoon Noakes was taken about four times to the chief's office and questioned, each of the first three interviews lasting about a half hour or less. Chief Reed testified that prior to Noakes' making the confession (marked Exhibit J), he cautioned Noakes that whatever "he may state may be used for or against him when the case came to trial." We suggest that the proper caution to give, when it is given at all, is not that the statement will or may be used "for or against" the accused, but (substantially) that "it may be used against him." The use of the former, however, does not require the rejection of the confession, except in some states. For example, in Texas the form of the caution is prescribed by statute, and a substantial departure from that form excludes the confession. 2 Wigmore Ev. sec. 831, note; 16 C. J. p. 724. Chief Reed also testified that "there were no threats or inducements of any kind," to his knowledge, and that at the morning interview he talked to Noakes about the crime. "I accused him of having committed it and told him that I could prove it; *Page 14 did not tell him, and nobody in my presence told him, that he would hang for it if he did not make a statement." The first interview after lunch was practically the same as the one in the morning. "I was not endeavoring to get him to confess to the guilt. I did not tell him he had better tell the truth, and nobody in my presence told him that. I did not tell him he had better admit his connection with the fact * * * I did not mention any part of the case at all; told him it was always better to tell the truth. I told him, and kept telling him, that I knew it was the truth that he participated in this hanging and that he was guilty; that I knew it and would prove it on him. Then I kept advising him to tell the truth. * * * I advised him probably two or three times that day to tell the truth — each time he was up there. * * * Q. Did you tell him [the officer] on any of those occasions to take him back and keep him there until he talked? A. No; he did not know. I did not ask him every time I brought him out whether he was ready to talk yet or not. I am quite sure patrolman Cole and Hadley were present on each of these occasions." The conversation at the second interview in the afternoon "was practically the same as on the former occasions." At that interview he denied practically everything. "I told him I wanted him to make a statement — wanted him to tell the truth." Noakes answered some of the questions asked by the chief. "I did not accept those answers. I told him that I knew that they were not true, and I wanted him to tell the truth." At the third interview in the afternoon the chief questioned Noakes along the same line as at the previous interviews and sent him back again. "He was not gone but a short time until detective Cole came back and said he [Noakes] wanted to tell me his story in the office." Noakes was brought back, and thereupon made his statement, in answer to questions, in the presence of Chief Reed, officer Cole, Richter (stenographer), Coffee and two newspaper *Page 15 reporters. O'Brien and Geiger. The stenographer took down what was said, and typewrote it. The chief did not tell Noakes that he would do anything in his behalf, or that Noakes could not or would not hang, if he pleaded guilty.
With reference to the Noakes confession, detective Cole testified: "I went down and got him [Noakes] and came up to the chief's office, and the chief talked to him probably 15 minutes. Took him back down and got down to the room where they keep the automobiles and talked to Noakes. I asked him if he did not want to tell the chief about what happened. He studied for a little bit; dropped his head. I asked him how many was in on that job, and he said there was two. I asked him who they were and he said, ``Art and myself.' I asked him to come back up and tell the chief and he said, ``Yes.' We went back up and he sat down and detailed that matter. The stenographer was called in them. Before he made the statement before the stenographer, Reed told him that anything he said could be used for or against him at the trial — told him to make his own voluntary statement."
Geiger, a newspaper reporter, testified that he was present when the statement was made by Noakes to the chief of police and other officers in Denver; that he heard the conversation preliminary to the statement; that the chief asked Noakes if he had anything to say, and told him that anything he might say might be used for or against him, and it was a voluntary statement; that the witness was present when Noakes made the first statement on the 16th; that Noakes "acted ordinarily"; that he was sitting in there smoking; that Noakes "didn't seem awfully excited."
O'Brien, another newspaper man, testified that he was present when the statement was made by Noakes before the stenographer in the chief's office in Denver; that he heard the conversation preliminary to this statement; *Page 16 that the chief warned Noakes that anything he may say might be used for or against him at the trial.
Chief Reed's secretary, Richter, testified that he took down in shorthand and transcribed Noakes' statement; that he read the statement over to Noakes after it was transcribed; that the chief handed it to Noakes, and asked him to read it, and that Noakes said it was correct; that Reed talked with Noakes about signing it — asked him if he wanted to sign it; that Noakes said that he did not care to at that time; that Exhibit J is a correct transcription of Noakes' statement; that it took Noakes about 10 minutes to read it.
The testimony of Noakes, given before the judge in the absence of the jury, is as follows:
"I am one of the defendants in this case. A statement was taken from me by a stenographer in the office of the Chief of Police of the City and County of Denver, along about the 16th of August last, on a Monday, as I recall. At that time I had been in the tank in the city jail since about Saturday noon — Saturday morning. Just in separate cells. I first saw Chief Reed Monday morning. I did not talk to anybody between Saturday morning, when I was taken to the city jail, and Monday morning. I was in there alone. I did not talk to the other prisoners. Then I was taken out Monday morning to Chief Reed's office and put in the same cell when I was taken back. After my first conversation with Chief Reed I was taken to the dark cell, what they called the ``hole.' He did not say why I was being put in the ``hole.' He did say that he was keeping me there until I talked. I was brought out again into the Chief's office and then taken back to the dark cell several times that day. From the time I was put in the dark cell Monday morning until I made the statement I had nothing to eat or drink. I had no water. I asked some of the fellows down there for water. I did not get any water. I don't know exactly the time of the evening when I made the statement, it was getting pretty late though. It was after dark. I had been *Page 17 interviewed by the Chief, that is, when I made the statement, five or six times, may be — well, I couldn't say for sure, it was several times. I had not admitted any connection with this hanging up until the last time when my statement was taken down by the stenographer. I denied all such connection. Q. What statement was made to you before your statement was taken with regard to any promise of benefit you may receive if you made the statement, or any injury that you might suffer if you did not? A. Chief Reed said if I plead guilty they wouldn't hand me and if I plead guilty that he would see that they did not, and he said if I did not, why, they were going to hang me. Reed and Cole and I think Mr. Hadley, I don't recall — there was several of them present at the time. Before I made the statement Chief of Police told me that they had a confession from Osborn and he said we done it. That was on the 16th. It was two or three days I believe before I first saw Osborn in the Chief's office. After the statement was taken down by the Chief's stenographer, Mr. Richter, there was a typewritten document prepared which purported to be my statement and handed to me to read, which I did. The Chief of Police asked me whether it was correct or not. I don't think I gave him any answer. He asked me if I wanted to sign the confession and I told him no, that I did not, and — it was handed to me for signature every time they talked to me out there — several times — I don't recall; several times they had taken me out there and asked me to sign it, and they handed me a pen to sign it with every time they asked me to sign. I refused to sign in every case. After I made the statement to the Chief's stenographer and he had taken it down in shorthand they had me taken to the hospital ward. I did get something to eat after the confession. I was without anything to eat or drink from in the morning until some time that night and I was in the Chief's office several times that day. I don't think I told him or made any complaint about not having anything to eat down there. I asked some one in the *Page 18 jail I saw for some water and they said they would get it, but they did not bring it to me, but I did not tell the Chief about it at all. The Chief of Police told me that if I would confess that they could not hang me for it, that is correct. I don't remember all of them that were present when that was stated by the Chief of Police, but I think Hadley and Cole; there might have been some more. That was stated to me several times, most every time I was taken out and given — that was before I made that statement. After that statement was made and after it had been written out on the typewriter, I read it over. Q. And it contained just what you so stated to the stenographer didn't it? A. Well, I would not say for sure whether all of it was or not. I could not say for sure that it seemed to me to be a correct statement of what I had told the stenographer. * * * Q. Mr. Noakes, as a matter of fact didn't the Chief of Police grant you every request practically that you asked? If you asked him for a cigarette or to have a shave didn't he have it done for you? A. Well, he gave me a cigarette; a shave, I did not ask him for that. Q. Whatever you asked for you got it from the Chief of Police? A. Well, I think I did in the way of smoking."
Cole, referring to Noakes' testimony that the chief (Reed) told him that if Noakes would plead guilty they would not hang him, testified that nothing of that kind occurred in Cole's presence.
Referring to the same matter, Hadley testified that he never heard Reed make that statement; never heard any such thing as that mentioned at any time.
Chief Reed denied having said it.
Noakes' confession (Exhibit J) is in the form of questions and answers. Condensed to narrative form, it is as follows:
I want to make this statement and tell all about it voluntarily. I understand that whatever I say will be used for or against me. My full name is Jasper Raymond Noakes. I live with my uncle at Grand Lake. Have *Page 19 lived in that neighborhood three years. I am 21 years old. Worked for my uncle. "I done teaming and worked in the wood logging." Knew Fred M. Selak. Was not very well acquainted with him; just knew him "when I seen him." Don't remember just what day it was when I saw him last. It was "when we taken him up there." By "we" I mean Art Osborn. Think that was July 21st; that was when we took him up. Saw him at the cabin at night, around 8 or 9 o'clock — around dark some time. Art Osborn and I took him up. Went down there and took him up there in the hills and hung him to a tree with a halter rope. Left him hang. So far as I know he is still hanging to the tree up there. When Art and I first went in the cabin we made him put his hands up — that is Art made him do so. Art pointed an automatic pistol at him. Couldn't say what caliber. The pistol belonged to Marion Reese, the fellow that worked up there for Lon Osborn, my uncle, Art Osborn's father. Miller has the pistol up there. Art told the old man "to put them up." Don't remember whether he [Selak] did or not. Then Art and I tied his hands behind him, and looked through the cabin; didn't see anything; didn't find anything, only what he had on him. Took him up in the hills and then came back to the cabin. Then we searched the house and found around $75.00 in a little cloth sack under the floor. "We taken it with us." We got around $40.00 or $50.00. I got half; that was the bargain. The understanding between me and Art was "to go halvers." Don't remember what else Art and I took; there was a suit of clothes, and I think two coyote hides, some underwear and some watches. "Q. How about the shot gun? A. And the shot gun. Q. Ten gauge shot gun? A. Yes, that isn't the gun that was up at the cabin. Q. What did you do with the shot gun? A. I don't know. Q. Know what the other stuff was? A. Two watches, some underwear and a looking glass." The part I know about was on Selak's property; we found it there. Am willing to go up with the boys *Page 20 and find this stuff and the old man. "Q. Did you and Gregg find the body when you went up the canyon? A. We intended to go over Monarch Canyon; we didn't get that far." We did not make any effort to go up where the old man was hanging. The old man did not fight; "I think the only reason, he thought he didn't have a chance." At first he didn't have much to say; he told us where this money was. We didn't find anything only what he had in his pockets. We did not tell him what we were going to do before we found the money. I don't know whether Art told him what he was going to do or not; we just put the rope on him and strung him up. All three of us walked from the cabin to the place we hung him — one-half or three-quarters of a mile away. Art climbed up the tree taking the rope. When Art did that all the old man said was, "he didn't see any use in it" — I don't remember what it was he said. Art asked if he remembered when he told him "not to start anything." What he meant by that was on the other deal — the deal over the fence; Selak had him arrested. After we got the rope over the limb, I pulled him up just off the ground and tied the rope to the tree and let him hang, and so far as I know he is still hanging there. He was really taken out and hanged because of the trouble he had over this fence. I told Art I didn't think he ought to do that and I told him not to, and he said "he done him dirt." Part of the money I spent at these different places was part of the money I got — my share that we got out of the cabin. That is the money I spent at Pine Cone and Granby; didn't spend as much money at Pine Cone as I said. Spent $3.00 or $4.00 and that's all I remember. "Q. You have made this statement of your own accord? A. Yes, sir."
Immediately after Noakes made this confession, chief of police Reed, together with Cole, Hadley, O'Brien and Geiger, went by automobile to Hot Sulphur Springs, arriving between 10 and 11:30 p. m. Reed questioned Osborn in the sheriff's house for a few minutes. Reed *Page 21 testified that he did not tell Osborn, nor did anybody tell him in Reed's presence, that if he confessed he could not be hanged for the crime. Reed did not tell him he was going to hang, or that they were going to lynch him; did not tell him there were threats of that kind; no one told him that in Reed's presence. Reed questioned Osborn in the kitchen. Osborn talked very little at all, and Reed said, "Son if you maintain your present attitude, you will probably get your neck cracked." Osborn just answered in monosyllables. Before he would answer any questions at all, they got him into the car with the intention of acquainting him with the statement that Noakes had made. "There were no statements made to him in the way of promises, threats, or anything of that kind." After that Osborn was placed in the automobile, and they started for Denver. Osborn sat in the rear. Not much was said directly to Osborn. The others conversed among themselves about the case. Just before they reached the forks of the road, where one road goes to Denver and the other to Grand Lake, Osborn said: "Well, I guess you fellows know what you are talking about, all right. I might as well tell you, I took the old son-of-a-bitch out and strung him up." He then told in great detail how they had taken Selak out and "hung him to a tree." There had been no promises or threats or anything of that kind, Reed testified. Cole testified that just before Osborn made the statement, Cole told Osborn that if he wanted to tell the truth "we would not have to come back tomorrow." Osborn stated that he had buried the shot gun, clothes and stuff about 2 miles this side of Grand Lake, and promised to show the place, and Reed found the clothes, the shot gun and the rifle at the place indicated by Osborn. He also attempted to show where Selak's body was, but at 2 o'clock in the morning the search was abandoned because of the darkness, and Osborn was taken to Denver. Later that morning the body was found where Osborn said it was.
On August 19 Osborn made a confession (Exhibit K) in the chief's office. It was taken down in shorthand and *Page 22 was typewritten by Richter, was read by Osborn, and was declared by him to be correct. The next day Osborn made another confession (Exhibit L) in the chief's office. This also was typewritten, was read by Osborn, and was declared by him to be correct. He did not sign either "K" or "L." Osborn made his statement (Exhibit K) in the presence of Noakes. Before making the statement, Osborn was cautioned that whatever he might say may be used for or against him. Later Osborn and Noakes were brought to the chief's office and questioned, "and each of them [orally] verified the statement of the other." Altering the form of Osborn's confessions from questions and answers to narrative form, they are as follows:
My full name is Arthur Alonzo Osborn. Live at Grand Lake. I understand that whatever I say in this statement may be used for or against me when the case comes to trial, and with that understanding I am willing to make a voluntary statement of the trouble I had with Mr. Selak, and the events leading up to the hanging.
At this place Osborn told about some trouble that he and his family had with Selak over the latter's building a fence across a road, thereby preventing the Osborns from hauling wood. The Osborns tore down the fence and were arrested and fined for doing so. "Q. How did you decide to get rid of him? A. Well, on the same grounds as the trouble and threats he made down there and everything." Noakes and I never talked much at all about it. Ray and I decided to go down and get the old man the same evening we went down. We never had much to say about it going down. We left home about 7 o'clock that evening — something like that — in my car; got the mail and maybe went up to the pool hall for a little while. Left Grand Lake about 8 o'clock. Went close down to his ranch, about a mile from the house. We left the car there and walked down to the house. Got to the cabin about 8:30 — something like that. Don't think the door was closed. Selak was sitting by *Page 23 the table. I think we knocked at the door. He opened the door and let us in. He said, "Hello!" I think it was something like that. I think I told him to throw up his hands; I had a gun in my hand; don't know whether I pointed it at him or not. He then said "all right," and threw up his hands. Ray was standing there. Did not tie his hands before searching him. Don't know whether Ray had a gun in his hand or not. Ray had a gun with him but I don't know whether he held it on him. After searching him, I tied him. Did not search the cabin at that time. Took him away from the cabin. He did not protest. Did not tell him what we were going to do to him. Did not have a rope around his neck at that time; just took him away from the cabin, straight out to where he was found. "Q. Have any conversation with him there before you hung him up? A. No, mighty few words said there." I was "kinda sore" the way he came down upon our land and threatened us the way he did. I climbed the tree and put the rope over the limb. When I started to climb the tree, he said: "That's kinda awful, boys" — something like that; and I told him who I was. "Q. Didn't he know who you was up until that time? A. Said he never — I don't know." When I told him who I was he never had anything to say then at all. I asked him if he remembered that day he was down on the place there. He never answered, never said anything more after I told him who "I was. He said he had some money under the floor in the cabin. "Q. Say you could have it, if you let him go? A. I don't remember how he did take it." After I put the rope over the limb, I stayed up there till I tied it. My cousin give him a boost and I pulled. I tied the rope to the tree and tied him up there; then we went straight back to the cabin. I got the money from under the floor — $60.00 or $70.00; something like that. I divided the money with my cousin before we left the cabin. Did not divide the other stuff at the cabin. Never did divide it. "Q. That is all the stuff out of the cabin you put in the car? *Page 24 A. We did." We went with it towards home. Did not have any of the stuff in the car when we got home. Got home between 1 o'clock — between 12 and 1 o'clock. Never said anything to anybody about what we had done. There wasn't anybody who knew about it. To the best of my knowledge that is the absolute truth of the whole business. When my cousin and I went to the cabin we had handkerchiefs around our faces. He did not have any idea who it was until I told him just before hanging him. "Q. Did you talk to anybody about the disappearance of Selak afterwards? A. No, not much." Had never borrowed any money from Selak before hanging him. Had no business dealings with him except over the old stage road. "Q. You read Ray Noakes' statement the other day. Would you say it is correct except what you have said about the automobile? A. I think, I don't remember all of it now. Q. You have made this statement of your own accord? A. Yes."
Confession of August 20: The statement made by him August 19 was handed to him and read by him. "Q. Is that correct, Arthur? A. Yes." We hung the old man up Wednesday night; do not remember the date. This is the gun I had. It was the property of Mr. Reese. This other gun belongs to Noakes. Think he had it the night we went down there. Referring to the photograph taken when Selak's body was discovered, Osborn said that it doesn't look much like him right there. He was dressed something similar to that when we hung him up. Don't remember whether he had a coat on when we hung him up.
It has been truly said, "There is no branch of the law of evidence in such inextricable confusion as that relative to confessions." State v. Patterson,
Tracing the history of the law's use of confessions, Professor Wigmore (Ev., sec. 817, et seq.) notes several distinct stages. In the earlier usage, by confession was meant a plea of guilty. Up to the middle of the 17th century the use of torture to extract confessions was common, and the confessions thus extracted were used in evidence. "In 1783 * * * the modern rule received a full and clear expression, and confessions not entitled to credit because of the promises or the threats by which they had been obtained were declared inadmissible in evidence. * * * At this stage, then, the doctrine is a perfectly rational one. Confessions apparently untrustworthy as affirmation of guilt are excluded." Id. During the first half of the 19th century, "there was a general suspicion of all confessions, a prejudice against them as such, and an inclination to repudiate them upon the slightest pretext." Id. Some of the decisions went to absurd lengths in excluding confessions. In this situation, Baron Parke, in Regina v. Baldry, 2 Den. Crown Cases, 428, 443, said, "I confess that I cannot look at the decisions without some shame when I consider what objections have prevailed to prevent the reception of confessions in evidence; and I agree with the observation of Mr. Pitt Taylor, that the rule has been extended quite too far, and that justice and common sense have too frequently been sacrificed at the shrine of mercy." In the same case, Mr. Justice Earle said, "I am much inclined to agree with Mr. Pitt Taylor; and according to my judgment, in many cases where confessions have been excluded, justice and common sense have been sacrificed, not at the shrine of mercy, but at the shrine of guilt." And in Queen v. Johnston, 15 Ir. C. L. 60, 85, Hayes, J., referred to such cases as "an exhibition of morbid sensibility towards criminals." A variety of *Page 26 circumstances contributed to bring about such rulings. Professor Wigmore (Ev., sec. 865) believes that the social conditions in England in the 18th century and in the early part of the 19th century — the deference shown by the so-called "lower" classes toward those in authority, and the great influence exercised by the latter over the former — had much to do with the exclusion of confessions induced by the latter. So, also, the fact that the accused did not have the full benefit of counsel at the trial, could not testify in his own behalf, and had no right to appeal, influenced the judges to "restore the balance by excluding confessions upon every available pretext." "In view of these considerations," says Professor Wigmore (Ev., sec. 865) "it is easy to see why the law of confessions came to develop what seem to us, in another community and in other times, absurd and dangerous sentimentalities, and why there is no necessity whatever for our retention of the distortions and irrational excrescences which, as handed down to us in the English rulings of the early 1800s, have served to obscure the correct and entirely rational principle of exclusion applicable to confessions."
Speaking of confessions, which in the early days in England meant pleas of guilty, Chamberlayne (Mod. Law of Evidence, sec. 1617) observes, "In view of the severity of the penal code then in force, the disproportionate punishment frequently awarded for comparatively unimportant offences and the disabilities under which the accused labored, it seemed but just that before the judge should allow a prisoner, undefended by counsel, without the aid of witnesses, and hurriedly tried, often with almost indecent haste, to foreclose his last chance of escape by plea of guilty, he should make sure that the act was a deliberate one made with full knowledge of its consequences." Those early rulings, made under the conditions above described, have been followed by some of the courts of this country. Eminent judges and law writers have earnestly protested against blindly and *Page 27 unreasoningly following those early rulings. Courts that years ago committed themselves to such extreme doctrines are loath to retrace their steps; and so, even in recent times, we find decisions that it is difficult, if not impossible, to reconcile with reason. Some of the rigid exclusionary rules of evidence are relics of the day when no defendant in a criminal case and no party to a civil suit could testify. The process of reasoning, apparently, was something like this: Our knowledge of human nature leads us to believe that many defendants in criminal cases and some parties to civil suits would, if permitted to testify, swear falsely because of their interest in the outcome; therefore, to prevent perjury in some cases, we will exclude from the witness stand defendants in all criminal cases and parties to all civil suits, although we know, and everybody else knows, that some persons who chance to be accused of crime, and many parties to civil suits, would not for any consideration, consciously depart a hair's breadth from the truth. Some of the early rulings seem to be due to a profound distrust of the intelligence of jurors — a belief that they either lack intelligence, or will not use it. It will not do to act upon that assumption in these days of compulsory education and wide dissemination of knowledge. Professor Wigmore says (Ev. sec. 867): "The policy of the future * * * should be to receive all well-proved confessions in evidence, and to leave them to the jury, subject to all discrediting circumstances, to receive such weight as may seem proper." We have not yet arrived at that stage of development. There seems, however, to be a tendency in that direction. Years ago (1852) Lord Campbell, in Regina v. Baldry, 2 Den. Crown Cases, 428, 445, said, "If the matter were res integra I should perhaps have doubted whether it might not have been advisable to allow the confession to be given in evidence, and let the jury give what weight to it they pleased."
In some jurisdictions, where the evidence is conflicting, or the court is in doubt whether the confession is voluntary, *Page 28
the whole matter may be left to the jury. Note, 18 L.R.A. (N.S.) 777; 1 R.C.L. p. 578; Wilson v. U.S.,
In the present case, the body and the stolen property of Selak were found as a result of information furnished by the defendants in their confessions. It was proper to admit evidence of that fact, even on the supposition that the confessions were improperly obtained. Beery v. U.S.,
This court, on repeated occasions, has said that, to be admissible, a confession must be voluntary, and that the question of admissibility is for the court. Fincher v.People,
The word "voluntary" has been criticized as so indefinite and loose as to be of little assistance in determining whether a confession is or is not admissible; but it has been long and frequently used, and has acquired a meaning in the law of confessions that is fairly well understood. In Buschy v. People,
In the light of this discussion, let us consider the confessions admitted in evidence in this case. The defendants' attorneys admit — and it is the law — that the finding of the trial court on conflicting evidence is conclusive on review. They say: "But we are not relying on evidence as to which there is any conflict. We are relying entirely, so far as the question of the admissibility of these confessions is concerned, on testimony which is absolutely undisputed and is for the most part, we may say, on the testimony of the people's witnesses themselves." Osborn did not testify, and there is no conflict in the evidence concerning the making of his confessions. Noakes *Page 31 testified before the judge in the absence of the jury. The trial court's findings on conflicting evidence cannot be disturbed, nor do counsel seek to disturb them. In their brief, the defendants' attorneys thus state what they claim to be the undisputed evidence with reference to the making of the confession of Noakes:
(1) "Nowhere in the evidence is it disputed in any manner that the Chief of Police told Noakes that if he would confess they could not hang him for it and that he was so told several times, almost every time he was taken before the Chief.
(2) "Nowhere in the evidence is there any contradiction of Noakes' statement that ``before I made the statement Chief of Police told me that they had a confession from Osborn and he said we done it.'
(3) "Nowhere in the evidence is there any contradiction of Noakes' statement to the effect that from the time he was put in the dark cell Monday morning until he made the statement he had nothing to eat or drink. That although he asked for water, he did not get any water. That he did not get anything to eat until after the so-called confession was taken down and he was put in the hospital ward."
As to the first. On direct examination Noakes was asked, "What statement was made to you before your statement was taken, with regard to any promise of benefit you may receive if you made the statement, or any injury that you might suffer if you did not?" He answered, "Chief Reed said if I plead guilty, they wouldn't hang me," etc. On cross-examination, the district attorney asked, "Now you say that the chief of police told you that if you would confess, that they could not hang you for it; is that correct?" Noakes answered, "He did." The district attorney did not accurately recall the words used by Noakes. But the substance was the same. Chief Reed testified: "I did not tell him that he would hang for it, if he did not make a statement. * * * No one in my presence told him" that. "I did *Page 32 not tell Noakes that if he plead guilty, he could not be hanged, and nobody said any such thing in my presence, that I recall." Reed was asked to state whether or not there was anything said in the way of threats or promisesor inducements. He answered, "Absolutely none." "Q. Was there, to your knowledge, at any time? A. None whatever." Geiger, who was present when Noakes confessed, and who heard the conversation preliminary to the confession, testified as follows: "Q. And what, if anything, was said in your presence to Noakes about making a statement? A. Why, the chief just told him — asked him if he had anything to say. The chief told him anything he might say might be used for or against him, and it was a voluntary statement. That isabout all." O'Brien testified: "I heard the conversation preliminary to the statement. * * * The chief warned him that anything he may say might be used for or against him at the trial. I don't believe there wasanything else said at that time about that." Cole, who also was present, said, referring to Noakes' testimony that the chief told him that if Noakes would plead guilty, they would not hang him, "Nothing of that kind occurred in my presence." Hadley testified to the same effect. It appears, therefore, that Noakes' testimony was disputed. The trial court was justified in believing the witnesses for the people and in disbelieving Noakes.
As to the second. The authorities agree — Professor Wigmore (Ev., sec. 841) says that the principle "is and always has been universally conceded" — that the use of a trick or fraud (however reprehensible in itself) does not of itself exclude a confession obtained by means of it. See Chamberlayne, Modern Law of Evidence, sec. 1538a. Thus, a false statement that an accomplice had confessed, or had implicated the accused, is not sufficient to exclude a confession. Price v. State,
The third proposition of counsel requires consideration in connection with the second. The force of counsel's statement is somewhat weakened by certain circumstances appearing in the record. It was not denied that he had nothing to eat from the time he was put in the dark cell until he made his statement. There is evidence that he was put in the dark cell around 10 or 11 o'clock in the morning, and that he made his statement somewhere between 3 and 5 o'clock in the afternoon of the same day. Cole testified that it was "about 3 or 4 o'clock. * * * It was not after dark; it was in the afternoon." So it appears that Noakes missed his lunch. It does not appear that he asked for lunch, or that he was hungry, or that he mentioned the matter to the chief of police, which he had ample opportunity to do. He testified, "I asked some one in jail I saw for some water, and they said they would get it, but they did not bring it to me; but I did not tell the chief about it at all." He admitted that whatever he asked for "in the way of smoking," he got from the chief of police. Chief Reed testified that he issued no orders that Noakes was not to have "even a drink of water" until he confessed. As the chief gave him a cigarette when he asked for it, would the court be justified in assuming that lunch and water were deliberately withheld to "torture" Noakes into making a confession? Can we say that, in refusing to draw such an inference, the trial court committed error? The remaining charge is, that after refusing to answer questions, Noakes was put in solitary confinement in a cell that has been referred to as "the hole." This cell, *Page 34 the chief testified, was not different from any other cell, except that it was dark. There was no bunk in it — "nothing in there; the four walls, the floor and the ceiling." According to the chief, he ordered Noakes put there "because he did not want any one to talk to him." But why the darkness? Why the absence of chairs? Why the absence of everything, except "the four walls, the floor and the ceiling"? Is there any reasonable connection between these conditions and the purpose that the chief claims he had in mind? We fail to see it. The claim is a palpable pretense, too flimsy to deceive even a child. Whenever police officers, through mistaken zeal and a false idea of their duties and rights, resort to such methods, they imperil the conviction in every case where a confession is introduced in evidence. This situation presents the most serious and the most difficult question with which we have to deal in this case. Should the judgment be reversed because of these matters?
The case of State v. McCullum,
That case concerned the King county jail, a jail that seems to have given the courts considerable trouble. The custom prevailing there in the matter of extorting confessions with the aid of this same "black hole" is described at length in State v. Miller,
Counsel also cite what is known to the profession as the "sweat box" case, Ammons v. State,
In the present case, Noakes was in solitary confinement but a few hours, not several days; there is nothing to indicate that he suffered from want of air, or because of heat. True, he did not have the comfort that a light and a chair would have afforded. However, he did not, when he testified, and he does not now, claim to have suffered by reason of these conditions, or to have made his confession because of them, or in order to avoid their continuance. Not that it is necessary for him to do so in order to entitle him to raise the point; but the fact that he did not do so is a circumstance that it was proper for the trial court to consider. There are a number of other circumstances in the present case that were not present in the Washington and Mississippi cases, supra. When Noakes commenced his confession, he was asked, "You want to make this statement and tell all about it voluntarily?" He answered, "Yes." At the conclusion he was asked, "you have made this statement of your own accord?" He answered, "Yes, sir." In O'Donnell *Page 37 v. People,
In his testimony, Noakes did not say or claim that his confession was given because of any hope of benefit or favor, or of any fear of harm or disadvantage, caused by any promises or threats, either express or implied. It was not, and it is not, contended by Noakes, or in his behalf, that either his confession or Osborn's confession is false, or even inaccurate, in any particular. To make a confession involuntary because of promises or threats, the promises or threats must have induced the confession; there must be a connection between the promises or threats and the confession; the confession must have been caused, prompted or produced by the promises or threats. In Beckham v. State,
In Fincher v. People,
Such we hold to be the law. The attorneys for the defendants admit that, on conflicting evidence, the finding of the trial court is conclusive on review. The law goes farther. It is also for the trial court to draw inferences from the undisputed facts, and the trial court's decision should not be reversed "unless the contrary inference is the only reasonable one." State v. Grover,
In admitting the confession of Noakes, the trial court did not abuse its discretion.
It is claimed that the Osborn confessions should not have been admitted, because of certain words admittedly used by the Denver chief of police (Reed) while talking *Page 40 to Osborn at Hot Sulphur Springs. The chief of police talked to Osborn a few minutes in the sheriff's house. Osborn talked very little, and the chief said: "Son, if you maintain your present attitude, you will probably get your neck cracked." There was nothing whatever to lead Osborn to suppose that this meant that some person was about to do him personal injury if he did not confess. At most, it meant, and must have been understood as meaning, that if Osborn continued to maintain silence; to offer no explanation of his whereabouts at the time Selak was killed; to say nothing to relieve himself from the suspicion that he was a party to the homicide — nothing in defense, or even in mitigation; to say nothing that would enable the officers to hunt the real criminal, if Osborn had no part in the homicide — such silence might result in Osborn's being convicted of murder, and suffering the highest penalty for that crime. This was the only thing said to Osborn, or in his presence, upon which to base any claim that a threat was used. The chief of police testified that there were no promises or threats, or anything of that kind. The chief had already obtained a full confession from Noakes. That confession described in detail the hanging of Selak and Osborn's part in the transaction. As Osborn would make no statement at the sheriff's house, they started to return to Denver. On the way, the officers and newspaper reporters discussed the case and the statement that Noakes had made. As the defendants' counsel say in their brief, the police officers "go to Osborn and tell him that Noakes has confessed, in order to get him, Osborn, to confess." After hearing for some time the discussion of the facts, Osborn said: "Well, I guess you fellows know what you are talking about, all right. I might as well tell you, I took the old son-of-a-bitch out and strung him up"; and then in great detail told how he and Noakes had killed Selak. He then directed the *Page 41 officers to the place where Selak's property was hidden; and described, and in the darkness tried to find, the place where Selak's body was hanging to a tree. The property was found that night at the place designated; and later the body was found at the place described by Osborn. Three days later (August 19) Osborn made a confession (Exhibit K) in the office of the chief of police. It was taken down in shorthand and was typewritten, was read by Osborn, and by him declared to be correct. The next day Osborn made another confession (Exhibit L) in the chief's office. This also was typewritten, read by Osborn, and declared to be correct. Before Osborn made these statements in Denver, he was cautioned that whatever he might say may be used for or against him. Later, Osborn and Noakes were brought to the chief's office and questioned, "and each of them [orally] verified the statement of the other." It is a fair inference — one that the court would be justified in making — that Osborn was not influenced or caused or induced to confess by the words of Chief Reed, but by the following considerations: From the conversation in the automobile, Osborn realized that the officers knew the truth, and, knowing that he was guilty, he no doubt concluded that it was useless for him longer to remain silent. And when, in the chief's office in Denver, he was brought face to face with Noakes, who, as Osborn knew, had already confessed, Osborn must have realized still more keenly the futility of withholding a full statement of the truth. The trial court, in admitting these several confessions of Osborn, did not abuse its discretion.
At no time after the defendants made their formal pleas of not guilty was it claimed, or even suggested, by the defendants, or in their behalf, that they did not commit the homicide. Not a word of testimony was offered by them, or in their behalf, or at all, indicating, even remotely, that they did not kill Selak. Indeed, at the close of the people's case, each of the defendants, in *Page 42 support of the application to have Dr. Tepley subpoenaed, swore, "that this affiant has no other defense save that of insanity." In other words, after having ample time — several months — to deliberate, during which time they were in consultation with their attorneys; at a time when it is not claimed that they were under the influence of any promise or threat; both defendants solemnly admitted, in effect, that they committed the homicide, and that unless they were mentally incompetent at the time of the homicide, they are guilty of murder in the first degree. There was no evidence introduced at the trial that would justify a finding that either of the defendants was insane, or that raises a reasonable doubt, or any doubt whatever, with reference thereto. If the expert that the defendants sought to have subpoenaed in their behalf at the expense of the public is of the opinion that either of the defendants was insane at the time of the homicide, the governor is the one, and the only one, who has authority to consider the matter at this time. At the trial, both defendants were proven guilty of murder in the first degree; they were proven guilty, not only beyond a reasonable doubt, but beyond the possibility of a doubt. All the matters relied upon for a reversal were presented to the trial court and argued on the application for a new trial, and the trial court denied the application. We discover no reversible error in the record. The judgment is affirmed. It is ordered that the judgment be executed during the week commencing Monday, the 26th day of March, 1928. *Page 43