1. On retrial of petitioner, whose conviction in a criminal case
in a state court had been reversed by this Court on the ground that
it had been obtained by use of a coerced confession,
Ashcraft
v. Tennessee, 322 U. S. 143, the
jury was permitted to hear testimony narrating everything (except
the confession) that took place during the inquisition at which the
confession was obtained. This resulted in another conviction.
Held: there was no relevant distinction between the use
of this evidence and the use of the confession, and the conviction
is reversed as being contrary to the due process clause of the
Fourteenth Amendment. P.
327 U. S.
278.
2. In oral argument before this Court in the earlier proceeding,
the State's attorney admitted that the confession was the only
evidence against petitioner, and this was mentioned in the opinion
of this Court, which reversed the conviction and remanded the cause
to the state supreme court for proceedings not inconsistent with
the opinion of this Court.
Held: the mandate of this Court did not forbid a new
trial of petitioner. P. 279, n. *.
3. A state supreme court's construction of its own mandate is
final. P. 279, n. *.
Reversed.
Page 327 U. S. 275
Petitioner was convicted as an accessory before the fact of the
murder of his wife. On appeal, the conviction was affirmed by the
state supreme court. On certiorari, this Court reversed the
conviction on the ground that it had been obtained by use of a
coerced confession, contrary to the due process clause of the
Fourteenth Amendment.
322 U. S. 322 U.S.
143. On retrial, the jury was permitted to hear testimony narrating
everything (except the confession) which took place during the
inquisition at which the confession was obtained. The second
conviction was affirmed by the state supreme court. This Court
granted certiorari. 326 U.S. 713.
Reversed and remanded
for further proceedings. P.
327 U. S.
279.
MR. JUSTICE BLACK delivered the opinion of the Court.
Mrs. Zelma Ashcraft was murdered in Shelby County, Tennessee.
The petitioner Ware was convicted for the murder. The petitioner
Ashcraft, husband of the deceased, was convicted for being an
accessory before the fact. The Supreme Court of Tennessee affirmed
the convictions. We reversed the judgment as to Ashcraft, vacated
it as to Ware, and remanded the case to the Supreme Court of
Tennessee for further proceedings not inconsistent with our
opinion.
Ashcraft v. Tennessee, 322 U.
S. 143. The State Supreme Court then ordered the case
remanded to the Criminal Court of Shelby County with the same
directions as to further procedure. The petitioners were again
convicted, and the State Supreme Court affirmed.
Page 327 U. S. 276
Our reversal of Ashcraft's first conviction was on the ground
that his conviction resulted from a trial so conducted as to
deprive Ashcraft of due process of law in violation of the
Fourteenth Amendment. At that trial, the state had been permitted
to introduce in evidence an alleged confession which had been
obtained from Ashcraft after thirty-six hours continuous grilling
by investigating officers, who were holding him incommunicado in
the County jail. This alleged confession was in large part written,
but Ashcraft had neither written nor signed it. Ware's conviction
had also rested on a confession, the admission of which as evidence
he had challenged as a denial of due process. Without passing on
the Constitutional question raised by Ware, we vacated the judgment
against him for other reasons stated in our opinion. In the joint
trial of both petitioners which resulted in the judgment now before
us, the state again introduced Ware's confession. His objection to
it based on the due process clause was overruled. Before reaching
the issues raised by Ware, we shall dispose of the questions which
Ashcraft now raises.
In our first opinion, we pointed out in detail alleged
incriminatory admissions used to convict Ashcraft and the
circumstances under which he had made them. In summary, those
statements and circumstances were these. On a Saturday at 7:00
P.M., nine days after his wife was found dead, officers went to
Ashcraft's home and took him to a fifth-floor county jail room.
There, he was held without rest or sleep until 7:00 o'clock Monday
morning, or 36 hours. During the entire time, Ashcraft was
subjected to a constant barrage of questions and charges. According
to the officers' testimony, he, for about 28 hours, consistently
denied any knowledge about, or complicity in, the crime. The
officers swore, however, that, after 11 P.M. Sunday night, Ashcraft
finally confessed that he knew who killed his wife, but at the same
time denied
Page 327 U. S. 277
that he had done it. According to this testimony, Ashcraft said
that Ware had come to his home before daylight, just as Mrs.
Ashcraft was getting in an automobile to take a journey; that he
watched Ware force Mrs. Ashcraft to drive the automobile away from
home with Ware accompanying her; that Ashcraft, after making slight
but ineffective protests, went back to his room, later went to
work, and that he made no report to the officers, but kept his
knowledge secret because he was afraid of Ware. Later on the Sunday
night that Ashcraft was being interrogated in the jail, a court
reporter was summoned and he, according to the evidence, took down
complete confessions of guilt given both by Ware and Ashcraft. The
reporter completed transcription of his notes about 7:00 o'clock
Monday morning. These transcribed notes were offered as to both the
petitioners in the first trial. Witnesses at that trial, including
Ashcraft's doctor, also swore that both Ashcraft and Ware had been
caused to strip for complete physical examinations. The only
apparent purpose of this was to counteract any later claim by Ware
or Ashcraft that their alleged confessions were the product of
physical mistreatment.
At an early stage in the new trial, resulting in the conviction
we are now reviewing, the prosecuting attorney announced that he
intended to use this jail evidence again, "about everything but the
confession." And that was done. The witnesses for the state in the
first and the second trials were the same. Construing our mandate
as prohibiting only the admission of the written unsigned
confession, the trial judge allowed the jury to listen to testimony
narrating everything else that took place during the entire 36
hours Ashcraft was questioned with no one present but his
inquisitors and those summoned by them to buttress their future
evidence.
An inspection of the record shows beyond any peradventure of
doubt that the testimony used in the last trial
Page 327 U. S. 278
showing what took place during Ashcraft's examination might well
have had the same practical effect on the jury the written unsigned
confession might have had, had it been introduced. For the
circumstances leading up to it were narrated in detail both with
reference to Ware and Ashcraft. Even the doctor who examined Ware
reported not only on Ware's physical condition, but also testified
in the same breath about his examination of Ashcraft.
Respondent claims that this testimony did not harm Ashcraft, and
that Ashcraft's supposed statement that he knew who killed his wife
was exculpatory. In fact, in the context of this case, that
statement was the strongest possible evidence against Ashcraft, who
was charged with having been an accessory before the fact. For ten
days following his wife's death, Ashcraft had purported to help the
officers in their efforts to solve the crime, and for the first
twenty-eight hours of his jail interrogation, he had not only
stoutly maintained his own innocence whenever it was questioned,
but had also denied any knowledge whatever as to the identity of
the murderer. To admit knowledge of the murder and of who committed
it after these protestations by him would, for most people, be the
equivalent of a confession of guilty participation in advance of
the crime. Willful concealment of material facts has always been
considered as evidence of guilt. And statements denying guilt
followed by a confession of knowledge of who the guilty person was
may carry the strongest implications of a guilty knowledge.
Cf.
Bram v. United States, 168 U. S. 532,
168 U. S. 562.
This is particularly true where a husband admits that he has,
against the strongest pressures, deliberately concealed the
identity of his wife's murdered for ten days.
We see no relevant distinction between introduction of this
statement and the unsigned alleged confession, except the
possibility that the admission of this long-concealed knowledge was
perhaps a more effective confession
Page 327 U. S. 279
of guilt than the written unsigned alleged confession would have
been. All the reasons given for reversal of the judgment against
Ashcraft in the first case, which we need not repeat, apply with
equal force here.
The state has asked that, if Ashcraft's case is reversed, we
follow the same course as to Ware that we did in the first case,
and vacate the judgment against him. For this reason, as well as
the reasons given in our former opinion, we do not pass on the
Constitutional question raised by Ware concerning his alleged
confession, but vacate the judgment of the Supreme Court of
Tennessee affirming Ware's conviction.
We need not now decide other questions that have been argued
except one contention mentioned below.
*
The judgment against petitioner Ashcraft is reversed, and that
against petitioner Ware is vacated. Both cases are remanded to the
State Supreme Court for further proceedings not inconsistent with
this opinion.
It is so ordered.
MR. JUSTICE FRANKFURTER joins in this opinion on the basis of
the decision in
Ashcraft v. Tennessee, 322 U.
S. 143.
MR. JUSTICE JACKSON took no part in the consideration or
decision of this case.
* The petitioner Ashcraft contends that, in the oral argument
before this Court when the first conviction was being challenged,
the state's attorney admitted that the confession was the only
evidence against Ashcraft, and, since we mentioned this fact in our
opinion, our mandate and the state Supreme Court's mandate, which
adopted our mandate, in effect forbade a new trial of petitioner.
We do not think our mandate lends itself to such an interpretation.
As to the State Supreme Court's mandate, that Court has construed
it by affirming petitioners' second convictions. The state Court's
construction of its own mandate is final.