Abele v. State

103 So. 370, 138 Miss. 772
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedApril 6, 1925
DocketNo. 24493.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 103 So. 370 (Abele v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Abele v. State, 103 So. 370, 138 Miss. 772 (Mich. 1925).

Opinion

Ethridge, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

Appellant was indicted and tried for burglary, convicted and sentenced to one year in the penitentiary, and appeals from said judgment.

The burglary was committed by breaking open I. C. car No. 24490, the property of the Illinois Central Railroad Company in service on the Yazoo & Mississippi Valley Railroad, and taking from said car cigarettes to the value of one thousand and forty dollars.

R. T. Westbrook, a witness, upon whose testimony the conviction is predicated, was an accomplice, who had previously pleaded g-pilty to the burglary and been sentenced to serve a term in the penitentiary therefor. According to this witness the appellant, Westbrook, and another party by the name of Beaver proceeded from Memphis, Tenn., into Tunica county, Miss., and awaited the arrival of the freight train, and, while said train stopped at a station in Tunica county taking water, the seal of the door of car No. 24490' in said train <?f ears was broken and the car door opened, and defendants entered and located the cigarettes and before the train reached Lula, Miss., the cigarettes were thrown from the train, and the said parties took said cigarettes and placed them in a cotton house, fastening the door in such way that they could tell if the cotton house was entered when they returned to get the cigarettes.

*776 The burglary occurred on a Monday night and on Tuesday night following the parties returned, to the cotton house where the cigarettes were stored, driving in a Ford car belonging* to the appellant. On approaching the cotton house they discovered that some one had opened the door. Thereupon, according to Westbrook, he wanted to abandon the enterprise and leave the cigarettes in the cotton house, but Beaver insisted on taking them, and they started loading the cigarettes into the Ford car when another car approached and thereupon the burglars pretended to be pumping up a tire. In this approaching car were the sheriff and his deputies who hailed them and asked if they needed assistance, and they replied that they did not, and the sheriff’s car went on down the road. Presently the sheriff returned and threw his flashlight and gun on Westbrook, and he surrendered. The other burglars drove away in the Ford car, but the sheriff fired upon the' car and punctured the tire which ditched the car, but the other two men escaped but the car itself was captured. Westbrook gave the sheriff a false name and wasJ placed in jail at Tunica at first and thereafter removed to the jail at Glarksdale at which place he made a confession implicating Beaver and the appellant. Beaver was tried and convicted at the former term of court and sentenced to the penitentiary, and did not appear as a witness in this case.

Westbrook testified that Beaver approached him about needing money, and proposed that they rob a car and get some cigarettes; that they procured information from a negro in the service of the railroad company at Memphis as to the car and number in which the cigarettes were placed for shipment and what time it was due to be billed out of Memphis; that they got in touch with the appellant and the' three men proceeded to a point in appellant’s Ford car where the freight car was burglarized, secured the cigarettes as above stated, placed them in the cotton hpuse, returned to Memphis, and on the following night drove back to the cotton house in appellant’s Ford car.

*777 The sheriff testified that he was notified, on the day following the burglary by the owner of the cotton house, that the cigarettes were in the cotton house and that he, the sheriff, and his deputies were on hand near the cotton house watching for the burglars to return for the cigarettes; that when the Ford car stopped in front of the cotton house that the sheriff and his deputies moved up in the sheriff’s car and they were trying to see whether the occupants of the Ford ear were loading the cigarettes in the cotton house into the Ford car; that the sheriff directed the driver of his car to slow down and he would ash the occupa3its of the Ford car whether they needed help; that his driver slowed down, but he (the sheriff) could not see whether the cigarettes were loaded in the car or not; that he desired to wait until the cigarettes were placed in the car before arresting these me3i, so he proceeded on down the road a short distance and then he and one of his deputies got out of his car, and the driver drove his car down the road apiece; that the sheriff and his deputy returned to the Ford car which was still at the cotton house with the results above stated; that he could not see or identify the other parties who were with Westbrook; that same night that the sheriff arrested Westbrook he called, up police headquarters in Memphis and gave them the number of the Ford automobile seized by him; that subsequently a lawyer in Memphis came down with a brother of Westbrook, and this lawyer introduced Westbrook’s brother under the fictitious name given by Westbrook and this lawyer also replevied the Ford automobile for the appellant. The cigarettes taken from this Ford car were testified to and identified by the agents of the railroad company as being the property being' shipped in I. C. car No. 24490, and which had been checked short at destination.

The defendant introduced a number of witnesses in .his defense. He lived in Memphis, Tenn., and proved by his mother that on the Monday night in question he was in company with his mother 4and his aunt from Texas; that they drove around the streets of Memphis in his au *778 tomobile, returning borne about ten o’clock p. m. that night; that they retired about eleven p. m.; that he was at home that night. Appellant introduced another witness, a young; man living' in Memphis, who testified that they were'together in the young man’s car on the Tuesday night in question driving around Memphis; that they went to a street carnival in the city of Memphis and were there until about 11:30 p. m. and then went to a restaurant and had lunch; and that his said friend took appellant home, reaching there shortly after midnight. During appellant’s! absence on Tuesday night, there was a telephone message for appellant, and his mother answered the telephone and stated that her son was not in, and when asked when he would be in, replied that he usually came home about eleven o’clock at night; that the telephone rang again at eleven o’clock that night, and again asked for the appellant, and stated that police headquarters desired that appellant should ring them up when he returned home that night.

Appellant’s mother testified that her son came home some time after twélve o’clock that night and she told him about the telephone-message from police headquarters, and told him- something; about his car being found out of town, but appellant said it was too late for him to call up police headquarters that night, that he would go around there the next morning. The following morning' appellant, his mother, and his young* man friend who had been out with him the evening before and who was not implicated in the robbery by Westbrook, proceeded to police headquarters and had a- conversation with the officer in charge.

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Bluebook (online)
103 So. 370, 138 Miss. 772, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/abele-v-state-miss-1925.