Ables v. State

1958 OK CR 98, 331 P.2d 954, 1958 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 213
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma
DecidedOctober 29, 1958
DocketA-12616
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 1958 OK CR 98 (Ables v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ables v. State, 1958 OK CR 98, 331 P.2d 954, 1958 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 213 (Okla. Ct. App. 1958).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

The plaintiff in error, Billy Lynn Abies, hereinafter referred to as the defendant, was charged by information in the District Court of Oklahoma County was tried, convicted, and sentenced to serve 45 years in the Oklahoma State Penitentiary at McAl-ester, Oklahoma.

It is alleged that the defendant, by means of force and threats, did have sexual intercourse, with one Jo Faye Evans, a female over 18 years of age.

The rather voluminous record in this case may be summed up in the presentation of the testimony of three witnesses, the victim, her doctor, and the defendant.

The victim Jo Faye Evans, testified that she was 33 years old, married, and the mother of 4 children. On the 4th day of August, 1957, she was employed as cashier at Louie’s 29 Club, selling tickets and had worked there off and on for eleven years. On the night in question, Mrs. Evans started home from her place of employment about 4 a. m. Her testimony reveals the following:

“A. I left the Club about five minutes until four, and I knew that I did-n’t have enough gas to get home. There is only one station open on MacArthur between the Club and home and I knew I didn’t have enough gas to get there, so I went east on 29th Street about four blocks to an all-night filling station and bought gas, and turned directly around and went back down on 29th Street to MacArthur Boulevard, going west on 29th, and when I came to MacArthur there was a car stopped on MacArthur, it was at 29th Street but back off across 29th Street, the car was on the south side, stopped like it had stopped for the stop sign. I stopped and waited for the car to go by. It didn’t move, so I made a right turn in front of the car, and as I did the car pulled up behind me and started blinking its light, and right then I knew something was wrong, and I stepped on the gas and speeded up.
“Q. Just a minute, now, go ahead. A. And as I speeded up, the other car speeded up, too. There was no place to pull in, no lights or nothing open, so I was just trying to outrun it. When I came to the River bridge, I was making a little better than eighty miles an hour. The car was staying right behind me. I expected it to pull around and cut in front of me, so I slammed on the brakes and slowed down some, I don’t know how much, but the ca.r didn’t pull on around; it just came along side of me and stayed there for a minute and then whipped in to me, and I couldn’t *956 see how many was in the car or anything, it was just a car coming at me, I could see the headlights. As it whipped into the side of me it hit just about even with where I was sitting, and I threw my car out of control, around like this; as it went around it turned over so far and I was almost sure it was going to flip, but when I saw the car was going to hit me, I sat down on the horn trying to attract someone’s attention. There wasn’t any traffic on the road but I thought maybe there might be a house close enough that someone would hear it, and I was so sure that the car was going to flip over I thought it was the only chance I had to attract someone’s attention, and no one seemed to hear it, and by the time the car came around and stopped, the side of the car dropped down and skidded sideways off of the pavement, and by the time my car had stopped there was a man standing at the side of it pounding on the glass and he was screaming something, and I couldn’t say what, but I heard the glass pop, and I still thought it was a mistake, I thought he had mistaken me for someone else, and thought I would roll the glass down just enough to talk to him and that would be all if he heard my voice and realized I wasn’t who he was looking for, that would be all of it, and I rolled the glass down about like that; and as soon as I rolled the glass down he grabbed with both hands on it doing it this way until it shattered the glass, and he reached inside and pulled up the door handle and unlocked the door, and jerked the car door open, and I was still honking the horn. I says, ‘Who are you, and what do you want?’ He says, T am Jerry Elliott but you will never live to tell anyone.’ He had me by this shoulder and my leg right here and trying to pull me loose from the wheel and I was holding on to it, and finally he jerked me out; I came out of the car and hit the pavement, he came right down on top of me; I remember screaming a car would run over me, and when I did he jerked me up and held my head back like this, pushing and shoved me across the road to his car and backed me up against the car with this hand and opened the car door with this one and pushed me back against the car and into the seat, and that’s when he started; and then we saw the lights from a car coming from the north and he shoved me over in the seat and crawled in with me. After it was all over with, I told him I was so nasty and he pitched me his handkerchief. I reached for the door handle of the car and he jerked my arm back, and he says, T wouldn’t try that if I were you,’ and he worked and tried to start the car and it wouldn’t start, so I asked him if he would light me a cigarette, which he did, and handed it to me, and he seemed calmer then, I mean he would talk to me then. Before this all he would — all he had said, he was gritting his teeth and talking through his teeth, more like a growling or like a wild animal. Then he lit the cigarette and handed it to me, and then he lit himself one, and I says, ‘Why don’t you let me * * * ’, I thought that if I could push his car I had a chance to get his tag number and I would also get a chance to get away, but I didn’t think I had any chance to get away because he had told me several times I wouldn’t have during this time of the attack and pulling my head back like this with my hair and pushing my head back and my chin back. Two cars came by and he says, ‘ * ⅜ * if you move or scream I will cut your throat.’ I didn’t have any reason to' doubt him. But all this time my neck was hurting real bad, and after he gave me the cigarette, I asked him to let me push his car to get it started, and he just looked at me and laughed, and then I know that I had to convince him that I wouldn’t tell anyone about it, and so I thought if I could make him believe I didn’t want my husband to *957 know about it,' that I definitely couldn’t tell anyone else, and so I told him that I was married and I didn’t want my husband to know what had happened. He said, ‘What are you doing out ? ’ and then I told him where I worked and that I was on my way home, and that I lived in Bethany; and I also told him that my Boss lived in Bethany also and that he had stayed to lock up and he would be by just any minute now and he knows my car as well as he knows his own and if he sees my car setting over there he will stop to see what is wrong, and if he does you have had it, and I have, too, because he will tell my husband about it, and the smart thing for you to do is to let. me push you and get you started and both of us get out of here just as fast as we can, and so then he grabbed me by the arm and held to my arm until we got over to my car, and he pushed me in and he still had hold of my arm and held to the car door until I pulled around behind him, and as soon as I pulled up behind him the first thing I did was to take the tag number. There was no chance to write it down but I was saying it over and over in my mind, and as I pulled up bumper to bumper with him he commented on the glass in my door being broken. I don’t know if he said, T broke your glass’, or ‘Did I break your glass?’.

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Related

Martinez v. State
1977 OK CR 291 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma, 1977)
Reddell v. State
1975 OK CR 229 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma, 1975)
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390 P.2d 759 (Hawaii Supreme Court, 1964)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1958 OK CR 98, 331 P.2d 954, 1958 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 213, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ables-v-state-oklacrimapp-1958.