Adair v. State

641 So. 2d 309, 1993 WL 537457
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Alabama
DecidedDecember 30, 1993
DocketCR-92-643
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 641 So. 2d 309 (Adair v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Criminal Appeals of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Adair v. State, 641 So. 2d 309, 1993 WL 537457 (Ala. Ct. App. 1993).

Opinions

The appellants, Gordon Adair, Billy Gurley, and Darrell Gene Buckman, were each convicted of burglary in the third degree, a violation of § 13A-7-7, Code of Alabama 1975, and of theft of property in the first degree, a violation of § 13A-8-3, Code of Alabama 1975. The appellants were sentenced to 10 years' imprisonment on each count. Adair's and Gurley's sentences were ordered to run consecutively and Buckman's sentences were ordered to run concurrently.

The evidence presented at trial tended to show that on two occasions in February 1992, the appellants, along with several other men, entered Lloyd and Myra Childs's house in Madison County, Alabama, and took cash and property valued at approximately $60,000. At the time, the Childses were vacationing in Australia for two weeks. Before they left, they secured their valuables in a hidden vault in their basement. They locked the house when they left and did not give anyone permission to enter the house while they were away.

Adair and his wife agreed to feed the Childses' ducks while they were away. This would necessitate the Adairs' going onto the Childses' property but would not necessitate the Adairs' entering the Childses' house. *Page 310 The Adairs lived nearby and often visited in the Childses' home. Adair was familiar with the Childses' vault and had been shown Mr. Childs's gun collection, which he kept in the vault.

When the Childses returned from their vacation, they discovered that their house had been burglarized and that property had been taken from the vault as well as from other areas of the house. The three appellants, along with Fred Holder and Keith Cullins, were subsequently charged with the burglary. Two of Fred Holder's employees, Connie Sexton and Charles Rutherford, were questioned during the investigation of the crime but were never charged. There was testimony that during the burglary, Sexton and Rutherford waited near the house and helped transport some of the stolen property. They testified that they did not enter the house or keep any property taken from the house.

I
The appellants argue that there was insufficient evidence to support their convictions for burglary in the third degree and theft of property in the first degree. Specifically, they contend that the only evidence connecting them with these crimes is the uncorroborated trial testimony of Fred Holder, Connie Sexton, and Charles Rutherford, who they contend were accomplices.

Section 12-21-222, Code of Alabama 1975, provides in pertinent part: "[A] conviction of a felony cannot be had on the testimony of an accomplice unless corroborated by other evidence tending to connect the defendant with the commission of the offense." In this case, Fred Holder admitted that he was an accomplice, and the state was therefore required to present evidence corroborating his testimony.

Connie Sexton testified that at the time of the burglary, he was employed as a handyman by Fred Holder in Chattanooga, Tennessee. Sexton said that on February 12, 1992, Holder said to him, "Let's go." Sexton and his son, William, got into Holder's truck and rode with Holder to Madison County, Alabama. Sexton testified that he did not know where they were going when they left Chattanooga and that he did not know that Holder was planning to participate in a burglary. Sexton and Holder travelled to Adair's house in Madison County. There, Sexton said, Holder met with the appellants, and they discussed their plan. According to Sexton, the appellants and Keith Cullins left Adair's house and went to the Childses' house to burglarize it. Sexton then went with Holder to meet the appellants at Buckman's house to take the stolen guns back to Tennessee.

Sexton testified that on February 16, Sexton again went with Holder to Madison County. He said he did not know where they were going when they left Chattanooga. On this trip, more property and a pick-up truck were taken from the Childses' house. Sexton returned to Chattanooga with Holder in the stolen truck. Sexton said that he refused to drive the truck. Once they were in Chattanooga, Holder wanted to dispose of the truck. Sexton refused to burn the truck, but he did abandon it in the parking lot of an apartment complex.

Sexton testified that he did not enter the Childses' house and that he did not take any property from their house. He testified that he was involved because he was with and was following the directions of his employer, Holder. He contended that he did not intend to commit any crime.

Charles Rutherford also testified as a witness for the state. He said that he was a former employee of Holder's at the time of the burglary. He identified the appellants as participants in the crime. He testified that he transported some of the stolen property after it was taken from the Childses' house, but he said that he never entered the house. He explained that he participated in the crime to obtain evidence for the police. He testified that he had been in contact with a Tennessee Bureau of Investigation officer and with the Jackson County, Alabama, sheriff's office and that he had been instructed to work as an undercover informant. This story, however, was never confirmed.

The appellants moved for a judgment of acquittal, contending that Connie Sexton and Charles Rutherford were accomplices and *Page 311 that their testimony had not been corroborated by other evidence. The court gave the following reasons for denying the appellants' motions:

"THE COURT: Well, let me tell you all how I think about it. Up through the testimony of Fred Holder, I was firmly of the opinion that all charges would be dropped against Buckman and Gurley and would proceed to trial only against Adair because I saw some, some, but albeit sufficient, circumstantial corroborative evidence to present the charges against Adair to the jury.

"Then we get Charles Percy Rutherford. Now, my judicial sense tells me that his testimony about being an undercover agent and having no intent to do anything except help law enforcement is tantamount to bovine excrement, but he raises that explanation.

"Then we get to Connie Sexton. Now, Connie Sexton to me is a classic example of the profound wisdom of the ore tenus rule. I'm glad this jury has gotten to see him and hear him testify because they are going to have to decide whether he was an accomplice or not. I think Connie Sexton takes this case to the jury against all defendants, and also Charles Percy Rutherford is going to have to be pitched in there for the jury, too, because of his statements and explanations.

"But I base that on Jacks vs. the State, which is the clearest statement of it. There are other cases. Larry [appellant Buckman's counsel] has mentioned it, but, for the record, it's a 1978 decision of the Alabama Court of Criminal Appeals, [reported] at 364 So.2d 397, and on page 403, the Court says that the general rule is, 'If a witness admits his participation with the defendant in the crime,' as did Connie Sexton and Charles Percy Rutherford, 'but seeks by his testimony to explain it and to show his innocent intent, it has been held that a question is presented for the jury.'

"Now, really, that's why I sustained the objections that Mr. Morgan [defense counsel] made earlier. What this case really is going to come down to is for this jury. The last thing I'll charge them on, as I see it right now, is going to be this element of the case, but that's the first question as to Darrell Buckman and Billy Gurley.

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Adair v. State
641 So. 2d 309 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Alabama, 1993)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
641 So. 2d 309, 1993 WL 537457, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/adair-v-state-alacrimapp-1993.