Allred v. State

390 So. 2d 1109
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Alabama
DecidedJune 30, 1980
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 390 So. 2d 1109 (Allred 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
Allred v. State, 390 So. 2d 1109 (Ala. Ct. App. 1980).

Opinion

Appellant was put to trial upon a two-count indictment charging him with assault with intent to rob and assault with intent to murder. Throughout the trial proceedings he was represented by counsel of his choice and at arraignment pleaded not guilty. The jury returned a verdict finding him guilty under both counts of the indictment and the court sentenced him to ten years imprisonment in the penitentiary. After sentence was imposed he gave notice of appeal and trial counsel represents him on appeal.

There was no motion to exclude the State's evidence; there was no motion for a new trial; no exceptions were reserved to the court's oral charge, but there was a written request for the affirmative charge which, of course, was refused.

Mrs. Jill Ann Love, the victim, was working at Handy Foods Store located on 8th Street, S.W., in Decatur, Morgan County, Alabama, on May 20, 1978, when she was stabbed six times by a young white male. She was alone in the store when this man entered the store and began looking around. May 20th was the first time Mrs. Love worked the late night shift. The young man asked Mrs. Love for some thin spaghetti and he was directed to the last aisle in the store. He did not find the kind of spaghetti he wanted and he asked Mrs. Love the price of an item in the frozen foods section. In the meantime another young white male came in the store and talked to the first man a few seconds and left the store. Mrs. Love stated that the first one to enter the store remained twenty-five or thirty minutes just looking around and she kept watching him. He *Page 1111 was not disguised in any manner and she had a clear view of his face. This young man, later identified as appellant, asked Mrs. Love the price of the french fries. Mrs. Love did not know the price and walked to the frozen foods section where appellant was standing. She opened the top and the first package did not have a price on it. She picked up the second package and told him the amount was $1.15. As she stood up next to appellant he grabbed her and began to stab her. He stabbed her six times, threw her on the floor and went to the cash register and pushed the buttons making a ringing noise. She heard the ringing sound and it appeared to her that he was pushing the buttons trying to get the register open.

Mrs. Love further testified that the exit and entrance doors had bells attached to them and while she lay prostrate and bleeding on the floor she heard these bells ring but did not know if the second young man who talked to appellant a few seconds earlier had returned. After hearing these bells ring the second time Mrs. Love got up from the floor and ran from the store calling a Mrs. Woods next door. Mrs. Woods' grandson came to the aid of Mrs. Love and assisted her to Mrs. Woods' yard. He then called the police and the ambulance. She was taken to the hospital for treatment of the stab wounds and remained in the hospital about two weeks.

Mrs. Love said she saw her assailant's face several times during the period of time he was in the store at close range and at times when they were standing side by side. She made a positive in-court identification of appellant as the person who stabbed her and threw her to the floor.

She did not see her assailant from the date of the attack until 15th of October, 1978, when she saw him at a U-Totem Store on Sandlin Road. She was sitting in a car at the U-Totem Store waiting for her husband who was in the store when appellant got out of a car. She recognized him and got the number on the license tag, and she and her husband drove home and called the police and gave them the tag number.

On cross-examination she testified that she talked to an unidentified officer at the hospital following the attack on her but did not know if he wrote down her statement. Later she talked to Detectives Collier and Crowell. She told them her assailant was wearing a reddish t-shirt and blue jeans. The shirt was short-sleeved. He was not wearing glasses and did not have a beard or mustache. She admitted that at the preliminary hearing she was uncertain about the mustache. She further said he was five feet, six or seven inches tall. At the U-Totem Store in October they pulled in behind the car occupied by appellant, which was a Toyota or Volkswagen stationwagon occupied by three people, appellant, another boy and a girl. She stated appellant went into the store, came out and went to a telephone booth. Prior to the time she saw appellant at the U-Totem Store she had viewed a number of photographs but appellant was not in that photographic array. On October 17, 1978, she viewed a handful of photographs and picked out a photograph of appellant. On redirect examination she testified she did not go back to work after being released from the hospital because she was afraid.

Sergeant Kenneth Collier of the investigative division of the Decatur Police Department testified that he and Sergeant Crowell processed the Handy Food Store after the crime. They made photographs of the store and Sergeant Collier testified as to the accuracy of the scene depicted in these photographs and they were admitted into evidence over the objection of appellant.

Sergeant Robert Clark of the Decatur Police Department was called as a defense witness and testified that he received a telephone call from Mrs. Love on October 15, 1978, in which conversation she gave him the tag number of the car parked at the U-Totem Store. He traced the tag number and found that it was registered in the name of Hubert Allred, appellant's father. Later he called Mrs. Love to the police station and showed her a number of photographs including one of appellant. *Page 1112 Mrs. Love unhesitatingly and unequivocally identified the photograph of appellant.

On October 17, 1978, Sergeant Clark conducted a lineup consisting of five persons. Mrs. Love, without the slightest hesitation, identified appellant as her assailant. The officer then removed Mrs. Love from the viewing room while the positions of the five people were rearranged. Then Mrs. Love was returned to the viewing room and again identified the appellant.

On cross-examination he identified State's Exhibit 8 which was a photograph of the five persons in the lineup. The photograph was introduced into evidence.

Appellant testified that he was 19 years of age at the time of the trial and would be 20 on May 6, which made him 17 at the time the crime was committed. He had a twelfth grade education and took a GED test after serving a short time in the Marines. At the time the offense allegedly occurred he was employed by Mr. James Guyse putting in central air and heat. He emphatically denied the stabbing. He stated he had been in the store a number of times both before and after Mrs. Love was stabbed. The store was on the route from his home to the place where his mother worked and he often took her to her place of employment. He said he had never seen Mrs. Love before and knew nothing about the stabbing. He stated he did not carry a knife and never had. He had been in and around Decatur from the time of the offense until the trial, but he could not state where he was at the time and place of the stabbing.

From the record:

"Q. Were you in that store on May 21, 1978, looking for spaghetti and french fries?

"A. No, sir. I am not saying I wasn't in the store. I could have been over there, because I don't know where I was at, but I know I wasn't in there doing anything wrong."

He further testified that he was presently employed as a caretaker at Johnson's Chapel in the Danville Cemetery taking care of the cemetery and digging graves.

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Ex Parte Bland
390 So. 2d 1109 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1980)

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Bluebook (online)
390 So. 2d 1109, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/allred-v-state-alacrimapp-1980.