Baker v. State

1967 OK CR 178, 432 P.2d 935, 1967 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 447
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma
DecidedOctober 18, 1967
DocketA-14377
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 1967 OK CR 178 (Baker 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
Baker v. State, 1967 OK CR 178, 432 P.2d 935, 1967 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 447 (Okla. Ct. App. 1967).

Opinion

NIX, Presiding Judge.

Plaintiff in error, Leonard Joe Baker, hereinafter referred to as the defendant, was charged in the District Court of Tulsa County with the crime of Unauthorized Use of a Motor Vehicle, After Former Conviction of a Felony. He was tried by a jury, found guilty, and sentenced to seven years in the penitentiary.

Defendant did not have funds to hire his own attorney, and the District Court appointed Robert B. Ardis, the public defender for Tulsa County (in 1963), assisted by Thomas Newhouse, to represent the defendant at the trial. After judgment and sentence was rendered, the public defender filed a motion for new trial, and gave notice of intent to appeal. However, defendant’s appeal was never perfected to this Court, and on March 2, 1967, the defendant filed an application, pro se, for Post-Conviction Appeal as authorized in Title 22, O.S.A. § 1073. On April 25, 1967, a hearing was held in this Court, and after a presentation of the facts, this Court ordered the District Court of Tulsa County to prepare a casemade at public expense, to appoint an attorney to represent defendant on appeal, and granted defendant’s Post-Conviction Appeal.

Subsequently, the casemade was prepared, and Jay Dalton, the public defender for Tulsa County at the present time was appointed to represent the defendant in perfecting his appeal. This Court heard oral arguments on the appeal September 27, 1967; and because of the lapse of time since the conviction, have advanced this cause for immediate opinion.

The facts of the case, as recited briefly in the Brief of Plaintiff in Error, are as follows :

The state’s first witness was Officer E. J. Neely of Ponca City, Oklahoma. Mr. Neely testified that on the morning of May 1, 1963, he had an occasion to be at 518i/£ West Chestnut in Ponca City, Oklahoma, and that he had a conversation with a Miss Kent, at that address, regarding a 1959 Plymouth automobile, which had allegedly been stolen and parked in the alley behind Miss Kent’s garage apartment. The officer testified that Miss Kent told him that a Leonard or Leonard Joe was driving the vehicle. The state’s second witness was Loretta Sue Kent. Her testimony was that Leonard Joe Baker had been driving the 1959 Plymouth on the day of May 1, 1963. There was the usual testimony from the owner of the autor mobile; that- the defendant • did not have permission to operate-the automobile and further that on April 30, 1963, the automobile had been stolen. Mr. Billy J. Jones, an officer for the Tulsa Police Department, testified on behalf of the State that on the afternoon of May 1, 1963, he had an occasion to locate the vehicle parked approximately one block from the courthouse. He and another officer arrested the defendant that afternoon when the defendant got in the automobile.

The defendant’s defense relied mainly on the testimony of a Mr. Ferrell Gene Knight. Mr. Knight testified that he was with the defendant on the night of April 30, 1963, at a club in Tulsa County known as the Admiral Club on East Admiral. .His testimony was to the effect that the defendant stated during the course of the evening that he would like to go to Ponca City and visit some friends. Inasmuch as the defendant did not have an automobile at the time, a friend of Mr. Knight’s, by the name of Buddy Epperly, agreed to transport them to Ponca City. That Mr. Epperly was driving the Plymouth in question. That when the defendant was arrested- at the courthouse on the afternoon of May 1,1963, Mr. Epperly had driven the defendant and Mr. Knight to the- courthouse, and that defendant did not at any time know or have reason to be *938 lieve that the automobile had been stolen. From these facts, defendant raises four assignments of error on appeal.

The first being that the trial court erred in overruling the objection of the defendant to the introduction of evidence to which ruling the defendant duly excepted. It is the defendant’s contention that the former convictions which were introduced in the second stage of the proceeding were inadmissible and that the trial court erred in allowing these exhibits into evidence as they had not been properly identified before their introduction.

From the record, it appears that the county attorney introduced three infor-mations and three judgments and sentences from Texas County and one judgment and sentence from Seminole County to prove the former convictions. There was never any evidence or testimony as to the identity of the defendant being the same person as shown on these documents, and defense counsel objected strenuously due to the name on one of the cases being shown as Joe Leonard Baker; while all the rest were shown as Leonard Joe Baker.

This Court has held consistently and repeatedly, that:

“The identity of the accused in the case must also be established on trial as one and the same person as that convicted of the prior offense. Woods v. State, Okl. Cr., 327 P.2d 720; Pitzer v. State, 69 Okl. Cr. 363, 103 P.2d 109; Clore v. State, Okl.Cr., 282 P.2d 780.”

See, also, Gilmore v. State, Okl.Cr., 36S P. 2d 573:

“A certified copy of the judgment and sentence without proof of identity is not sufficient to establish the. conviction of the defendant.”

And, this Court held in the 1964 case of Bean v. State, Okl.Cr., 392 P.2d 753:

"The Habitual Criminal Act, Title 21 O. S.A. § 51, was designed solely for the purpose of enhancing the punishment of those convicted of a felony after having been previously convicted of a penitentiary offense. Providing for increased punishment in such cases was its only purpose. To permit any testimony or evidence as tp the details of the former convictions * * * tends to place too much inference thereon and tends to further prejudice the defendant.
The information should not be a part of this record as it tends to describe the crime in detail. It was said in the case of Ervin v. State, Okl.Cr., 351 P.2d 401:
‘Introduction of the information for examination by the jury would serve no purpose but to advise the jury of the details of the crime constituting the former conviction. What would be accomplished to hold inadmissible evidence as to the details, then present to the jury for examination the information which recites all the details of the former conviction. It would be allowing indirectly that which would be directly prohibited.. The information does not prove the conviction but only that a charge was filed. * * * The information is in no manner proof of a former conviction.’
We are not ruling out the method of bringing the prison records clerk, with the judgment and sentence; nor the method herein used of the fingerprint cards as identification.”

This Court is of the opinion that there was not proper identification of the defendant with reference to the former convictions introduced; and that, further, the information should not have been presented to the jury for proof of former convictions.

• Defendant’s second contention of error is that the verdict was a result of coercion by the Judge by his remarks to the jury, to which the defendant duly excepted.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1967 OK CR 178, 432 P.2d 935, 1967 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 447, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/baker-v-state-oklacrimapp-1967.