Ball v. State

42 So. 2d 626, 252 Ala. 686, 1949 Ala. LEXIS 539
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedJune 30, 1949
Docket7 Div. 972.
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 42 So. 2d 626 (Ball v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ball v. State, 42 So. 2d 626, 252 Ala. 686, 1949 Ala. LEXIS 539 (Ala. 1949).

Opinion

*688 LIVINGSTON, Justice.

Lonnie James Ball was convicted of murder in the first degree and his punishment fixed at death by electrocution. His appeal to' this Court is under the provisions of, and controlled by, the automatic appeal statutes of this State. — Section 382 (1), et seq., Title 15, Code of 1940, Pocket Part.

The principal argument for reversal is directed to the refusal of the lower court to grant defendant’s amended motion for a new trial.

We will first dispose of questions presented by the record other than those presented by the motion.

The record shows, without conflict in the evidence, that defendant killed Robert E. Sparks, the then chief of police of the municipality of Oxford, in Calhoun County, Alabama, by shooting him four times with a pistol. In the same affray another officer by the name of Billingsley was seriously wounded by defendant. As hereafter noted, the defendant interposed pleas of “not guilty” and “not guilty by reason of insanity”.

The State’s evidence tended to show that the fatal shooting took place in the vicinity of a store, with gasoline pumps in front, operated by one R. C. Cobb, and located in Oxford, Alabama. It is to the effect in the late afternoon of May 7, 1948, the defendant, in company with several other Negroes, arrived at Mr. Cobb’s store in an automobile driven by a Negro woman, which was stopped near an air hose there. The defendant got out of the -automobile for the purpose of putting air in the tires of the automobile. He began cursing and berating the other members of his party. Mr. Cobb, who was standing on the porch or stoop of his store remonstrated with defendant, and asked him to stop cursing or he would call the officers of the law. Defendant, in vile terms, informed Cobb of his utter disregard for the “law”. Cobb went to the telephone in his store and called the officers. A man and woman, members of defendant’s party, got out of the automobile and attempted to get defendant back in the car. Defendant struggled with them and disengaged himself from them. Another Negro man appeared upon the scene and after wrestling with defendant managed to hold him until Mr. Sparks, the deceased, and officer Billingsley, who had been called by Cobb, arrived. *689 These officers then took charge of the defendant, and placed him in the rear seat of the officers’ car. Mr. Sparks then returned to the group in front of the store, a distance of just a few steps, apparently to ascertain whether or not any other persons were wrongfully involved in the difficulty, while officer Billingsley remained standing alongside the automobile in which defendant was seated. Defendant leaped from the officers’ car and seized Billingsley. In the ensuing struggle defendant secured Billingsley’s pistol. Defendant and Billingsley fell to the ground and as they fell one shot was fired. Four more shots were fired in fairly rapid succession. Billingsley was shot one time and Sparks, the deceased, four times. Defendant was then disarmed by other bystanders, and held until other officers arrived who took’ him in custody and to jail. Sparks died shortly after the shooting. His wounds were described by Dr. Neigs as follows: “I found five holes apparently produced by bullets. One was on the region of the upper abdomen, just below the ribs on the left side; one just above the heart on the left side; one through the neck on the left side; two through the right side of the chest — one was the point of entrance and one the point of exit.”

Defendant’s sole defense, insofar as the record discloses, was that he was drunk and did not know what he was doing, and had no recollection of the events surrounding the tragedy. In support of such theory, defendant introduced evidence tending to show that upon the day in question, about noon or a little after, the defendant drank about a pint of whiskey, and after picking up some members of the party who were with him at the time Sparks was killed, drove to the home of his , brother, located some three or four miles below Oxford. That after arriving at his brother’s home defendant drank a large quantity of home-brew: some of the witnesses stating the quantity to have been a gallon or more. Defendant testified that he had no recollection of events from some time in the afternoon of the day on which Sparks was killed until he awoke to find himself in jail the next morning.

The State called rebutting witnesses who saw the killing, or were at the scene shortly thereafter and saw and talked to defendant, and whose testimony tended to refute the defendant’s claim of «drunkenness to the point of reducing the crime from murder to manslaughter in the. first degree.

Clearly the evidence presented a case for the jury, and no argument is advanced to the contrary.

No exceptions were reserved to the court’s oral charge to the jury, and we are therefore not required to review it. — Easley v. State, 246 Ala. 359, 20 So.2d 519; James v. State, 246 Ala. 617, 21 So. 2d 847; Reedy v. State, 246 Ala. 363, 20 So.2d 528. Nor is a review sought of the trial court’s refusal of any written charge requested by defendant.

Section 382(10), Title 15, Code (Pocket Part) provides:

“In all cases of automatic appeals the appellate court may consider, at its discretion, any testimony that was seriously prejudicial to the rights of the appellant, and may reverse thereon even though no lawful objection or exception was made thereto. The appellate court shall consider all of the testimony, and if upon such consideration is of opinion the verdict is so decidedly contrary to the great weight of the evidence as to be wrong and unjust and that upon that ground a new trial should be had, the court shall enter an order of reversal of the judgment and grant a new trial, though no motion to that effect was presented in the court below.”

Although no argument is made in brief as to the admission or rejection of any evidence, we have, under the duty imposed by the foregoing statute, carefully examined the record for errors seriously prejudicial to the rights of appellant and have found none. We are also fully persuaded that the verdict of the jury is not so decidedly contrary to the great weight of the evidence as to he wrong arid unjust.

As above stated, the principal argument for a reversal is directed to the overruling of defendant’s motion for a new trial. *690 The questions presented on this- aspect of the case are stated by counsel for the defendant as follows: ■

'“Questions presented: 1. Appellant was denied a fair opportunity to secure counsel of his own choice to represent him in the trial of this case.

“2. The appointment of counsel to represent appellant upon the trial of this case was ineffectual.

“3. Appellant was denied that due process of law guaranteed him by the Fourteenth Amendment to the Federal Constitution and by Article 1, section/ 6, of the Alabama Constitution of 1901.

“4. Appellant was denied the equal protection of the laws guaranteed by the Fourteenth Amendment to the Federal Constitution.

“Specification of errors: 1.

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Bluebook (online)
42 So. 2d 626, 252 Ala. 686, 1949 Ala. LEXIS 539, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ball-v-state-ala-1949.