Barnett v. State

286 So. 2d 876, 51 Ala. App. 470, 1973 Ala. Crim. App. LEXIS 1186
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Alabama
DecidedAugust 14, 1973
Docket8 Div. 237
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 286 So. 2d 876 (Barnett 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
Barnett v. State, 286 So. 2d 876, 51 Ala. App. 470, 1973 Ala. Crim. App. LEXIS 1186 (Ala. Ct. App. 1973).

Opinion

*472 HARRIS, Judge.

A wife and mother is dead at twenty-nine, having been shot three times with a twenty-two caliber pistol. The husband and father received a life sentence for murder at the age of thirty-seven. He lives with a bullet embedded in his brain.

Appellant, Clifton Wayne Barnett, and Betty Jane Shaw were intermarried in the late 1950s. To this union were born two girls, Vicki Jane and Mary Jo, who were twelve and ten years of age, respectively, at the time of their mother’s death on October 10, 1969. A long time ago someone said that well placed domestic affection grows brighter day by day as husband and wife climb the hill of life to sleep together at its foot. Whether this is true or not, it had no application in the case of Clifton and Betty Jane, assuming it was well placed in the beginning of their nuptial relationship. Their marriage turned out to be a most unfortunate one. The daily sky over their lives was overcast with the angry frown of the tempest culminating in quarrels and fights, recriminations heaped upon recriminations, separations and reconciliations, threats of death, attempts to kill, and then death. Such is the record now before this court — a stark human tragedy.

In February, 1969, Betty Jane got a divorce from Clifton on the ground of cruelty. She was awarded permanent custody of the children with reasonable visitation privileges given appellant. In the separation agreement signed by bath parties and ratified by the court as an integral part of the decree, the visitation rights were conditioned upon appellant being sober or not under the influence of intoxicating liquors. The property rights of the parties were settled in this proceeding. Betty Jane received $3,000.00 and a Ford automobile. Child support was fixed at $20.00 per week to be paid directly to the mother. Betty Jane deeded to appellant all her right, title and interest to the family home and all household furniture and furnishings located therein.

Immediately after the divorce decree was signed, appellant left for a visit to Ohio and was gone for one week. Upon his return Betty Jane and the girls moved back in the home of appellant and he and she lived together without benefit of clergy until one week before she died from three twenty-two caliber pistol bullets pumped into her head and neck.

It is, perhaps, not necessary to pass on the marital status of the parties at the time of Betty Jane’s death, but inasmuch as she was constantly referred to as appellant’s “ex-wife” throughout the record, and in order to remove the slightest stigma or reflection upon the moral character of the deceased, and for the benefit of the two young girls and their future standing in the community, we will settle that issue here and now. It is the common law of Alabama that when a man takes a woman into his home and they cohabit together as husband and wife with the present intention of being husband and wife, and where the man holds her out to the whole world as his wife, treats her and regards her as his wife, and where the community looks upon them as husband and wife, and where there was the present intention to marry followed by cohabitation or the open mutual assumption of marital duties and obligations, then they are husband and wife the same as if they had gone through a ceremonial marriage, assuming there was no impediment to contracting a valid marriage. Otherwise there would be only a meretricious relationship which could never ripen into a common law marriage. Her immediate family did not learn about the divorce decree until the last week of her life. On the record before us, we hold that Betty Jane was lawfully married to appellant on the date of her death.

*473 Appellant was indicted for the murder of Betty Jane. On the occasion of the shooting of Betty Jane, appellant, himself, suffered the entrance of a like caliber bullet between his eyes that penetrated a part of his brain and came to rest near the back of his skull. Betty Jane was found in bed fully clothed, without shoes, with a twenty-two caliber pistol cradled in one arm. It was the state’s theory, not without considerable substance, that appellant killed her in the back yard of his home, carried her in the house, placed her on the bed and then shot himself. According to appellant, Betty Jane shot him first and he has no recollection of what happened after he was shot, nor who killed her, nor how she got in bed.

Betty Jane owned and operated a beauty shop on a part-time basis, which was located in the rear of the family home. This is mentioned here as it plays a part in the events leading up to the shooting as will be hereinafter mentioned.

During the weekend preceding the shooting on Friday morning, October 10, 1969, Betty Jane and appellant engaged in a difficulty of great magnitude causing her and the two girls to take refuge behind a locked bedroom door in appellant’s home. According to the testimony of Vicki, the oldest daughter, her father, appellant, was in the livingroom and she heard him threaten to kill her mother; that he shot through the bedroom door where they were closeted more than once and that her mother returned the fire one time but she shot downward through the door leading into the livingroom. Appellant testified she shot through the door four times. Following this shooting, appellant started knocking on the bedroom door with a hammer. He knocked a big hole in the door and broke the lock. When the door flew open, Betty Jane and the two girls ran out of the house and went to the home of a neighbor nearby and hid in a bedroom closet. Appellant went to this house looking for them and notwithstanding the neighbor told him they were not in the house he searched every room trying to locate them. He even opened the closet door in which they were hiding, but due to the darkness he could not see them.

Betty Jane called the Sheriff’s Department and two deputies were dispatched to the scene so that she could return to the home and get some clothes for her and the girls and go to the home of her sister in Florence. These two officers took the girls in their car and drove in the driveway of appellant’s home and Betty Jane walked back. These officers observed her go in the house and a few minutes later she and appellant appeared on the porch. Appellant had her by the hair of her head and had her head under his left arm and was striking severe blows in her midsection or chest. She managed to get loose and went back in the house. In a few minutes she came out with a few items of clothing and got in the officers’ car who carried her and the girls to her sister, Mrs. Christine Price, where she stayed until the following Friday when she was shot.

On Monday morning, October 6, 1969, she swore out a warrant charging appellant with assault and battery. This warrant was executed by placing appellant in jail where he remained overnight. On the way to jail appellant threatened to kill Betty Jane. According to the testimony of Deputy Sheriff James Camp, appellant said, “couldn’t no damn woman have him arrested and put in jail and get by with it; said he was going to kill her.”

Monday night while appellant was in jail, Betty Jane and her sister, Christine, and two deputies, one of whom was Bill Price, husband of Christine, went to appellant’s home to get more clothing for herself and the girls. She also got a twenty-two caliber pistol, a twenty-two long rifle, and other items of personal property, together with the Ford automobile.

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Bluebook (online)
286 So. 2d 876, 51 Ala. App. 470, 1973 Ala. Crim. App. LEXIS 1186, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/barnett-v-state-alacrimapp-1973.