Brady v. State

1950 OK CR 71, 219 P.2d 267, 91 Okla. Crim. 367, 1950 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 227
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma
DecidedMay 24, 1950
DocketA-11163
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 1950 OK CR 71 (Brady 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
Brady v. State, 1950 OK CR 71, 219 P.2d 267, 91 Okla. Crim. 367, 1950 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 227 (Okla. Ct. App. 1950).

Opinion

POWELL, J.

Carl Brady, plaintiff in error, defendant below, was charged by information filed in the district court of McIntosh county with the crime of manslaughter, first degree, was tried before a jury on April 26, 1948, found guilty and assessed punishment of four years in the penitentiary. Appeal has been perfected to this court.

For reversal, some seventeen specifications of error are set out in the petition in error, but are argued in brief under seven propositions, as follows:

“1. Refusal of the court of the request of the defendant below to limit the argument of the attorneys for the State to the same number as the attorneys for the defendant below to two and that the court committed error in permitting three arguments of the State over the objections of the defendant.
“2. Misconduct of the special prosecutors.
“3. Refusal of the court to give defendant’s requested instructions numbered 1 and 2.
“4. Error of the court in giving instructions numbered 6, 7, 8, 11 and 12.
“5. Error of the court in admitting incompetent, irrelevant, immaterial and prejudicial evidence over the objections of the plaintiff in error.
*369 “6. Error of the court in refusing to admit evidence offered by the defendant below to which refusal of the court the defendant below duly excepted.
“7. That the evidence for the State was so glaringly conflicting that same was not sufficient to sustain a conviction herein.”

The appellant was the night city policeman of Eu-faula. The tragedy herein involved was the outgrowth of his arrest, or attempted arrest, of Joe Boy Williams, now deceased, and witness for the state, Bob Burton. The record discloses that appellant, who will hereinafter be referred to as defendant, was first informed against in justice court in-the city of Eufaula, and upon preliminary hearing Avas discharged by reason of insufficiency of the evidence; that thereafter complaint was filed before a justice of the peace in the neighboring city of Checotah, preliminary hearing was waived, and the defendant was thereafter, and on July 21, 1947, tried in the district court of McIntosh county, but the jury failed to agree, and the court declared a mistrial, and on second trial defendant was convicted as first herein recited.

The county attorney of McIntosh county was assisted in the prosecution by three able special prosecutors, and the defendant was represented by able counsel. We have had the benefit of oral argument of several of the trial attorneys, and the Attorney General.

The pertinent portion of the information reads:

“* * * That Carl Brady on the day and year aforesaid, in the county and state aforesaid, did then and there knowingly, Avilfully, unlawfully, wrongfully and feloni-ously, make an assault in and upon one Joe Boy Williams by means of a certain weapon, to-wit: a 45 automatic pistol which he, the said Carl Brady, without a design on the part of him, the said Carl Brady, to ef- *370 feet death, but in a heat of passion and in a cruel and unusual manner then and there and thereby inflicting upon the said Joe Roy Williams, certain mortal wounds, of which said mortal wounds the said Joe Roy Williams did, on the 17th day of November, 1946, die, in the Oklahoma Baptist Hospital at Muskogee, Oklahoma. * * *”

The theory of the state, from the evidence introduced by the state, seems to have been that the deceased did not commit a misdemeanor in the presence of the officer-defendant, that the deceased was not intoxicated, and therefore the defendant had no right without a warrant to attempt the arrest of Joe Roy Williams, and that deceased had a right, under such circumstances, to protest and resist being arrested, and at all events, even if legally arrested, that the defendant had no just grounds to fire on the deceased.

The theory of the defendant was that there was a lawful arrest and that the deceased resisted arrest, obtained possession of the defendant’s pistol, refused to give it up, and that defendant shot only as a last resort to protect his own life.

We shall treat defendant’s seven propositions in order as seems logical. Counsel contends, and they set out evidence of various of the state’s witnesses to demonstrate and support their proposition, “that the evidence for the state was so glaringly conflicting that the same was not sufficient to sustain a conviction herein.” We have examined this evidence most carefully. This case is close and presents difficulties, because we are confronted with the proposition that the record does as a fact disclose a sharp conflict in the evidence of the state’s own witnesses involving the very material questions, (1) As to whether or not a misdemeanor has been committed by Joe Roy Williams, the deceased, in the presence of the defendant-officer at the time of the arrest or attempt *371 ed arrest; and (2) whether or not in the resistance that followed the arrest or attempted arrest, the deceased was attempting to nse or cause the defendant to believe that he was attempting to use, and thereby endangering defendant’s life, the pistol deceased had gained possession of after he knocked or threw defendant to the pavement.

The evidence, on the other hand, of the defendant’s witnesses concerning these material factual issues was consistent and was corroborated by a number of the state’s witnesses.

We shall consider the state’s evidence.

The state used 14 witnesses on direct examination, and two on rebuttal, and the defense used 14 witnesses. Concerning the material and important question as to whether or not the deceased committed a misdemeanor (that is, in this case, was he creating a disturbance or was he intoxicated in the presence of the defendant-officer, so as to make the arrest without warrant a valid arrest), Bob Burton, who was the companion of the deceased at the time of the tragedy, and who was arrested along with the deceased and who subsequently paid a fine for being drunk, testified:

“I was in the 69 Tavern with Joe Boy Williams and we went over there, and there is a cafe there — -we just went in there and I was up in front talking to some guy. Joe Boy was kinda in the back end there, and he ordered some coffee, and he and the girl had a little argument, I don’t know what it was about, what the argument was about, I didn’t go back there, and she began to raise the devil with us, with him, and so we started out the door and got just outside the door and met Carl Brady — * * * So we were just outside the door and met him, and he said ‘What are you guys doing?’ We told him nothing, and he said well he was going to take us to jail, said we had raised enough hell around there, *372 and we started on out with him and got not quite half way out in the street and began to talk to him to get him not to throw us in.”

On cross-examination, witness Burton testified in part:

“Q. Had you been drinking that day, Bob? A. Yes, sir. Q. Both of you? A.

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Related

Sheppard v. State
1957 OK CR 8 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma, 1957)
Southard v. State
1956 OK CR 59 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma, 1956)
Mathis v. City of Tulsa
1953 OK CR 111 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma, 1953)
Young v. State
1952 OK CR 25 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma, 1952)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1950 OK CR 71, 219 P.2d 267, 91 Okla. Crim. 367, 1950 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 227, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brady-v-state-oklacrimapp-1950.