Briggs v. State

375 So. 2d 530
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Alabama
DecidedAugust 21, 1979
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 375 So. 2d 530 (Briggs 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
Briggs v. State, 375 So. 2d 530 (Ala. Ct. App. 1979).

Opinion

Arthur Lee Briggs was indicted for the first degree murder of Loretta Jackson by shooting her with a pistol. The jury found the appellant guilty of manslaughter in the first degree and fixed punishment at three years imprisonment. The trial court, following a probation hearing, denied probation and set sentence at three years imprisonment in the penitentiary.

Charles Jackson, Jr., stated that he was the brother of the deceased, Loretta Jackson, and identified a photograph of the deceased, indicating she was killed as the result of gunshot wounds on Saturday, January 21, 1978.

On cross-examination Jackson testified that he had gone to 3115-J Caffey Drive in Montgomery and was at his mother's apartment on Saturday morning, January 21, 1978. He stated that his sister, Queenie Jackson, was there, also his mother. He stated they looked out the window and saw his sister, Loretta, as she was struck by a bullet, and saw that the appellant, Arthur Lee Briggs, was firing a pistol from beside their apartment in the direction of Loretta Jackson and one Joseph Smith. Jackson stated that Smith was behind a van truck, that Briggs was firing from beside the apartment toward the truck, and that the bullet struck his sister, Loretta. He stated that he saw Briggs then run and back his car up, and that they put his sister in the car to take her to the hospital. Jackson also stated that, the night before, they had all been at Briggs' apartment and Briggs had stabbed Joe Smith in the head with a knife, and that Smith had told him "he was going to get even." Jackson further stated that, together with Briggs and Willie Springs, they placed his sister, Loretta, in the automobile to take her to the hospital. Jackson stated that the appellant, Briggs, lived in the apartment building adjacent to the one in which his, Jackson's, mother lived.

Dr. Richard Roper stated that he made photographs of the deceased, Loretta Jackson, State's Exhibits 1-4. Dr. Roper stated he examined the body of the deceased and found two gunshot wounds, one in the upper left arm, and the other entered the left chest and lodged "on the right side of the heart near the right lung." He stated that a .25 caliber bullet was removed. This was identified as State's Exhibit 5. He stated that the cause of death was due to massive interior bleeding as the result of a gunshot wound, which penetrated the heart and lung (R. 19).

Charles Jackson, Jr., was recalled to the stand and identified a diagram of the location of the apartment buildings and stated that his sister, Loretta, had gone out to the street and asked Joe Smith to leave when she was struck by bullets fired by the appellant, Arthur Briggs, who was standing beside the apartment building. He stated that his sister fell to the ground, and that Joe Smith was behind the van truck. He stated he later saw Joe Smith fire at Briggs.

Thomas Hopen, Criminalist for the Department of Toxicology at Montgomery, stated he received a copper jacketed .25 caliber bullet, State's Exhibit 5, and compared test rounds fired from State's Exhibit 6, a .25 caliber bullet, and determined that the same had been fired from this .25 caliber pistol and could not have been fired through a .22 caliber revolver, though he subsequently examined a .22 caliber pistol, which reportedly had been used in the incident.

Thomas G. Totty identified State's Exhibit 6 as a .25 caliber pistol, which had been turned over to him by Detective Danny Carmichael. *Page 532

Terry Briggs testified he was the younger brother of the appellant, Arthur Lee Briggs, and that the appellant had come by his house on Saturday morning, January 21, 1978, and that their brother, Tracy, was there. He stated that his older brother, Arthur Lee Briggs, told him to take the pistol and put it up. He stated he put the pistol upstairs under the dresser, that later, when the police came by, he went upstairs, got it and gave it to a Montgomery police officer. Young Briggs testified he was twelve years of age.

Joseph Smith testified that his wife, Linda Faye Smith, was a sister of the deceased, Loretta Jackson. He testified that, on Saturday, January 21, 1978, he and the appellant, Arthur Lee Briggs, fired pistols at each other at a location on Caffey Drive in Montgomery, Alabama. He stated that the night before Briggs had stabbed him in the head, that he had gone to the hospital and had this fixed, and then went back over the next morning to ask Briggs why he had stabbed him. He stated that, as he got out of his car, his wife's sister, Loretta Jackson, came running out on the street toward him and began pushing him away from the apartment. He stated that Loretta had her baby in her arms, that Briggs started shooting, that he ducked behind the van truck, and that Briggs fired several times before he fired back at him. He stated that Briggs had a small .25 caliber pistol, and that he, Smith, had a .22 caliber pistol with which he returned the fire.

On cross-examination, Smith admitted getting into an argument the night before with his own wife at Briggs' apartment, that Briggs picked up a knife and stabbed him in the head, and that he had to go to the hospital.

Smith further stated that they had been drinking whiskey and beer. He stated that his brother-in-law, Bernard Jackson, had been there on Friday night, along with Loretta Jackson and Arthur Lee Briggs, and his own wife, Linda. He stated that he had fired at Briggs the next day only after Briggs began shooting, and the bullets struck Loretta. He stated that he gave the Montgomery police a statement when they came to see him on Saturday, January 21, 1978, concerning the shooting.

On cross-examination, he admitted firing three or four shots at Arthur Lee Briggs.

Queenie Jackson testified that she was the younger sister of the deceased, Loretta Jackson, and was at her mother's home at 3115 Caffey Drive on Saturday morning, January 21, 1978. She stated that she heard some shots being fired from beside her apartment and looked out the window. She stated she saw Arthur Lee Briggs standing beside her house, firing at Joseph Smith, who was ducking behind a van truck on the street. She stated she saw her sister go outside, and by the time that she, Queenie, could get outside her sister was lying on the ground. She said, "Men, stop shooting," and her brother, Charles Jackson, and Willie Springs helped put Loretta in Briggs' automobile to take her to the hospital.

She stated that she had been at Briggs' apartment the night before, and that Arthur had come into the bedroom where Joe Smith and his wife, Linda, were arguing, and struck Smith, then stabbed him in the head with a knife. She said that when Smith left, Briggs told him "if he ever came back over, he was going to kill him."

Bernard Jackson testified that, on Saturday, January 21, 1978, he was at his mother's apartment on Caffey Drive. He stated that the deceased, Loretta Jackson, was his sister. He said that, together with one Joe Spring, he helped Arthur put Loretta in Arthur's car after she was shot to take her to the hospital. He said that he was inside his mother's apartment and did not see the shooting. When he ran outside he saw Loretta staggering. The baby was lying on the ground, he picked up the baby and took it to his mother's apartment. He then helped put Loretta in the automobile and rode with Arthur and Willie Joe Springs. He stated that Arthur first stopped at his mother's house in Gibbs Village and went inside, taking the pistol with him. He stated that Briggs first asked him to take the pistol inside, that he refused, and that Briggs went inside and came back in a few minutes. *Page 533 He said that they then drove to Jackson Hospital emergency room where they took Loretta inside.

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Bluebook (online)
375 So. 2d 530, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/briggs-v-state-alacrimapp-1979.