Brown v. State

70 So. 2d 23, 219 Miss. 748, 51 Adv. S. 1, 1954 Miss. LEXIS 382
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 1, 1954
DocketNo. 38974
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 70 So. 2d 23 (Brown v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brown v. State, 70 So. 2d 23, 219 Miss. 748, 51 Adv. S. 1, 1954 Miss. LEXIS 382 (Mich. 1954).

Opinion

McGehee, C. J.

The appellant, Lessie B. Brown, was found guilty of robbery and sentenced to five years in the penitentiary. She was accused of robbing Adrian Taylor of the sum of $3.50. She appeals from the conviction.

On September 3, 1952, appellant, a Negro woman, approached the taxicab of Adrian Taylor, a white man, in the City of Oxford about 10 o ’clock in the morning. She entered the cab and Taylor transported her west of Oxford to College Hill, where he stopped at the grocery store of Mrs. Lucille Shaw. Appellant entered the grocery store and purchased a package of cigarettes. She then returned to the taxi and Taylor drove the taxi about two miles beyond College Hill and turned off to the right and traveled about a half mile to a “big wooden gap” and stopped. Later he drove back to the main highway with the appellant in the taxicab and took her to or near Tidwell’s Store, which was somewhere beyond College Hill. The above stated facts are in accordance with the testimony of Taylor, the prosecuting witness, and also the testimony of the appellant. As to what happened during the course of this journey, the testimony is in direct conflict.

Taylor testified that when appellant hired the cab, she directed him to go to College Hill; that on the way she asked him if he had change for a “ten or twenty”; that she had him stop at Mrs. Shaw’s store so that she could buy some cigarettes; that he went to the right off the highway to the wooden gap at appellant’s direction, as [752]*752she stated she was looking for a red-top house; that he stopped at the wooden gap and told her to get out; that she told him not to move, that she told him not to turn around, that she cursed him and threatened to kill him, that she demanded his pocketbook, which he handed to her over his left shoulder; that he saw a gun in her hand but could not determine whether it was a toy pistol or a real one'; that she handed the pocketbook back when she found there was no money in it; that she took his “money-changer” and removed or had him remove $3.50 in change therefrom, and took this money; that she tried to make him take her to Clarksdale; that she threatened him and his family if he should report the incident; and that when they got near Tidwell’s store, he told her that he was going no farther and she could do what she wanted to, and that she thereupon got out of the car. In his testimony, Taylor denied the version of occurrences as given by appellant, which will be hereafter summarized.

Appellant testified that the story given by Taylor was not true and that what occurred was as follows: That when she hired the taxi she instructed Taylor to take her •to Tidwell’s store; that instead he went to College Hill; that on the way there she told Taylor that she did not want to go to College Hill and he told her to “hush and be quiet”; that when they arrived at Mrs. Shaw’s store, Taylor gave her 25 cents and told her to go in and get him a package of cigarettes and that if she tried any tricks he would kill her; that she had been crying, because she was scared; that when she returned to the taxi from the store, Taylor “went on down this other road” and “he went on out in there and he come to an old wooden gate”; that he then made improper advances to her but she refused his proposals; that he got in the back seat with her but she jumped out; that he talked a while and said he was going to leave her out there; that when he got back in the car, she got back too because she didn’t [753]*753know where she was and that Taylor then took her to Tidwell’s store and let her out between that store and the Ole Miss driveway and told her that if she said anything about it he would kill her. It was shown by appellant’s testimony that she then ate her lunch; went to the place of a Mr. Anderson and started picking cotton, and that a short time later the sheriff came and arrested her.

It will be noted that according to the testimony of the prosecuting witness, the appellant was guilty of robbery but that according to the testimony of the appellant, she committed no offense but to the contrary that she was mistreated by Taylor.

The only other witnesses were Mrs. Shaw, the owner of the store at which the cigarettes were purchased, and a Mr. R. L. Young, who was present in the store when that purchase was made. Their testimony is of little value because it amounts in substance to the fact that the appellant did enter the store while a taxi was waiting outside and purchased a package of cigarettes. However, it is to be noted that Mrs. Shaw, testifying for the State, said that "there was something the matter with her eyes, she was a stranger and did not look right” and that Mr. Young stated "her eyes were right watery. I had never seen that before and her eyes looked like they were running water.” Both said that the taxi was waiting outside. This testimony tends to corroborate the statement of the appellant that she had been crying because Taylor did not take her where she wanted to go.

We think that there was a question for the jury in this case on directly conflicting testimony as to the guilt or innocence of the appellant, and, therefore, that the court below correctly refused a request for a peremptory instruction.

It is urged upon us that the testimony for the State is so unsatisfactory and the verdict is so obviously against the weight of the evidence that the motion for a new trial should have been sustained and that we should [754]*754reverse the case upon this point and permit another jury to consider the issue of guilt or innocence. Several factors are brought to our attention in this connection, including that of certain improper cross-examination of the appellant, to which, however, no objection was made at the time. The argument is persuasive and in fact quite compelling, and we find it necessary to reverse this case on that ground instead of on the ground hereinafter discussed, which will not in itself justify a new trial.

The appellant requested an instruction in this language : * ‘ The court instructs the jury for the defendant that if there is a probability of the innocence of the defendant, then a reasonable doubt exists as to her guilt; and the jury should find her not guilty.” This form of instruction has been approved by the court a number of times. In Nelms v. State, 58 Miss. 362, the Court ouoted an instruction in almost identical language which had been refused the defendant in that case and said: “This charge ought to have been given v * * *. There is nothing in the other charges which were given, to remove this error.” The Court thereupon reversed the case. It is true that the Court also based its reversal upon the giving of an objectionable instruction to the State, but the instruction under consideration was directly before the Court and was in part the nasis for the reversal.

In Jones v. State, 141 Miss. 894, 107 So. 8, the case was reversed' because of a certain matter entirely disconnected from the instructions in the case, but the Court added at the end of the opinion a quotation of a refused instruction in the same language as that under consideration and after stating that there were many instructions in the record by which the reasonable doubt theory was submitted to the jury, called attention to the Nelms case and said: “While we do not say that this is reversible error in the light of the many instructions secured by the defendant, yet, upon another trial, we think this instruction should be given by the Court ’ ‘

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
70 So. 2d 23, 219 Miss. 748, 51 Adv. S. 1, 1954 Miss. LEXIS 382, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brown-v-state-miss-1954.