Brown v. State

1930 OK CR 46, 287 P. 1070, 46 Okla. Crim. 97, 1930 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 482
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma
DecidedJanuary 31, 1930
DocketNo. A-7297.
StatusPublished

This text of 1930 OK CR 46 (Brown 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
Brown v. State, 1930 OK CR 46, 287 P. 1070, 46 Okla. Crim. 97, 1930 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 482 (Okla. Ct. App. 1930).

Opinion

DAVENPORT, J.

The plaintiff in error, hereinafter referred to as the defendant, was convicted in the district court of Choctaw county, of the crime of robbery, and sentenced to imprisonment in the state penitentiary for a period of twenty years. He filed his motion for new trial, which was overruled, exceptions saved, and the case is appealed to this court.

The testimony, in substance, on behalf of the state, is as follows: Pearl Campbell, the party alleged to have been robbed, at one time had lived in the town of Ft. Tow-son, and had been away from the country for about a year. A few days prior to the robbery he returned to Ft. Tow-son,' and on his return brought with him a Ford automobile. Pearl Campbell formed the acquaintance of Bud Brown, Evelyn Britton, and Buster McIntosh. Bud Brown and the complaining witness had been on a deal for the purchase of the Ford car; the deal finally being closed the evening of the alleged robbery in the post office at Ft. Towson, in the presence of Buster McIntosh and others, the defendant paying the complaining witness the sum of $35 and agreeing to pay him $15 additional in a few days. *99 The money was paid to the complaining witness by the defendant shortly after dark. The complaining witness asked Bnd Brown about some girls. Bud replied that he did not know but one and that was his girl. The complaining witness agreed to give Bud $5 if he would make arrangements for him to have a date with his girl.

The testimony of the state further shows the defendant left the complaining witness and was gone a few minutes and returned with Evelyn Britton to where the complaining witness was, and the complaining witness and Evelyn Britton started in the direction of a spring which was some distance from where he met the girl, beyond a gin which is referred to in the evidence; that Evelyn Britton led the way and they walked slowly, consuming some ten or fifteen minutes going in the direction of the spring, where near the spring at a bridge the complaining witness was hit with some kind of a heavy instrument and knocked senseless, and his money to the amount of $37, which included the $35 Brown had paid him, taken from him.

The testimony of the complaining witness is that he did not see the party who struck him and did not remember anything until the following day. Some young men were down near the gin, which is between town and the place where the alleged robbery took place, and about the time Campbell was robbed, Evelyn Britton came by, and one of them inquired where she was going, and she replied, away from Bud Brown. Shortly thereafter Bud Brown came by near these witnesses and some one was with him whom the witnesses did not recognize. The witness Bill Wafer had a short conversation with Bud Brown, the defendant in this case, in which he asked if he had seen Evelyn, and he told him he had, and that she had gone straight up the road, and that Bud then said to the wit *100 ness Bill Wafer, “Don’t say anything about it,” and walked off.

- Bill Meggs testified he was acquainted with the parties, and on the night of the robbery he was on top of the hill in the direction of Mrs. Collins’ house, between the Collins house and the spring, when the robbery occurred; that he met Pearl Campbell, the complaining witness, going in the direction of town; Campbell was bleeding and looked like he had been beat up. The testimony further tends to show that, thirty minutes to an hour after the Britton girl and Bud Brown had been seen near the spring, the defendant was seen near the drug store in Ft. Towson, and invited Bill Wafer to get in the car, after which the defendant drove to Scott’s Rooming House and back toward the gin, where they met Cotton Stanfer and the complaining witness, and took them in the back seat and drove on the highway with the complaining witness; that the defendant drove the complaining witness to the office of Dr. R. H. Faught, at Ft. Towson, and the doctor examined the complaining witness; that there were contusions on his head and he was bleeding at the right ear and through both nostrils; from the appearance of the complaining witness he had been hit with a bumpy something. The defendant called the doctor and told him he wanted him to dress the complaining witness, and asked him what the bill was, and, when told it was $2.50, the defendant paid the bill.

The testimony further shows that later in the evening the defendant and some other parties attended a dance, and that night or the next morning they left the community and were located several miles away by the officers, arrested, and returned to Ft. Towson. The defendant denies he injured the complaining witness, and makes the defense of an alibi; that is, at the time the complaining *101 witness was injured and robbed, he was in another part of town, and could not have been where the robbery is alleged to have taken place.

The defendant in further support of his alibi called several witnesses to show that he was up town at a certain time, tending to show that he was too far away from the place the robbery is alleged to have occurred to have been at the scene of the robbery. The state showed by Bill Wafer that Evelyn Britton came by where he was, near the place where the robbery was alleged to have taken place, going toAvard town, and, when he spoke to her, she stated she was running away from Bud BroAvn; that shortly thereafter Bill Brown, accompanied by some one whom the witness did not recognize in the dark, came from the direction of where the robbery is alleged to have taken place, and asked Bill Wafer if he had seen Evelyn Britton, and witness told him he had. The witness did not identify the other person with Brown, but stated it looked like Buster McIntosh. The record in this case is voluminous, and we have set out, in substance, all the testimony Ave deem necessary to arrive at an opinion in this case.

The defendant has assigned several errors alleged to have been committed by the court in the trial of his case. We will first consider the third assignment of error, which is as follows:

“That the court committed reversible error in failing to sustain the defendant’s objections to the introduction of to sustain the defendant’s objections to the introduction of tions which were overruled by the court and the defendants excepted at the time and still except. Said error being in this, to wit: that at the time the witness, Bill Meggs, had been recalled and made a witness for the defendant, Avhile on the stand testified as to where he got the AAdiisky; that he was then interrogated by the court in the presence of the jury as to where he got the Avliisky; there *102 afterwards the court gave the witness for the defendant the following examination in the presence of the jury and the hearing of the jury, which was prejudicial to the defendant’s statutory and constitutional rights and affected the jury in its determination of this cause:
“ ‘Testimony of witness Meggs. Recalled and made a witness for the defendant.
“ ‘By the Court:
“ ‘Q. How old are you son? A. Seventeen.
“ ‘Q. When were you seventeen? A. July 16th.
“ ‘Q. Were you seventeen when you went after this whisky? A.

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1928 OK CR 138 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma, 1928)
Koontz v. State
1914 OK CR 31 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma, 1914)
Cosby v. State
1925 OK CR 257 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma, 1925)
Douglas v. State
1921 OK CR 135 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma, 1921)
Young v. State
1928 OK CR 345 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma, 1927)
Reed v. State
1911 OK CR 91 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma, 1911)

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Bluebook (online)
1930 OK CR 46, 287 P. 1070, 46 Okla. Crim. 97, 1930 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 482, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brown-v-state-oklacrimapp-1930.