Bullock v. State

770 So. 2d 1062, 2000 Ala. LEXIS 142, 2000 WL 378193
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedApril 14, 2000
Docket1972297
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 770 So. 2d 1062 (Bullock v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bullock v. State, 770 So. 2d 1062, 2000 Ala. LEXIS 142, 2000 WL 378193 (Ala. 2000).

Opinion

JOHNSTONE, Justice.

On November 1, 1996, a jury convicted Rodney Stacey Bullock of arson in the second degree, a violation of § 13A-7-42, Ala.Code 1975.1 The trial court sentenced him to five years’ imprisonment, but split the sentence and ordered Bullock to serve [1064]*1064one year in prison and five years on probation. The Court of Criminal Appeals, on August 14, 1998, affirmed Bullock’s conviction and sentence in an unpublished memorandum. Bullock v. State (No. CR-96-0641), 741 So.2d 480 (Ala.Crim.App.1998) (table). The Court of Criminal Appeals overruled Bullock’s application for rehearing and denied his Rule 39(k), Ala. R.App. P., motion. Bullock petitioned this Court for certiorari review, which we granted to determine whether the State presented sufficient evidence to corroborate accomplice Homer Leonard Raines’s testimony that Bullock solicited him to set fire to Bullock’s house.

The testimony of Homer Leonard Raines, a convicted felon and an old friend of Bullock, is summarized as follows. He participated in the arson, but he has not yet been formally charged for the offense. Bullock visited him in January 1982 and asked him to burn Bullock’s house. The only explanation Bullock gave for wanting his house burned was that he and his wife, Judy, were getting a divorce. On or about January 24,1982, Raines rode with Bullock to Bullock’s house. Raines looked around inside the house while Bullock sprayed the interior of the garage with gasoline. During his survey of the house, Raines noticed a fuse box in a small closet on the second floor of the house. Before they left the house, Raines and Bullock loaded a television, a CB linear amp and radio, a guitar, and a saddle into Bullock’s vehicle. Shortly after they left the house, Bullock and Raines stopped at a nearby shopping mall, where Raines purchased a can of Ronson cigarette lighter fluid and a pair of gloves. Raines testified that he returned, either later that night or the next day, to Bullock’s residence with Wally Booker and started a fire in the house.2 Raines entered the front door of the house with a key Bullock gave him. He went upstairs to the small closet and saturated the electrical fuse box and some clothes in a box in the closet with cigarette lighter fluid. He then lit a match, threw it in the closet, and left the house. As payment for starting the fire, Raines received the television, the CB linear amp and radio, and the guitar, which he and Bullock had previously removed from the house. Raines gave the CB linear amp and radio to Ricky Kent in exchange for a banjo, and he gave the guitar to Jerry Mixon.

Ricky Kent’s testimony showed that in 1982, he gave Raines a banjo in exchange for a CB linear amp and radio.

James Munger, a fire marshal who investigated the arson immediately after the fire was extinguished, contradicted Raines’s testimony. Munger’s testimony is summarized as follows. There was no forced entry into the house; in fact, two doors to the house were unlocked. He did not smell any gasoline in or around the house. The closet where the fire was started did not contain an electrical fuse box, as Raines had stated. The only electrical fixtures in the closet were a lightbulb and a light switch. Neither was harmed by the fire. The fire was not electrical or otherwise accidental. Rather, it was started with an accelerant which had been placed on the boxed clothes in the closet and then ignited with a match. The type of accelerant used could not be detected because the items in the closet were destroyed by the fire. From his experience, Munger believed that cigarette lighter fluid may have been used to start the fire because such an accelerant could not be detected after the fire. After Munger discovered that the fire was not accidental, he investigated Bullock’s financial situation. Bullock’s house was insured for $114,000. Bullock was past due on the mortgage note by $4400, and the house was subject to foreclosure.

Dale Kocher, a friend and neighbor of Bullock, verified that Bullock had a home[1065]*1065owner’s insurance policy worth $114,000. Kocher testified as follows. Kocher worked at the insurance company which insured Bullock’s house. In the fall of 1981, either Bullock or his wife Judy requested an increase in insurance coverage, but the request was denied because the increased coverage would have been more than the value of the house. Just before Thanksgiving of that year, Bullock and Judy were having marital problems. As a result, Judy and Jim Jenkins, a young man who lived with the Bullocks during that time, temporarily moved into Kocher’s house for about ten days. Judy, however, did not move any furniture into Kocher’s house. Thereafter, Judy and Jim moved into an apartment together. On the evening before the fire, Bullock called Kocher, told him that he was going to out of town to his mother’s house, and asked him to feed his two dogs and cat the next day. Early the next morning, Kocher, noticing a “mist” above Bullock’s house, went to the house to determine the source of the “mist.” Although Kocher had a key to Bullock’s house, he did not use it because the side door in the garage area was unlocked. When he walked into the house, Kocher heard smoke alarms and saw smoke. He hurried back to his house and called the fire department. Kocher and his wife then returned to Bullock’s house. Kocher did not smell gasoline in the garage area. Upon entering the house, Kocher noticed that very little furniture was in the house. Kocher verified that a pump house was located about fifty yards behind Bullock’s house. According to Kocher, Bullock did not file a claim for insurance on the house, but the mortgage company did.

Larry Criswell, a claims agent for the insurance company which insured Bullock’s house, interviewed Bullock after the fire and recorded the interview. Criswell’s testimony about the interview is summarized as follows. At the time of the fire, Bullock and his wife owed a $98,000 mortgage note on the house, and they were four months in arrears on their mortgage payments. The mortgage company claimed insurance to cover the loss caused by the fire. Bullock told Criswell he was at his mother’s house the afternoon and the evening before the fire. Early in the morning on the day of the fire, Bullock drove his mother to Texas to speak with her psychic advisor. Bullock learned about the fire when he returned to his house the day after the fire had occurred. Bullock noticed a television, a radio, and a CB radio and linear amp were missing from his house after the fire. Bullock told Criswell that he thought he locked the doors to his house when he left the house the day before the fire. Dale Kocher and Dale Cobb had keys to Bullock’s house.

Dale Cobb’s testimony was as follows. Cobb was an old college friend of Bullock and Judy. He frequently talked with Bullock around the time Bullock and Judy were separated and were awaiting divorce. Bullock told Cobb that Bullock had financial problems. Bullock said that everything around him was going up in smoke and that he wished the house would go up in smoke too so he could start all over. Within one to three weeks after Bullock told Cobb about his problems, Bullock’s house was burned.

Judy Bullock Ash was married to Bullock from 1967 to 1982. She testified as follows. In October 1981, Bullock and she allowed one of her former students, Jim Jenkins, a juvenile delinquent, to move in with them. Shortly thereafter, Bullock became jealous of the relationship between Judy and Jim.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
770 So. 2d 1062, 2000 Ala. LEXIS 142, 2000 WL 378193, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bullock-v-state-ala-2000.