Callaway v. State

109 So. 2d 364
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedFebruary 25, 1959
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 109 So. 2d 364 (Callaway v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Callaway v. State, 109 So. 2d 364 (Fla. 1959).

Opinion

DREW, Justice.

The appellant, James Callaway, has been tried, convicted and sentenced to death in the Circuit Court for Taylor County consequent upon a jury verdict finding him guilty of murder in the first degree without recommendation of mercy.

The homicide out of which the charge arose occurred on the evening of November 18, 1956, at a filling station operated by the deceased, Auley Cockcroft, in Salem, Florida. Decedent was shot by an assailant while alone in the station and died as a result several days later at a hospital in Georgia, medical testimony being that the path of the bullet was from the upper back through the abdomen. A waitress from an adjoining restaurant witnessed the departure of a two-toned Plymouth automobile immediately after the shooting, but the record does not reflect what, if any, description of the driver was given to the investigating officers at the time.

Early on the following morning an automobile of the make and color specified was found abandoned some ten miles distant. It contained numerous items of clothing and personal possessions bearing the name ■of James Walton Callaway, the appellant, and at least one fingerprint identifiable as his. Callaway’s prior criminal record was traced and, together with a “rogue’s gallery” photograph, published locally. On December 12, 1956, an indictment was returned charging appellant with murder in the first degree.

On February 26, 1957, more than three months after the crime was committed, Callaway was arrested in Cleveland, Ohio, and, waiving extradition, was brought to Taylor County for arraignment on March 4th. The next day defense counsel was appointed and trial set for a date six days later.

The court denied defense counsel’s motion for a 30-day continuance based on alleged need for more extensive investigation in the preparation of the accused’s defense of alibi because the location of out-of-state witnesses was complicated by distance and lapse of time, and based on necessity for interview of sixteen witnesses already subpoenaed by the prosecution. Motion for change of venue filed simultaneously was denied, and trial was set anew for March 20, nine days subsequent to the date originally scheduled, and a total of 14 days after appointment of counsel in the case.

The evidence, viewed in a light most favorable to the state, includes: testimony of a local mechanic who worked for a few minutes on appellant’s car on November 17, the day before the murder, and who “identified” the above mentioned photograph of appellant as the driver whom he saw in the car; testimony of decedent’s wife, who worked as a cook in the restaurant adjoining her husband’s service station, and who visited the station a few minutes before the shooting, saw the above described automobile being serviced by her husband, observed the driver through the window on the opposite side of the vehicle, and subsequently identified appellant as the driver from examination of his photograph and confrontation in his cell.

After appellant was taken into custody, and some three and one-half months after the events transpired, one William Hamel-mann came forward and stated for the first time upon seeing the prisoner in the Taylor County Jail that he had witnessed the shooting and could identify appellant [366]*366as the guilty party. Hamelmann said he observed appellant at close range in the station while making a purchase just prior to the homicide, and that a few minutes later when he was walking back around the outside of the station from the restroom in the rear, he looked through the windows, observed a struggle, saw appellant knock Cockcroft down and almost simultaneously “heard a shot' — -saw the flame from the gun.” The witness said he then saw appellant leave in his car, a “reddish” and cream two-toned Plymouth with a Texas license.

He reported on cross-examination that his own automobile was all white or cream colored but his wife’s car was a maroon and white two-tone. His testimony was that he left the scene in his own automobile immediately in the wake of the appellant’s car because he was scared and excited. Mr. Hamelmann had recently arrived in the area and was preparing to open a truck stop. He drove immediately to this place of business down the highway upon which appellant made his escape, but did not recall seeing the ambulance or accompanying officers, who testified to having met the speeding suspect car which Hamelmann followed. While identifying appellant as the assailant, Mr. Hamelmann was unable to recall even generally his manner of dress, whether he wore a hat, or any other distinguishing characteristic. He said he read newspaper accounts of the events referred to, but did not report his knowledge to anyone except his wife, who did not testify. The only witnesses who testified to having observed the departure of the suspect car stated that they saw no other vehicle leaving at that time.

Appellant’s story from the outset was that he had never been in the locale where the crime was committed, and that upon the date in question he was in transit, hitchhiking en route generally to Mobile from Atlanta, where he had, on the previous night, abandoned his car because he could not buy gasoline and knew that the vehicle was being traced for repossession by his finance company for default in payments. He could not, when taken into custody three months later, recollect his precise movements on the critical date, and the only alibi witness produced at trial was the operator of a motel near Lexington, Kentucky, where appellant stayed on November IS, 1956.

Toward the close of the trial defense counsel requested a day’s postponement to permit the production of a witness from Knoxville, Tennessee, whose testimony was alleged to be vital to defendant’s case. Counsel presented in detail the confusion in communication which had delayed his arrival. The motion was denied by the court in the following language:

“He is an out of state witness; a subpoena wouldn’t mean anythin to him unless he wanted it to. But while I would very much like for my young friends to have this witness here, I didn’t feel that I could in good conscience grant the continuance requested. We have got twelve jurors in custody here, and we must of necessity be in Madison on Monday to open the Spring Term of Court there, and while under all of the circumstances I would be glad to stretch a point on the motion if the circumstances were not like they are, I do not think I will be justified in doing so either as a matter of fact or law. The motion will be overruled.”

This reasoning presents a vivid contrast with the solemn treatment traditionally accorded such efforts by counsel on behalf of an accused:

“The allowance to an accused person, whether guilty or innocent, and regardless of the heinousness of his crime, of a reasonable time to prepare for his trial on a felony charge, is a part of our constitutionally required ‘due process of law.’ * * *
“The protection of the Constitution stands at the threshold of every criminal trial, and, when a defendant is erroneously denied the benefit of his [367]*367constitutional rights, it is ground for setting aside a judgment of conviction against him, no matter how guilty the transcript brought here on appeal may show that the defendant was otherwise proven to be' on the record.

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Related

State v. Gomez
363 So. 2d 624 (District Court of Appeal of Florida, 1978)
Paul v. State
110 So. 2d 388 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1959)

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Bluebook (online)
109 So. 2d 364, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/callaway-v-state-fla-1959.