Carol v. State

540 So. 2d 1330, 1989 WL 26098
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 15, 1989
Docket58212
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 540 So. 2d 1330 (Carol 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
Carol v. State, 540 So. 2d 1330, 1989 WL 26098 (Mich. 1989).

Opinion

540 So.2d 1330 (1989)

Willie CAROL, Michael Smith and Lester Williams
v.
STATE of Mississippi.

No. 58212.

Supreme Court of Mississippi.

March 15, 1989.

Milford A. Weaver, Lucedale, A. Wellington Gibbs, Gulfport, for appellants.

Mike Moore, Atty. Gen. by DeWitt Allred, Sp. Asst. Atty. Gen., Jackson, for appellee.

Before HAWKINS, P.J., and ROBERTSON and SULLIVAN, JJ.

HAWKINS, Presiding Justice, for the Court:

Willie Carol, Michael Smith and Lester Williams have appealed their conviction in the circuit court of George County of burglary of a dwelling and sentence to ten years imprisonment. Because there was a conflict in the defense of Carol and Smith and the circuit court overruled defense motion to appoint separate counsel, we reverse and remand their convictions. Because there was insufficient evidence to support a conviction of Williams, we reverse and render his judgment of conviction.

FACTS

The State Department of Corrections has a George County Work Center, which in 1985 had 75 prisoners. Three of the inmates were Willie Carol, Michael Smith and Lester Williams. On Monday, November 25, 1985, these three were assigned on a work detail to J.P. Holland, a city employee of Lucedale, to pick up trash alongside a highway outside the city limits of Lucedale, and work back towards town. Holland did not stay with the men, however, as they worked. Holland put the men out at 9:00 that morning near the city dump area.

When Holland got back from lunch that day these three men were missing. When he called the Work Center to report them missing, he saw them walking out of the woods near the county vehicle barn.

Dayton Whites, a physician, and his wife Mrs. Suzanne Whites, had a residence about a mile out of town off the highway along which these three convicts were picking up trash. Mrs. Whites and the rest of the family were gone most of the day. That evening Mrs. Whites' daughter told her somebody had gotten into their jewelry. They then discovered that jewelry, cash, a camera, and numerous items of personal *1331 property worth several thousands of dollars were missing. The theft was then reported. Eventually, almost all the stolen property was recovered.

Eugene Howell, sheriff of George County, learned during the week that these three convicts had been on a work detail on the highway near the Whites' residence. On Friday, November 29, Sheriff Howell, and deputies C.H. Davis and C.A. Burnett went to the Center, and questioned all three. Smith and Williams denied any knowledge of the crime. Carol, after some questioning, said he did know something, saying something to the effect "I knew I couldn't lie to ya'll." At that point, according to Howell and Davis, Carol was read the Miranda warnings.

The officers continued to question Carol, who agreed to take the officers to locate some of the stolen property. Carol took the officers into the woods where some of the property was recovered.

The officers then returned to the Center and took all three, Williams, Smith and Carol into the sheriff's office. They all signed waiver of rights forms, acknowledging Miranda warnings. After these were signed, only Carol agreed to make a statement. Carol made the following written statement:

I left the Road to go use the woods and after I came back the two boy were gone. And I started calling there [sic] names and then one of them threw a stick in the road. And then they came down the hill with a bag and I ask them were did they get that stuff from and he said just don't tell no one and we will give you some of the money.
s/Willie Carol

Witness:

Eugene Howell, C.A. Burnett, C.H. Davis

Charles David Turner, the director of the Center, returned to the Center around 6:00 p.m. that Friday, and learned the sheriff had taken the three into custody. Turner called a meeting of the inmates and told them that in fifteen minutes he was going to make a complete search of the Center, but in the meantime if the stolen property was produced, "that would more or less clear them up." A few minutes later several inmates brought a plastic bag containing various items of jewelry into his office.

At some subsequent time Turner asked the sheriff if he could talk to Michael Smith. Turner did not give Smith any Miranda warning, but according to him Smith told him and the assistant director that "they went in the house and took the stuff." Smith then took the Work Center officers to the woods and some more of the stolen property was recovered.

The grand jury of George County indicted the three for burglary and larceny on April 29, 1986. The case came on for trial November 7, 1986. Milford A. Weaver, the public defender of George County, stated for the record that he was first notified either November 3 or 4 previous that he was appointed to represent Carol, and that on November 7 (the day of the trial) he was notified by the court that he was also going to represent Smith. A. Wellington Gibbs was the court-appointed attorney for Williams.

Weaver reported to the court that he had on November 7 been given a copy of Carol's statement, and told of possible oral statements made by Smith, and that the statements were in conflict. He then asked to be relieved of representing either of the defendants, and requested the court to appoint another attorney, explaining that he could not represent them both. He further moved that the statements of them both be suppressed following a hearing because they had been taken in violation of their constitutional rights, and had been given no Miranda warnings.

The prosecuting attorney informed the court that the State:

[W]ould confess the motion as to his having been read his rights in that statement. We do not confess the motion as to whether or not the statement was voluntary on Mr. Smith's part. And we would confess the motion that we do not plan to use those statements in our case in chief, but in the event he takes the witness stand we would attempt to use them to impeach him.

*1332 The court overruled Weaver's motion to appoint separate counsel in view of the position of the State that the statements would not be offered by the prosecution except in rebuttal.

Despite this assurance by the State that none of the statements would be offered by the State in its case in chief, when Turner was testifying as a witness in the State's case in chief he testified that Smith "took us up to the area, a wooded area where the stuff had been dropped." He then related where the stolen property was located and what was recovered. (R. 58-59)

A defense motion to strike this testimony was overruled. (R. 60) Then, under cross-examination by Gibbs, counsel for Williams, Turner gave a detailed description of where the property was found, and the containers it was in.

In his testimony during the case in chief, over the objection of Weaver, Howell testified that Carol agreed to go with the officers to the woods to locate some of the stolen property.

Deputy Sheriff C.H. Davis testified that Carol told them where "the stuff was." He said that he and Officer Burnett went with Carol to the woods where some of the stolen property was recovered.

Carol testified in his own defense that one of the inmates, whom he did not name, told him the location of the stolen property which he showed the officers. He said that all he knew about the man who told him of the stolen property was his first name was "John" and he was about six feet tall.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
540 So. 2d 1330, 1989 WL 26098, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carol-v-state-miss-1989.