Chapman v. State

487 So. 2d 269, 1986 Ala. Crim. App. LEXIS 6002
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Alabama
DecidedMarch 25, 1986
Docket7 Div. 231
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 487 So. 2d 269 (Chapman v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Criminal Appeals of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chapman v. State, 487 So. 2d 269, 1986 Ala. Crim. App. LEXIS 6002 (Ala. Ct. App. 1986).

Opinion

LEIGH M. CLARK, Retired Circuit Judge.

A jury found this appellant guilty on a trial on an indictment that charged in pertinent part that he:

“did, in the course of committing a theft of, to-wit: approximately $700.00 to $900.00 in the lawful currency of the United States of America ..., the property of Othanell Holcombe, use force or threaten to use force against the person of Othanell Holcombe, or against another person present, or did aid and abet in using force against the person of Otha-nell Holcombe with intent to overcome her physical resistance or physical power of resistance, while the defendant or another participant, Sylvester Mixon or Phillip Mixon, was armed with a deadly weapon or hazardous instrument, to-wit: a pistol, or did aid and abet in said act ... contrary to and in violation of § 13A-8-41(a)(l). Code of Alabama 1975.”

On the cover page of the brief of counsel for appellant and on the cover page of the brief of counsel for appellee, the case is stated to have been “Appealed from the Circuit Court of Jefferson County, Alabama.” This incidentally produced some disorientation of the writer upon his reading from the court reporter’s transcript of the trial that the alleged robbery occurred in the home of the alleged victim on Highway 25 in Shelby County between Colum-biana and Calera, until thereafter noting from the record proper and the complete transcript of the proceedings, as well as from the remainder of the briefs of counsel, that the appeal is from the Circuit Court of Shelby County, Alabama. We now refer to some of the testimony of the alleged victim that pertains to some of the few issues presented on appeal.

Mrs. Holcombe, the victim, testified that on the evening of February 18, 1983, she arrived at her home at 8:15 and, while [271]*271watching a television program between 8:30 and 9:00, she heard a noise “outside the kitchen door,” that she then turned the light on outside and “saw two black males with something similar to a pillow case,” with the eyes cut out, over their head, who broke into the house, bound her hands and her feet, started looking through the house, and one of them “pulled out a pistol and asked her where was her pistol.” She further testified that she told him she did not have a pistol and that one of them pointed a pistol at her, pulled the trigger and it clicked. Some of her testimony was as follows:

“A. The one that pulled the pistol on me went back through the hall to the bedroom and was looking again. The other individual saw my purse sitting on the table and started to looking through it.
“Q. What, if anything, occurred after that?
[[Image here]]
“Q. All right. And what, if anything, did you observe this individual doing with your purse?
“A. He was emptying everything out of it.
“Q. All right. What, if anything, happened after he emptied all the contents out?
“A. After he had found some money, he called to the one that was back in the bedroom and said something that sounded like, ‘Hey, Doug, I found it.’
“Q. All right. Did you have any money in your purse?
“A. I had somewhere between seven and nine hundred dollars.
[[Image here]]
“Q. All right. Did you ever have an occasion to hear a conversation between these two assailants?
“A. When they were tying me up, one was just saying to the other one, have you got her, or something to that effect. That was the main talking that they were doing.
[[Image here]]
“Q. All right. Did you have occasion to identify any of the voices of the individuals involved?
“A. When he had the pistol on me, I knew it was Otis Chapman, Junior.
“Q. All right. Have you ever had an occasion to have a conversation with Otis Chapman, Jr., before?
“A. We opened our store in 1979 and over the years he was in the store sometimes two sometimes three, sometimes at least once a week. Sometimes every day of the week.
“Q. And it is your testimony that the gentleman who pointed the pistol at you, you identified his voice as being Otis Chapman?
“A. Yes, sir.
“Q. Is Otis Chapman in the courtroom today?
“A. Yes, sir.”

During the remainder of the testimony of Mrs. Holcombe, she stated that when the robbers had left her house she managed by struggling to remove the tapes with which she had been bound and that, knowing that the telephone line had been cut by her robbers, she managed to drive next door, which was the home of her brother-in-law, and they telephoned her husband, who immediately left his store at Columbiana and came to the scene of the crime. The victim testified that when the officers came and asked her if she recognized anything about any of the robbers she stated that one of them “sounded like Otis Chapman, Jr.” On cross-examination, she said that one of the officers asked her as to whether there was “anything about any of them that I recognized and I told him — and I said I used the term that it sounded like Otis Chapman, Jr. because I believed it to be Otis Chapman, Jr.” On Cross-examination by the attorney for defendant Phillip Mix-on, the victim testified that she did not know who was the other person that was in her house taking part in the robbery.

We believe we have set forth enough in the foregoing recital of the testimony of the victim of the robbery to show the strength of the case against the defendant [272]*272as one of the participants, and that for the purpose of consideration in connection with the main issues presented by appellant we need only to say that there was also strong evidence on the part of other witnesses for the State to the effect that defendant was one of the two participants in the robbery who were inside the house at the time the money was taken from Mrs. Holcombe. Before commencing our discussion of the principal issues presented on appeal, we think we should state that a separate indictment for the same alleged crime had been returned against each of three persons, including this appellant, and Sylvester Mixon and Phillip Mixon.

We deem that the paramount issues as to which appellant and appellee are in disagreement pertain to the action of the trial court in consolidating for trial the cases against Otis Chapman, Jr., and Phillip Mix-on and the subsequent action of the trial court in severing from such consolidated cases the case against Phillip Mixon when it became known that Phillip Mixon desired to change his plea from a plea of not guilty to a plea of guilty. It appears from the lengthy four volumes of the transcript, inclusive of the record proper, that, about four months before the trial of the two consolidated cases commenced, the trial court, over the objection of defendant, granted the State’s motion for a consolidation of the cases. The record shows that in the objection of this appellant to the motion of the State for a consolidation of the two cases for trial, there was the following averment:

“2.

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Bluebook (online)
487 So. 2d 269, 1986 Ala. Crim. App. LEXIS 6002, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chapman-v-state-alacrimapp-1986.