Cole v. State

1970 OK CR 29, 467 P.2d 511
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma
DecidedMarch 4, 1970
DocketA-14708
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 1970 OK CR 29 (Cole 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
Cole v. State, 1970 OK CR 29, 467 P.2d 511 (Okla. Ct. App. 1970).

Opinion

*512 BRETT, Presiding Judge.

This is an appeal from a conviction for the crime of Murder, in which plaintiff in error, Ruby Roberta Cole, was sentenced to serve life imprisonment. Hereafter plaintiff in error will be referred to as defendant, as she appeared in the district court.

Defendant’s brief sets forth five propositions of error. The first alleges that defendant’s rights were violated, because she was not provided the “Miranda warnings” at the time she was arrested. 1 Secondly, that the State failed to prove that a crime had been committed. The third proposition alleges that the evidence was insufficient to meet the requirements of reasonable doubt; fourth, that the punishment was excessive, and was not supported by the evidence. The fifth proposition asserts that the State failed to prove the corpus delicti, or that a crime had been committed.

Defendant was convicted on the basis of circumstantial evidence — consisting of a series of events relating defendant to the scene where the dead body was found— coupled with the finding of the dead body of the handyman, who worked for defendant; and the fact that her small house situated southwest of Durant, Oklahoma, was burning at the time of the discovery. In fact, the burning house was the factor which caused the witnesses to go to the scene, when they discovered the dead body.

Defendant’s second and fifth propositions of error will be discussed herein, as they pertain to the proof of a crime having been committed, and proof of the corpus delicti. The two main facts which seem to be controverted are: did the witnesses stop and talk to this defendant, and did the defendant fire the pistol which caused the death of John Dean (or Den) Bell. Admittedly, the circumstantial evidence is quite strong but, is it sufficient to support the conviction requiring life imprisonment, is the proposition which this Court seeks to answer.

The facts summarized are: On December 29, 1965, at about six or six-thirty P.M. three witnesses observed a house on fire about a quarter of a mile from the farm, where they were. Two of the witnesses testified they were at the barn watching the father of one of the young men, as he was milking his cows. The third witness testified that they were at the farm “penning up some cows.” Nonetheless, two of the young men went to the scene of the fire in a pick-up truck. They stated that when they were some twenty-five to fifty yards from the burning house, they observed a blue 1960 Ford automobile leaving the vicinity; they stopped the vehicle and asked if someone was burning trash at the house, but the occupant of the car replied she didn’t know. One of the men then inquired as to whether the house was on fire, to which the occupant of the car answered, she didn’t know.

The two witnesses testified that they proceeded to the burning house where they discovered the man’s body laying four to six feet from the steps of the small house. They returned to the pick-up truck and proceeded back to the farm house to notify the authorities. When they reached the section time road — at which they turned south to travel about a quarter of a mile to the farmhouse — they passed a blue Ford which was travelling the same direction, which they thought was the same car they had seen a few minutes earlier. One of the young men testified that he wrote down the license number of the car. They proceeded to the farmhouse, notified the authorities, and two of the three witnesses returned to the burning house, while one of the two young men — who first went to the burning house — proceeded to the highway to direct the authorities to the scene. Shortly thereafter, the authorities arrived at the scene.

Sometime after six-thirty P.M. — the record does not reflect the actual time defendant was arrested by the highway patrolmen — Trooper H. D. Van Arsdell and *513 Trooper Norman Kious stopped the defendant’s car west of Durant, Oklahoma, about half a mile west of the Roosevelt Bridge on U. S. Highway 70. Trooper Van Arsdell testified that a radio broadcast had been heard for the police authorities to be on the look-out for a blue Ford with license number CY-1631. [The license number reported by the young man] Trooper Kious had heard the same broadcast and had proceeded east from the direction of Ardmore, Oklahoma. The two Troopers were sitting in Van Arsdell’s patrol car when defendant’s car approached from the direction of Durant. They stopped the car; placed defendant under arrest; and Trooper Kious searched the automobile and found the pistol and some shells in a paper sack. The pistol turned out to be the weapon from which the fatal bullet was fired. Defendant was taken to the Durant jail, where she was incarcerated. The next morning her attorney visited her at the jail.

From the record it appears that defendant was not questioned by either of the Troopers, or at the jail and no confession was introduced at defendant’s trial, nor was there any indication that one was sought by questioning of the defendant. Likewise, the record reflects that defendant was not subjected to any tests, concerning her condition of sobriety, notwithstanding the fact that Trooper Van Arsdell testified that she was intoxicated. He testified also, that defendant’s automobile was travelling about forty miles per hour when it was stopped.

It was stipulated into the record that the pistol, and H & R .32 caliber revolver, serial number AA3722 and the shells found with it belonged to defendant; that the items had been purchased at Godsie’s Sporting Goods Store in Del City, Oklahoma, on December 13, 1965; that it was the weapon from which the fatal shot was fired; that it was the same weapon found in defendant’s automobile by the Highway Patrol Troopers; and that it had been in the possession of the court reporter since defendant’s earlier habeas corpus hearing.

Dr. Robert E. Engles performed the autopsy on the morning following the shooting, after the body had been embalmed. He testified that the bullet was found by x-ray and he removed it. The doctor testified, “Well, the wound of entrance was in the left upper abdomen, in approximately this position, right here.” In reference to his removal of the bullet he testified, “Well, the x-ray revealed the bullet to be in the right posterior flank area, in approximately this position, right here. And it was just underneath the skin, and we removed it, at that time.” 2 On redirect examination, the doctor testified that he attributed the man’s death to the bullet wound. He also testified that he found no indications of powder burns on the body; however, his examination was made after the body had been embalmed.

Mr. Ray Lambert, from the Oklahoma Bureau of Investigation, testified concerning his examination of the pistol and the bullet removed from the body, and identified the weapon as being the one from which the bullet was fired. He explained the “paraffin test” to the jury, and stated that such test could reveal whether or not a person had fired a weapon — if powder grains were found on the person’s hand. He also testified that by the process of lifting fingerprints from a weapon, it could be determined whether or not the person had handled the weapon being examined. During his examination, Mr.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1970 OK CR 29, 467 P.2d 511, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cole-v-state-oklacrimapp-1970.