Collins v. State
This text of 408 So. 2d 1376 (Collins 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.
Opinion
Obadiah COLLINS
v.
STATE of Mississippi.
Supreme Court of Mississippi.
*1377 Chill, Chill & Dove, Bernard W.N. Chill, Jr., Jackson, for appellant.
Bill Allain, Atty. Gen. by Charles W. Maris, Jr., Sp. Asst. Atty. Gen., Jackson, for appellee.
Before PATTERSON, C.J., and BROOM and DAN M. LEE, JJ.
PATTERSON, Chief Justice, for the Court:
In the Circuit Court of Rankin County Obadiah Collins, in a joint trial with George Williams, was convicted of armed robbery and sentenced to fifteen years in the Mississippi Department of Corrections, with five years suspended.
On January 18, 1980, Ms. Jimmie Morgan, an employee of Institutional Foods Distributors, was robbed as she was taking a deposit to the bank for her employer. At approximately 10:40 a.m. Ms. Morgan left her place of employment carrying a basket of bank deposit bags to her car. She placed it on the backseat of her automobile, then sat down on the backseat and leaned across it to pick some paper off the floor on the opposite side of the vehicle. While she was leaning over a black male approached the car and, as she raised up, pointed a gun at her and commanded that she stay down. After seizing the basket of bank bags and the employee's purse, the assailant went to a car parked perpendicular to Ms. Morgan's vehicle. As he was walking away, Ms. Morgan again raised herself up, at which time another black male, seated in the driver's seat of the getaway car, yelled at her to stay down. As the car departed Ms. Morgan observed its color and obtained its license plate number.
Ms. Morgan described her accoster to the police as a dark complexioned black man with a scar under his eye on the right side of his face. She stated he was 5'10" tall, 160 lbs., with slim build, medium length afro haircut and slender face and that he spoke with a speech impairment. She identified Obadiah Collins in court as the man who robbed her. She also described the driver of the getaway car as a black male with a gold tooth, goatee, sunglasses, and hat. She identified George Williams, co-defendant, in court as the driver of the getaway vehicle.
On the evenings of January 18 and 19, 1980, Ms. Morgan was shown a group of approximately 20 photographs of black males by the police of the City of Pearl. On both occasions she identified the co-defendant George Williams. On March 19, 1980, she was shown another group of approximately 15 photographs of black males. A few days after that another group of photographs was displayed to her. Each time she identified a photograph of Obadiah Collins as the person who robbed her. This photograph revealed Collins as a heavyset, full faced man; evidence was introduced that he weighed approximately 200 pounds.
The license tag number observed by Ms. Morgan was traced and disclosed the getaway car was registered to the defendant George Williams.
Collins testified in his own behalf, stating that he worked as a driver for Jackson Packing Company. Collins testified that on January 18, 1980, he went to work at approximately 2:00 a.m. to take a load of meat to an A&P warehouse in New Orleans, Louisiana, where he arrived about 7:00 a.m. and unassisted, transferred the boxes of meat from the truck onto a pallet for removal by the warehouse employees. He testified this task was completed about 9:45 a.m. and that he had the merchandise checked and the drayage ticket stamped and signed. He further testified that he *1378 left New Orleans returning to Jackson at approximately 10:00 a.m. Collins stated that he stopped enroute in Brookhaven, Mississippi, for gas for which he paid in cash and received a receipt. Upon arriving in Jackson at approximately 3:00 p.m. he cleaned the truck, turned in his sheet, turned in the cash ticket for the gas he had purchased, and received a refund. He testified that upon his return he spoke with John McAllister, his supervisor.
John McAllister, a shipping foreman at Jackson Packing Company, testified that he was not at the Jackson Packing Company at 2:00 o'clock a.m. on January 18, and did not see Collins leave in the truck. However, he did see him when he returned that afternoon. McAllister testified that there is no log for drivers to sign in and out as they leave in a truck, but there is a watchman at the locked gate who verifies the drivers by sight. He testified that Collins was chosen as the driver for the New Orleans trip because he was one of two or three drivers for Jackson Packing Company certified by the Interstate Commerce Commission to cross state lines.
Various documents concerning Collins' alibi were introduced into evidence. Collins' timecard showed that he had punched in for work at approximately 2:00 o'clock a.m. on January 18 and punched out at approximately 4:00 o'clock p.m. the same day. The card was initialed by McAllister to verify the time worked by Collins. A handwritten memo of McAllister, showing that Collins was assigned to the New Orleans route on January 18, 1980, was also introduced. The cash receipt for the gas, showing Collins name and McAllister's initials authorizing repayment to Collins, was also introduced into evidence. There was also a Jackson Packing Company sales ticket showing the purchaser of meat as the A&P warehouse, the amount of purchase, and the January 18, 1980, date of purchase.
The receiving clerk from the warehouse in New Orleans testified that he signed the dray receipt indicating receipt and approval of the shipment from Jackson Packing Company on January 18, 1980, whereupon the receipt was introduced into evidence. The clerk did not recall Obadiah Collins, but stated that 15 to 22 trucks came to the warehouse every day with numerous drivers. Additional documents from the warehouse were introduced indicating that on January 18, 1980, a Jackson Packing Company truck arrived at 7:20 a.m. and was released at 9:45 a.m. The A&P warehouse manager testified that any person entering the A&P warehouse through the gate was required to sign in with the guard. However, their security logs are destroyed after 30 days and since this time had expired they were no longer available.
One of the attorneys representing Collins testified about one phase of his investigation of the case. He stated that he went to the gas station in Brookhaven to ascertain if anyone there recalled selling gas to a Jackson Packing Company truck on the date in question. He testified that no one could remember who had been on duty that particular day. The state responded by calling an employee of the gas station in Brookhaven who testified about the usual procedure for issuing a cash receipt. He testified that the purchaser's name was usually placed on the top of the form, not at the bottom as it was on Collins' receipt, and that the salesman would usually write his signature on the receipt. There was no salesman's signature on the receipt in question, instead there were initials which the employee did not recognize. This employee named the persons who he believed worked the daylight hours of January 18, 1980, and none of the initials on the receipt corresponded with those employees.
A Pearl police officer was called in rebuttal by the state and testified that after Collins was read his Miranda rights he was asked if he knew George Williams and that he responded that he did not. This contradicted Collins' testimony at trial that he knew Williams. Another officer testified in rebuttal that when Collins came to pick up *1379
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408 So. 2d 1376, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/collins-v-state-miss-1982.