De Angelo v. State

192 So. 444, 187 Miss. 84, 1939 Miss. LEXIS 104
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 11, 1939
DocketNo. 33820.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 192 So. 444 (De Angelo 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
De Angelo v. State, 192 So. 444, 187 Miss. 84, 1939 Miss. LEXIS 104 (Mich. 1939).

Opinion

McGeh.ee, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This appeal is from a conviction of the appellant as an accessory before the fact to the crime of robbery; whereupon he was sentenced to serve a term of five years in the state penitentiary.

On Saturday night, February 4, 1939, at about eleven o’clock, one Billy Moody, held up and robbed, by the use of a pistol, Grover 0. Carter, in his store located in the Wade community, about twenty miles north of Kreole, in Jackson county; and took, stole and carried away about $35 in money, and certain checks. No one else was present in or about the store building at the time of the robbery except Mr. and Mrs. Carter and the said Billy *91 Moody. He was later arrested, charged with the crime, and placed in jail at Gulfport in Harrison county, from whence he escaped; but thereafter surrendering himself to the officers, he was placed in the Jackson county jail shortly before the Circuit Court convened in that county on May 15, 1939. While in custody he had learned from other prisoners, or from some source which, upon the trial of the appellant, he refused to disclose, that the “others” (meaning the appellant and Harold Goff, who had carried him by automobile late that Saturday evening to a place near the scene of the crime) had “squealed,” the inference being that he had learned that the officers had ascertained through these two parties the fact that he, Moody, had been left by them near the scene of the crime a few hours prior to the robbery.

It appears that he then implicated both the appellant and Harold Goff in the crime, claiming that they both took him up there, and later returned in the car for him, pursuant to an agreement that they should meet him at a certain school-house near the store after one o’clock that night, and by further claiming that the three of them divided the money and checks taken from the store, at about five o ’clock Sunday afternoon, the day following the robbery.

It further appears that the appellant and Goff worked at a paper mill at Kreole from seven that Saturday evening until one o’clock in the morning; that as a matter of fact they did take Moody in the appellant’s automobile from Moss Point to the vicinity of the crime at about four or five o’clock that Saturday evening, and also that the appellant and Goff later drove back to the Wade community, to a point about a mile and a half north of Carter’s store.

The appellant contends that he and Goff took Moody to the vicinity of Carter’s store at Goff’s suggestion, and that Moody paid the appellant a dollar for his transportation, claiming that he was going from there to McLain, Mississippi, later that night; that he knew nothing of *92 the proposed robbery; that when he and Goff got off from work at the paper mill at one o’clock that night, he went to his automobile and found Goff seated in it, and that Goff thereupon suggested that they go back to the Wade community, where he thought there was a dance still in progress; that they went back up there for that purpose, and not for the purpose of meeting Moody; that en route to the dance hall they passed Carter’s store and the school-house, but did not try to find Moody; that upon their return they stopped at Carter’s store, where the sheriff and his deputy were investigating the robbery, and appellant borrowed Mr. Carter’s flashlight to see how to adjust the lights on the automobile, which were flickering and giving trouble; that Goff, who lived in that community, wanted appellant to stay and spend the night with him at his father’s home, but instead they returned to Kreole that night, going back Sunday afternoon to visit in Goff’s home, and at his uncle’s, returning to Kreole at about four o’clock that afternoon; that from Kreole appellant drove to Grand Bay, Alabama, twenty miles away, had his car lights fixed at a filling station not later than 4:30 P. M., and remained at Grand Bay until 7:30 that evening, at the home of Mrs. Minnie McClinton, where he had a date with her daughter, whom he brought back to Kreole that night, she being employed at that place; and that he was therefore not in the vicinity where Moody and Goff claimed that the three of them had divided the proceeds of the robbery on Sunday afternoon, between five and six o’clock according to Moody, and as late as six o’clock according to Goff.

The appellant was arrested on May 10th, under a warrant issued by a justice of the peace on an affidavit charging him with the crime, and on May 12th, which was only three days prior to the convening of the Circuit Court in Jackson county, he employed an attorney, and demanded a preliminary trial. His request for a preliminary hearing was denied, for the reason that the state was not ready; but an agreement was reached whereby he was *93 released under a $2,000' appearance bond to await the action of the grand jury which was to convene on the following Monday. The bond was tendered and accepted on May 13th, before the grand jury convened on the 15th. This procedure is mentioned for the reason that the appellant was indicted jointly with Moody for robbery with firearms under one indictment, and separately as a principal under another, on the theory that he was an accessory béfore the fact to the crime, and a motion to quash the indictments was made, followed by a plea in abatement, on the ground that the appellant had been denied a preliminary hearing, and the charge against him was still pending in the justice of the peace court at the time the indictment was returned; and the overruling of the motion and plea is here assigned as error.

We are of the opinion that the giving of the bond by the appellant, to await the action of the grand jury, amounted to a discontinuance of the prosecution in the justice of the peace court, and a waiver of the appellant’s right, under section 1230, Code of 19301, to be taken before the officer for an examination of his case. Hence, we are of the opinion that no error was committed by the trial court in overruling the plea and the motion to quash the indictments.

It seems that the indictments against the appellant were presented partly upon the testimony of Harold Goff, who in testifying as a witness against the appellant, stated that he went before the grand jury voluntarily, and without any process having been issued for him as a witness. Goff then testified on the trial that he and the appellant took Moody to the scene of the crime for the purpose of enabling him to commit the robbery, and that they returned for Moody after one o’clock that night; and that although they didn’t find Moody until Sunday afternoon, the three of them divided the money and checks at about six o’clock Sunday afternoon. He also testified that when he and the appellant returned to the Wade community that night, after the robbery, drove be *94 yond Carter’s store, and passed the school-house, they were not looking for Moody; then later swore that they went to the school-house, looked for him, and that he did-n’t come. He admitted that Moody paid the appellant a dollar on the way there, in the first instance. He first testified that they “picked up” Moody Sunday afternoon in an “ old bunk hall ’ ’ near the paper mill, to go and divide the money, and later swore that they overtook him on the highway, when he got in.

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Bluebook (online)
192 So. 444, 187 Miss. 84, 1939 Miss. LEXIS 104, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/de-angelo-v-state-miss-1939.