Dickey v. State

1954 OK CR 8, 266 P.2d 480, 1954 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 250
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma
DecidedJanuary 20, 1954
DocketA-11836
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 1954 OK CR 8 (Dickey 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
Dickey v. State, 1954 OK CR 8, 266 P.2d 480, 1954 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 250 (Okla. Ct. App. 1954).

Opinion

BRETT, Judge.

Plaintiff in error Roy W. Dickey, Jr., defendant below, was charged by information in the district court of Stephens county, Oklahoma, with the crime of receiving stolen property, Title 21, § 1713, O.S.1951. The crime was allegedly committed on November 25, 1951, 5 miles west of Duncan, Oklahoma, in the aforesaid county. The defendant was tried by a jury, convicted; the jury being unable to agree on the punishment, the same was fixed by the trial court at a term of 3 years in the Penitentiary and a fine of $250; judgment and sentence was entered accordingly, from which this appeal has been perfected.

The facts developed by the state and relied on for the conviction are briefly as follows. On November 24, 1951 in the afternoon at about 4:00 o’clock p. m., William Megehee, J. D. Bottoms, Bob Harris, A. J. Taylor and Billy Elliott of Shawnee, Oklahoma, as testified to by the first four, decided to go to Duncan, Oklahoma, for the purpose of committing a burglary of the Mack Oil Company warehouse. The object of the burglary was to steal some Hughes Tool company bits, leased to the oil company for drilling purposes. The burglars arrived in Duncan about 5:00 o’clock p. m., and at about midnight went to the Mack Oil Company warehouse located in Duncan, and stole 50 Hughes drilling bits • and removed them from the warehouse to a point about 4 miles west of Duncan where they were hidden under a culvert. They contacted one Herschel Wilkerson of Duncan, Oklahoma, by telephone about buying them, and he informed them that he could not handle the bits until after dark that day, the 25th of November 1951. The testimony of the thieves was that about 7:00 p. m. on the evening of November 25, 1951, they met Wilkerson and defendant Roy W. Dickey, Jr., of Wichita Falls, Texas, at the Red Horse Drive-in. The self-confessed thieves testified, they then went in Dickey’s pick-up and Wilkerson’s car to the hiding place of the bits where 42 bits were loaded into Dickey’s pick-up and 8 of them were loaded into Wilkerson’s car. They related that thereafter they drove about a mile from the point of delivery where payment was made therefor in cash and by check. The parties then went back to Duncan and returned to Shawnee, where Megehee, Elliott and Bob Harris (the last, to whom the check was made payable), picked up Megehee’s wife and drove to Wichita Falls, arriving there about 7:00 or 8:00 o’clock a. m., in order to get Dickey’s check cashed, which Dickey cashed himself. They testified they had another transaction with Dickey prior to the one in question and could not get his check cashed in Shawnee, so they drove to Wichita Falls for that purpose. They testified that the deal netted them $168 apiece. Megehee testified they received $17.50 apiece for the bits. The record shows new bits cost about $160 each, and re-tipped bits cost about $35 each. Megehee and Elliott testified they sold Dickey 22 other stolen bits in the other deal which took place about 2 weeks prior' to this transaction, in which he gave them a check they could not get cashed in Shawnee. They testified that these bits involved in the prior sale were stolen from the warehouse in Velma, Oklahoma, and were delivered in the nighttime on a country road. They testified that in this Velma burglary they stole 30 bits, but 8 of them were delivered to Wilkerson. None of the stolen bits were ever recovered, or traced to the defendant’s possession except as hereinbefore testified to by the 5 thieves. *483 A demurrer and motion for directed ver-diet was overruled. •

The defendant’s defense was an alibi. Dickey testified that he was born in Electra, Texas; a graduate of the Gladewater, Texas, high school; he attended Kemper Military College for 2 years at-Boomeville, Missouri. ' Dickey related that he then went to the army as an engineer and served 2 years overseas in the Pacific; was discharged from the army in December-1945, after which he went to school at Oklahoma University. After completing his university training he went into the business of re-tipping oil field drilling bits. . Dickey admitted that he knew a man by the name of Wilkerson in Duncan, who was a re-tipper; that they often traded and borrowed bits from each other as well as occasionally buying bits from each other. Dickey denied that he bought 42 re-tipped bits from Megehee et al., on the road near Duncan, Oklahoma, on the 25th day of November 1951. The defendant testified that he did not know the thieves Megehee, Elliott, Taylor, Bottoms or Harris; that the first time he ever saw them was at the preliminary hearing in January of 1952. He further testified he went fishing on Sunday the 25th day of November 1951 at Possum Kingdom, Texas, about 80 miles southwest of Wichita Falls, leaving about 1:00 o’clock. On this trip he said he was accompanied by Harold Hulsey and a Richard McComb, of Wichita Falls. He testified that they went in his car and took a boat, motor, trailer, lantern, fishing equipment and a couple of carbide cans for fire. He said that they fished until about 10:00 or 10:30 p. m. and left, arriving back in Wichita Falls' about midnight. He testified he knew that it was the 25th day of November 1951 because it was the first Sunday after Thanksgiving which was his dad’s birthday and that they had Thanksgiving dinner. On Saturday he said they had tickets for a football game but it was rained out and they did not go. The next day was Sunday and it cleared off,- and they went fishing to Possum Kingdom. He denied that he had any transaction with the state’s witnesses in connection with any bits. On cross examination he admitted that he had bought some bits from Herschel Wilkerson in the month of November 1951.

Harold Hulsey testified in behalf of the defendant to the effect that he had known ■the defendant 6 years; had doné a lot of hunting and fishing with him, and that on Sunday the 25th of ‘November 1951 together with Richard McComb he accompanied the defendant to Possum Kingdom, 80 miles from Wichita Falls, where they fished for quite awhile after dark, loaded the boat and got back to Wichita Falls about 12:00 o’clock midnight.

Roy McComb testified that he had known the defendant about a year and a half; that he went fishing with the defendant and Harold Hulsey on the 25th day of November 1951 at the Possum Kingdom lake. He testified that they fished until 'after dark. They got back to Wichita Falls about 12:00 o’clock at night. He testified he fixed the date as November 25, 1951 by reason of the fact that he had just got in from a deer hunting trip that-morning.

In addition to the foregoing the defendant had Mr. Hammet Vance, sheriff in Wichita Falls, Oral Jones, Vice President of the City National Bank .of Wichita Falls, and Grover Bullington, an insurance man of Wichita Fall's, Harry Browning, L. H. Ward and R. O. Wood, all testified as to the defendant’s good character and reputation in and' around Wichita Falls, Texas. The defendant’s motion for a'directed verdict was properly overruled.

Furthermore, it is apparent that the jury who saw and observed the witnesses, believed the thieves who stole this property, which the defendant is alleged to have received knowing the same to have been stolen, and their evidence is entirely sufficient to support the conviction, under proper instructions.

The next contention of the defendant is that the court erred in refusing to instruct the jury, upon motion of the defendant, that in the event they found him guilty, they must assess the punishment. This complaint is directed at instruction No. 10 reading as follows:

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1978 OK CR 49 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma, 1978)
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1977 OK CR 244 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma, 1977)
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Wilkerson v. State
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1954 OK CR 8, 266 P.2d 480, 1954 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 250, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dickey-v-state-oklacrimapp-1954.