Dixon v. State

168 S.E.2d 770, 253 S.C. 41, 1969 S.C. LEXIS 149
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedJuly 3, 1969
Docket18937
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 168 S.E.2d 770 (Dixon v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dixon v. State, 168 S.E.2d 770, 253 S.C. 41, 1969 S.C. LEXIS 149 (S.C. 1969).

Opinion

Bussey, Justice.

This is an appeal fro.m an order of the Honorable Louis Rosen, resident judge of the First Judicial Circuit, dismiss *43 ing alter a full hearing a writ of habeas corpus and remanding appellant-prisoner, Dixon, to the South Carolina Penitentiary where he is serving several sentences.

Dixon was convicted at the September 1966 term of the General Sessions Court fo.r Orangeburg County on charges of armed robbery and assault and battery with intent to kill. He was sentenced by Judge Eppes, presiding judge, to a term of fifteen years on the armed robbery count and also to ten years on the assault charge, the latter sentence to run concurrently with the former. The charges against him arose out of the armed robbery of a place of business, at gun point, on the night of December 6, 1965, one employee of the place of business being shot and wounded in the course of the robbei-y.

Subsequently to the foregoing sentences and while Dixon was still confined in the Orangeburg County jail, he allegedly came into possession of a pistol, and by threatening the jailer with the weapon forced the jailer to release him and other persons, stole an automobile and effected his escape. He was recaptured promptly and at a special term of General Sessions Court, December 1, 1966, he pled guilty to indictments charging him with escape, assault with intent to kill and murder, and grand larceny. He was then sentenced to one year on the escape charge, seven years consecutively on the assault charge, both sentences to run consecutively to his earlier sentences, and on the grand larceny charge he was sentenced to a term of five years, concurrently with all other sentences. He is thus faced with the service of twenty-three years.

The petition for a writ of habeas corpus alleged various and sundry grounds for relief, but did not assert the relief to which petitioner supposed himself entitled. The petition is dated August 11, 1967. A hearing was granted by an order dated December 19, 1967, and the hearing was held on January 16, 1968. The order denying relief and dismissing the writ is dated March 14, 1968.

*44 The petition did not specifically allege any inadequacy or incompetency of his appointed counsel, Mr. Zack E. Townsend of the Orangeburg Bar, who represented Dixon at his jury trial in September 1966, but upon the hearing the only real issue developed with respect to such trial was whether he was, at that trial, represented by adequate and competent counsel. With respect to such issue, Judge Rosen found as a fact that Dixon was represented by counsel in a proper and competent manner. Such issue having been decided adversely to the appellant, we are limited in our review to. the determination of whether there was evidence to sustain the findings made by the trial judge. Ross v. State, 250 S. C. 442, 158 S. E. (2d) 647 (1967).

At the time of the December 1965 crime, Dixon was a married, family man, and a resident of Orangeburg County. He was not personally known to either of the two. employees of the business establishment present at the time of the robbery, but was somewhat later identified by both of them. While these employees were not able to immediately identify the perpetrator of the crimes, for reasons or facts not clearly reflected in the trial record, Dixon was early regarded as the prime suspect in the case. From the time of the December 1965 crime until Dixon was apprehended in Augusta, Georgia in the latter part of May 1966, he was for the most part absent from Orangeburg County. He knew, however, long before his apprehension that he was sought in connection with the crime and managed by flight on one occasion to avoid arrest in Orangeburg County.

His counsel, Mr. Townsend, was appointed on the 13th day of September 1966, the second day of the first term of the Court of General Sessions for Orangeburg County following his arrest. The case proceeded to trial on the 15th day of September, no motion for continuance being made. Upon the trial, Dixon’s defense was mistaken identity and alibi, he contending that he left Orangeburg by bus on the early morning of December 4th, two days prior to the crimes, for Spartanburg, where he remained until December 27th. Ac *45 cording to, him, he returned on that date to Orangeburg County for one day, but went immediately back to Spartan-burg where he remained for two additional weeks. His testimony was to the effect that he was having an illicit affair with 'one Susie Lee Dawkins in the City of Spartan-burg, and that while he did not sleep there, he was in her home every day and every night from the morning of December 4th until December 27th. Offered in corroboration of his alibi testimony was a statement, to the effect that an aunt of his, could she have been present, would have testified to the fact that she put him on a bus for Spartanburg o.n the night of December 3, 1965, and also a letter purportedly received by Dixon while in jail, a few days before trial, from Susie Lee Dawkins to prove that such a person did exist. Appointed counsel knew o.f Dixon’s contention but admittedly made no effort to contact Susie Lee Dawkins prior to the trial. .. ... ,

Upon the habeas corpus hearing, the only evidence adduced tending to prove inadequacy-or incompetency. on the part of appointed counsel'.'was,,1-us failure-to follow:'up the alleged alibi witness, Susie Lee- Dawkins. Mr. Townsend was also appointed to represent: Dixon in the habeas corpus procéeding but the petition, did .-not allege any incompetency on- his part in any respect, andmot even Dixon contends that Townsend was inadequate or incompetent in any other particular. Mr. Townsend took .the stand in the habeas corpus proceeding and testified that, in retrospect, he thought he had been derelict in his duty, but that at he time of the trial he was convinced that Susie Lee Dawkins was a fictitious person. Dixon had been unable to. produce the envelope containing. the letter allegedly written by Susie Lee Dawkins, which fact was a natural ground for the belief on the part of counsel that the alleged alibi witness was a fictitious one.

Upon the hearing an affidavit was presented from one Idella Dawkins, a daughter of Susie Lee Dawkins, dated January 15, 1968, more than two. years after the commission of the crimes, in which she swore that Dixon was in Spar *46 tanburg at the time of the crimes; that he came there prior to December 6, 1965, and remained there until December 27, 1965. Her affidavit, however, contains no explanation as to how or why she remembered the precise dates of Dixon’s visit to Spartanburg more than two years prior to the date of the affidavit.

Susie Lee Dawkins, the adulterous consort of Dixon, appeared and testified at length in the proceeding. She testified categorically that Dixon was in Spartanburg on the night of the crimes, December 6, 1965. She, however, gave no explanation of her reason for remembering that precise date, more than two years before. It is noteworthy that she was quite confused as to whether she was in So.uth Carolina or in New Jersey at the time of the September 1966 trial of 'Dixon, her testimony thereabout indicating that she could not keep even years straight in her mind, let alone days.

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Bluebook (online)
168 S.E.2d 770, 253 S.C. 41, 1969 S.C. LEXIS 149, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dixon-v-state-sc-1969.