Douglass v. State

58 So. 2d 608, 257 Ala. 269, 1952 Ala. LEXIS 185
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedMarch 10, 1952
Docket3 Div. 618
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 58 So. 2d 608 (Douglass v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Douglass v. State, 58 So. 2d 608, 257 Ala. 269, 1952 Ala. LEXIS 185 (Ala. 1952).

Opinion

BROWN, Justice.

The appellant was tried on an indictment returned by a grand jury impaneled in the Circuit Court of Montgomery County, charging him with murder in the first degree, substantially in the form prescribed by the statute. Code of 1940, Title 15, § 259, Form 79, p. 429. The person alleged to have been killed was William Patterson and the means by which the offense was committed, as alleged in the indictment, was “by cutting him with a knife” and was sufficient compliance with' the statute. Gaines v. State, 146 Ala. 16, 41 So. 865; Sims v. State, 176 Ala. 14, 58 So. 379; Moody v. State, 94 Ala. 42, 10 So. 670. The verdict of the jury was for murder in the first degree and the punishment fixed at death. The appeal comes to this court under Chapter 18, Title 15, § 382, Code of 1940, providing for automatic appeals from death sentences, subsection 10 of which provides:

[271]*271“In all cases of automatic appeals the appellate court may consider, at its discretion, any testimony that -was seriously prejudicial to the rights of the appellant, and may reverse thereon even though no lawful objection or exception was made thereto. The appellate court shall consider all of the testimony, and if upon such consideration is of opinion the verdict is so decidedly contrary to the great weight of the evidence as to foe. wrong and unjust and that upon that ground a new trial should he had, the court shall enter an order of reversal of the judgment and grant a new trial, though no motion to that effect was presented in the court below.” [Italics supplied.]

The requirements of said statute are supplemented by the provisions of § 389 which is a part of the same chapter and which provides inter alia, “the court must consider all questions apparent on the record or reserved by bill of exceptions, and must render such judgment as the law demands.”

The appeal is prosecuted on the record proper and the duly authenticated transcript of the proceedings of the trial including the oral charge of the court, testimony of the witnesses and exhibits thereto, consisting of several photographs of the body of the deceased taken by the Coroner of Montgomery County, Dr. Kirkpatrick, the charges given at the request of the defendant’s attorney and those requested and refused. The transcript was approved by the trial judge.

The evidence is without dispute that both the deceased and the defendant were inmates of Kilby Prison, Montgomery, Alabama; that deceased was operating within the prison walls of the Negro department of said prison what was referred to in the evidence as a “commissary”, where he kept articles for sale to Negro inmates. The deceased stated to defendant before the fatal rencounter, in substance, that he (deceased) “could not afford to take the rap on account of the money order, that his business was too valuable and he had to take care of ‘my boys’.” . ,

The defendant also testified that deceased handled all “hot stuff” which he sold at half price. The defendant further testified that deceased had access to the mail received at the branch post office maintained in the Negro department of the prison through which the mail to the inmates was handled. The defendant further testified, and his testimony is not disputed, that he had the privilege of the corridors inside the walls and on the front as clean-up boy; that the only access he had to the post office was to sweep it out, that he handled no mail; that he had been recommended as a trusty by some of the guards for whom he worked and that the warden had made some promise to give effect to this request in the near future.

The evidence further goes to show that when an inmate of the prison is found guilty of serious violation of the prison rules they are deprived of all their liberty and placed in solitary confinement, which has acquired the appellation among the prisoners of “Alcatraz,” and which is much dreaded by them.

So far as appears from the evidence there was no conflict or enmity between the deceased and the defendant up to and immediately preceding the fatal rencounter in which the deceased knocked the defendant down and the defendant inflicted several stab and incised wounds on deceased’s person with a small pocket knife which the defendant had in his pocket before the fight began. Said wounds caused Patterson’s death in a short time thereafter, approximately within a quarter to a half hour. The evidence shows that there was some delay in getting the wounded man to the prison hospital and he died on the stretcher immediately after he was carried into the hospital from a blood clot or from loss of blood.

The chain of incidents antecedent to and immediately preceding and leading up to the fatal rencounter, as the evidence shows, were as follows: A postal money order received at the post office within the prison walls, the department wherein the deceased, the defendant and other Negro convicts were kept, had been surreptitiously abstracted from the said post office, which [272]*272was traced by the warden to the possession of the deceased. In his investigation the warden questioned the deceased and he told the warden that he received the money-order from the defendant. This accusation was denied by the defendant in the presence of the warden. The warden then told deceased to go into the waiting room, that he (the warden) would talk to the defendant. After the defendant'again denied any knowledge of or connection with the stolen money order, the warden ordered his deputy to lock the defendant up and let him think it over. The deputy warden instructed the defendant to wait in the corridor while he (the deputy) went to the gate to get the key. While the deputy was absent on his mission, the defendant went into the waiting room, according to the defendant, to get his tooth brush and some other articles from a drawer where he kept such articles for use while in solitary confinement and started out of the room. As the defendant passed by the deceased he said to Patterson, “Why you frame me about that money order? You know I didn’t give you no money order.” Deceased replied, “I didn’t frame you, you framed yourself. I can’t afford to take the rap and be put back in Alcatraz. I got too good a start in my business and got to protect my boys.” At this juncture the scuffle started. The deceased knocked the defendant against the wall and the defendant inflicted on the deceased several wounds with a small pocket knife, which he had in his pocket when the fight started. The defendant suffered an injury to his shoulder.

The eyewitnesses testified that nothing was said and when they observed the scuffle, they thought they were just playing. There is an absence of evidence as to which of the combatants struck the first blow. Both were strong muscled and the tendencies of the evidence show that the deceased was larger than the defendant.

The defendant testified that the deceased said:

“ T don’t want to take no rap. I got too many employes, too good a start in store to get back in Alcatraz.’ He hadn’t been out of Alcatraz more than three months.”

The following questions were asked by defendant’s counsel:

“Q. What did he say to that? A. After I got my sweat shirt I said, don’t need nothing to go up there with, put all my stuff back in the box, started out the door. He said something concerning his boys again; I had a little old knife and just losed my head.
“Q. Lost your temper? A.

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Bluebook (online)
58 So. 2d 608, 257 Ala. 269, 1952 Ala. LEXIS 185, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/douglass-v-state-ala-1952.