Dozier v. State

337 So. 2d 148, 1976 Ala. Crim. App. LEXIS 1723
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Alabama
DecidedAugust 31, 1976
Docket4 Div. 429
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 337 So. 2d 148 (Dozier v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Criminal Appeals of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dozier v. State, 337 So. 2d 148, 1976 Ala. Crim. App. LEXIS 1723 (Ala. Ct. App. 1976).

Opinion

CHARLES M. NICE, Circuit Judge.

Random contacts made over a bottle of beer are seldom conducive to the establishment of stable employer-employee relationships. This truism is borne out in the case before us.

The indictment charged the appellant, Billy Ray Dozier, with the robbery of Jimmy F. Lawson by taking sixty dollars ($60.00) from his person by violence or by putting him in fear. The Court charged the jury on both robbery and grand larceny and the jury found Dozier guilty of robbery, setting punishment at ten years imprisonment. The trial court fixed punishment in accordance with the verdict.

At about daybreak on September 28, 1975, Jimmy F. Lawson of Blakely, Georgia, stopped in at the Busy Bee Restaurant in Dothan, Houston County, Alabama. He sat in a booth and had just ordered a beer and a sandwich when he noticed the appellant, Billy Ray Dozier, age 23, and struck up a conversation with him.

According to Lawson, Dozier said he would like to have a job for a day or two. Lawson testified that he often hired young men to help him with his part-time, commercial fishing tackle business at his home in Blakely, Georgia, and that one could always find people loafing around the Busy Bee to hire.

Another young man, Robert Charles Pierce, a cousin of the appellant, joined them at the booth and asked for work, also.

After eating their food and drinking two or three beers each, the three got into Lawson s car and drove off on Highway 52 toward Blakely. Lawson was driving.

The appellant and Pierce wore large sun glasses and both looked alike to Lawson.

The trio left Dothan and Highway 52 going toward Columbia. Lawson testified that he became sleepy and asked the appellant to drive for him. After proceeding for awhile, Lawson requested that the appellant stop the car so he could urinate. Lawson got out of the car and was standing by a ditch when, suddenly, one of the two men pushed him down into the ditch. Lawson was “satisfied” that this was the appellant. While Lawson was trying to extricate himself from the ditch, the appellant took his money from his pockets, which amounted to $60.00 less than that which he had spent earlier at the Busy Bee. The other man, Robert Charles Pierce, stood by and watched. One of the two men, Lawson does not know which, said, “We understood you to have $800.00,” to which Lawson replied, “No, ya’ll are mistaken.” Either Dozier or Pierce then said something about Lawson cashing a check.

Lawson testified that he was scared, that he did not know whether the boys might have a gun, and he answered, “Yeah, boys, we don’t want nobody to get hurt. Ya’ll just cool it; I’ll get ya’ll some money.”

They were unsuccessful in getting a check cashed at the first store they tried. After one of the boys suggested that he knew a store that would cash a check, they stopped at Jordan’s Superette, a mile off Highway 84, going into Gordon, and the three of them went in. The appellant then said to Lawson, “You be sure to get the money this time.”

Lawson testified, “I had done began to get scared, I’ll tell you. I did not know what was going to happen.” Lawson asked the lady behind the counter, Margaret Parish, if she would cash a check for $75.00, and she answered, “No, we don’t have the money and don’t know you good enough.” The appellant and Pierce then left the store. The appellant had Lawson’s keys with him, but he did not take Lawson’s car.

[150]*150Margaret Parish testified that she recognized Billy Ray Dozier as one of the two boys with Mr. Lawson and that he had been living in Gordon, just around the corner from the store, for several years. She said, further, that she “got a little bit leery” the way the appellant and the other two men, Lawson and Pierce, stood around without saying anything. She told one of her customers, “Don’t leave me in here by myself; something is funny.” She also testified that after telling Lawson that she could not cash a check, Dozier and Pierce left.

The District Attorney, Mr. Martin, asked Mrs. Parish the following:

“Q. Mr. Martin: O. K., what did Lawson do?
A. Mr. Lawson asked me, ‘Lady, have you got a telephone?’ Said, T have just been l’obbed.'
Q. That’s the first thing he said?
Mr. Thomas: I object to what he said, your Honor.
Mr. Martin: Yes, it is part of the res gestae.
The Court: Yes, I had overruled the objection to that; go ahead.
A. He said, ‘Lady, have you got a telephone, I have been robbed,’ and ‘Will you call the police.'
Q. And you heard the way he talked?
A. Yes, sir.
Q. And what was his condition?
A. Well, he was real shaky and appeared real scared .”

Sid Batchlor of the Houston County Sheriff’s Department testified that he arrested the appellant shortly before 5:00 P.M. the afternoon of September 28, 1975, and that he had in his pockets the automobile keys which Mr. Lawson identified as his.

The appellant, Billy Ray Dozier, testified that he was in the Busy Bee Cafe on the early morning of September 18, 1975, with his cousin, Robert Charles Pierce, when Mr. Lawson came to their table and asked if he could sit down. The appellant answered, “Sure.” Mr. Lawson bought beer for the three of them and asked the appellant about a woman, to which he replied, “Yeah, I might know.”

Dozier related that while he was driving, Mr. Lawson asked that he stop the car so he could urinate. He stopped, and when he got out a moment later, he found Lawson lying on the ground. Pierce helped him to his feet and they drove on to Gordon.

The appellant further testified that Lawson wanted to stop and cash a check in order to purchase beer and to pay “this woman” that Lawson wanted. When the woman in Jordan’s store refused to cash the check, Dozier testified that he left. He admitted on cross examination that while at the Busy Bee, he was looking for someone to give him a ride to Gordon, and that was all he was interested in. After he reached his destination, he left Mr. Lawson.

The judge charged the jury on both robbery and larceny, and the jury found Dozier guilty of robbery. Thus, the jury has immortalized Jimmy F. Lawson as an authentic robbery victim, a statistic, if you prefer, saying, in effect, that the victim parted with his money by violence and not by cajolery.

The appellant claims error on the part of the trial court in these three aspects:

(1) Insufficient evidence against this appellant;
(2) Wrongful admission of hearsay testimony which was not part of the res gestae;
(3) Wrongful admission of prejudicial testimony.

I

The three essential elements of the offense of robbery are:

(a) Felonious intent;
(b) Force, or putting in fear as a means of effectuating the intent;
(c) And, by that means, a taking and carrying away the property of another from his person or in his presence.

Henderson v. State, 172 Ala. 415, 55 So. 816; Tarver v. State, 53 Ala.App.

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Bluebook (online)
337 So. 2d 148, 1976 Ala. Crim. App. LEXIS 1723, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dozier-v-state-alacrimapp-1976.