Duff v. State

111 So. 2d 621, 40 Ala. App. 80, 1958 Ala. App. LEXIS 114
CourtAlabama Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 21, 1958
Docket6 Div. 548
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 111 So. 2d 621 (Duff v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alabama Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Duff v. State, 111 So. 2d 621, 40 Ala. App. 80, 1958 Ala. App. LEXIS 114 (Ala. Ct. App. 1958).

Opinion

CATES, Judge.

The January, 1957, Tuscaloosa County Grand Jury indicted Jewel Pearl Duff for first degree murder in killing Herbert Riddle by shooting him with a pistol.

She appeals her conviction of murder in the second degree, for which she was sentenced to twenty years’ penal servitude, and from the overruling of her motion for a new trial.

The tendency of the prosecution’s case was:

April 19, 1957, about 10:30 or 11:00, P.M., Dr. A. W. Davidson examined Riddle, a seventeen year old boy, at the Bessemer General Hospital. Through his right thigh he had a bullet wound running from left to right and in his left side another “located right above the bone of the crest of the ilium.” The physician found a bullet in Herbert’s pelvis at a point lower than the entrance' wound in the torso. Death came about two o’clock in the morning, April 20. Dr. Davidson was of the view that the wounds he examined caused death.

The scene of the shooting was the defendant’s, Jewel Pearl Duff’s, “place.” This description seems to have embraced the dwelling house in which she lived with her husband, Northern Duff, and a nearby frame building used as a dance hall. Both buildings adjoined the Tuscaloosa-Birmingham Highway.

Sometime after 6:30, P.M., April 19, 1957, Will Alfred, also called “Old Man,” came up to the dance hall. He had brought a package which he left on a step.

The package disappeared; Alfred and Herbert Riddle got into an argument as to whether or not Herbert had moved it, and they fell to fighting. Herbert’s half brother, Nathaniel Riddle, pulled him off the Old Man. As so often happens in the course of human events, the office of peacemaker served but to divert Herbert’s fight with the Old Man into a scuffie between Herbert and Nathaniel. Herbert’s mother *83 (with the help of another half brother) broke up this second quarrel; she took Herbert home with her.

Herbert soon returned to the dance hall, and after he had been there about five minutes, he and the defendant got into an argument: “She said she would show anybody coming up there trying to take her place, so she went in the house and got the gun and came out and shot him.” Meanwhile, Herbert had come onto the porch of the house and had taken a seat there beside Northern.

When the defendant came from the house, she had a pistol hidden in her bosom. Herbert, who was then in the yard, came toward her. She pulled the gun and shot three times.

The defense was that of justification because the taking of Herbert’s life was the necessary consequence of Jewel Pearl protecting herself from an apparently murderous attack being made by him against her in which he used an ice pick.

The pertinent portion of her examination in chief reads:

“A. He said yes; he was going to have something to say. He was going to kill or get killed that night.
“Q. Then what happened? A. Then when he said that, this Rosie Davis — she had done got her eggs and we were standing there talking, and he first came off the porch and she said, T better leave. I believe there is going to be trouble around here.’
“Q. When did the pushing take place? A. I told him to quit, and he pushed me, and I started backing up, and I backed up a piece, and he come pushed me again, and I said, ‘Go on, I don’t want to hurt you.’ And he said, ‘You are a smart S. O. B.’
“Q. Which way did he push you? A. This way.
“Q. Did he push you toward your house? A. Toward my house porch.
“Q. Did he push you toward the house porch? A. Yes, sir.
“Q. Then what happened? A. When he pushed me twice, and first pushed me, I hadn’t pushed him. I said, ‘Go on, I don’t want to hurt you.’
“Q. Then what happened? A. When he pushed me first, I didn’t bother him, and he pushed me again, still cursing me, and I pushed him back.
“Q. Then what happened? A. Then he came up from the side with the ice pick in his hand, and I kept telling him, T don’t want to hurt you.’ And I run my hand in my bosom and got the pistol and shot up in the air.
“Q. You first shot up in the air? A. Yes, sir.
“Q. What happened then? A. It didn’t stop him. He kept coming.
“Q. It didn’t stop him. He just kept coming? A. Yes, sir.
“Q. Then what happened? A. I shot again. When I shot up in the air, it didn’t make no difference. It looked like it made him that much worser, and he came drawed back the ice pick, and I shot, looked like, across his arm. It looked like it glanced it, and he didn’t stop, and I made another shot and I had backed up as far as I could get, and that is when I shot the third time, and he fell.”

While the solicitor, in his opening statement to the jury, was outlining the State’s expected proof, the mother of the deceased (who was sitting at the counsel’s table) began “crying out loud”; whereupon, after objection by the defense, the judge admonished her to stop or else leave the court room. Defendant’s counsel moved for a mistrial, claiming her conduct was “highly prejudicial * * * to the defendant’s rights.” This motion was overruled without error.

In brief the appellant contends that:

*84 (1) The verdict was contrary to the evidence in that it came from bias and not from unprejudiced deliberation; (2) she was prejudiced by unfair argument, viz., “Yes, gentlemen of the jury, I am speaking about some of these places where the police officer got killed about three years ago.”; (3) the solicitor improperly argued that the defendant (who pled self-defense) was under a duty to retreat; (4) she was hurt unfairly by argument and evidence implying that she had illegally sold or given beer and whiskey to Riddle, a minor; (5)' it was error to admit medical testimony that the bullet found in the pelvis was lower in the body than the point of entry; (6) the court erred in admitting State’s Exhibit 8, a photograph showing a pile of beer cans near the scene; (7) it was improper to ask (over objection) whether or not one of the witnesses saw the defendant with beer just before the shooting; (8) there was error in sustaining objection to the following question put by defense counsel: “I will ask you if she didn’t come up there and tell Herbert to quit fighting and go on home with her?”; (9) it was error not to declare a mistrial on defendant’s motion when the solicitor asked Robert Alfred if he tried to buy beer from the defendant shortly before the shooting; (10) it was error to deny the motion for a mistrial because of a reference to a prior court proceeding; and (11) it was error to admit evidence tending to show the good reputation of the deceased for peace and quietude even though the court excluded the entire testimony of the witness thereto.

We have considered contentions (1), (3), (5), and (7), and conclude they do not raise questions of error. Nor do we believe there is need to detail our reasons.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Johnson v. State
120 So. 3d 1130 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Alabama, 2009)
Frazier v. State
758 So. 2d 577 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Alabama, 1999)
Weaver v. State
678 So. 2d 260 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Alabama, 1995)
DeBruce v. State
651 So. 2d 599 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Alabama, 1993)
McNair v. State
653 So. 2d 320 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Alabama, 1992)
Lawson v. State
476 So. 2d 116 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Alabama, 1985)
Bill Steber Chevrolet-Oldsmobile, Inc. v. Morgan
429 So. 2d 1013 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1983)
Hurt v. State
361 So. 2d 1163 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Alabama, 1978)
Kendrick v. State
318 So. 2d 378 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Alabama, 1975)
Powell v. Powell
231 So. 2d 103 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1970)
James v. State
217 So. 2d 545 (Alabama Court of Appeals, 1969)
Burke v. State
209 So. 2d 859 (Alabama Court of Appeals, 1968)
Jessup v. State
194 So. 2d 570 (Alabama Court of Appeals, 1966)
Uldric v. State
192 So. 2d 736 (Alabama Court of Appeals, 1966)
Howard v. State
142 So. 2d 685 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1961)
People v. Rivera Romero
83 P.R. 452 (Supreme Court of Puerto Rico, 1961)
Pueblo v. Rivera Romero
83 P.R. Dec. 471 (Supreme Court of Puerto Rico, 1961)
Duff v. State
111 So. 2d 627 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1959)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
111 So. 2d 621, 40 Ala. App. 80, 1958 Ala. App. LEXIS 114, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/duff-v-state-alactapp-1958.