Espey v. State

120 So. 2d 904, 270 Ala. 669, 1960 Ala. LEXIS 376
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedApril 21, 1960
Docket6 Div. 443
StatusPublished
Cited by76 cases

This text of 120 So. 2d 904 (Espey 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
Espey v. State, 120 So. 2d 904, 270 Ala. 669, 1960 Ala. LEXIS 376 (Ala. 1960).

Opinion

*672 MERRILL, Justice.

Appellant, Curtis C. Espey, was convicted of murder in the second degree and sentenced to the penitentiary for twenty-five years. His pleas were not guilty and not guilty by reason of insanity. The latter plea was withdrawn at the close of the evidence. His motion for a new trial was overruled.

Appellant was forty-seven years of age and an uncle of the deceased, Wiley Howard Espey, who was thirty-three years of age. They were on friendly terms and had been riding together in appellant’s automobile in the afternoon and night of March 26, 1959.

The wife of the deceased and his sister had been looking for him for some time because he had failed to come home from work as was his usual custom. Around 9:15 P.M., they drove up in front of a white block building, on the Berry-Gorgas Road, which was known as Curt Espey’s place, and was operated by appellant. They stopped their automobile and saw appellant and the deceased standing in front of the front entrance to the building and the deceased’s wife called to him. About that time, the appellant raised both hands and struck the deceased near the shoulders. They saw “something shiny” in his right hand. The deceased fell backward to the ground. They saw no weapon in the hands of the deceased and they did not see him strike the appellant. The women started their car and drove back to Berry to get police help, but they were unable to get the policemen at Berry because Berry is in Fayette County and Curt Espey’s place was in Tuscaloosa County. They summoned the sheriff of Tuscaloosa County by telephone and returned to Curt Espey’s place. They found the body of the deceased lying in the middle of the road, some three hundred steps from the front of Curt Espey’s place, and a trail of blood led from there to the place where they had seen him fall. The deceased had been cut at the neck, on the chest, on the arm and hands and in the small of the back. Death was the result of shock and hemorrhage because of the severing and cutting of the external jugular vein.

While the two women and others who had stopped were standing near the spot in the highway where the body was lying, appellant’s automobile came by, slowed up and went on toward Tuscaloosa to the hospital. At the hospital, appellant was treated for two superficial cuts on his hands and a small stab wound in the abdomen. He was treated at the Druid City Hospital, charged $5.25 and dismissed. He was arrested at his home around 1:30 A.M. the next morning.

Appellant did not take the stand but he showed that he and deceased had been on good terms all of their lives. One of appellant’s witnesses testified that they both appeared to be drinking a short time before the altercation and that the deceased was intoxicated but appellant was not drunk. The two women who testified for the State were the only eye witnesses, and there was no evidence as to the cause of the killing, or the circumstances which led up to it, except that both appellant and his nephew had been drinking.

*673 Appellant argues that the court erred in allowing State’s witness, Blanche Swindle, sister of the deceased, and niece of appellant, to testify that she and other people, while standing by the side of the road on which the body of the deceased was lying, some hour after the difficulty, saw an automobile, which she identified as belonging to appellant, approach the point on the highway where deceased was lying, going at a rapid pace; that it slowed down, its lights flashed on the body of deceased; that appellant was seated in the front seat but another person was driving; and that the automobile did not stop.

Appellant contends that this testimony was inadmissible because events, statements and acts which occur after the fatal difficulty are not admissible as a part of the res gestae, unless they were in continuance of the difficulty.

The correct rule is stated and approved in Smarr v. State, 260 Ala. 30, 68 So.2d 6, 10:

“The acts, declarations, and demeanor of an accused, before or after the offense, whether part of the res gestae or not, are admissible against him, but unless a part of the res gestae are not admissible for him.”

After citing this principle, we held in Willingham v. State, 261 Ala. 454, 74 So. 2d 241, 244, that it was not error to permit the State to prove that the defendant returned to the dance hall an hour after the difficulty and was dancing, because “such proof was of probative value as bearing on the defendant’s attitude toward the offense just committed by him.” We think the same reasoning is applicable to the rulings of the trial court in the instant case.

It is also urged that the court erred in permitting the witness to testify, over objection, that the car did not stop. But a few moments before, the witness had testified without objection:

“Q. Did the car stop? A. No.”

The admission of testimony, if error, is harmless where the same witness has previously testified to the same facts without objection. Woodard v. State, 253 Ala. 259, 44 So.2d 241.

Appellant further contends that the court erred in refusing to grant a mistrial when the following occurred:

“The Court: Whenever any statement is excluded by the Court you are not to consider it. Whenever an objection is made and the Court sustains the objection you will not consider it.
“Mr. Edward deGraffenried: Your Honor, if they ask that question about whether or not Curt slowed up, she hasn’t said Curt was driving.
“Mr. McDuffie: Your Honor, we expect to show by this witness that Curt (the appellant) came by with his wife and son and that there at that time the deceased was lying out in plain view and in his lights, and we expect the evidence to show they didn’t stop or ask if they could take him to the hospital or anything, and Curt knew at that time he was lying there and didn’t know whether he was dead or dying.
“Mr. Edward deGraffenried: We object to that and move to exclude it from the jury. It is highly prejudicial and if there are anymore speeches to be made we ask that the jury be excluded.
“The Court: Sustain the objection.
“Mr. McDuffie: Except.
“Mr. Edward deGraffenried: We move for a mistrial on the strength of that statement. It is highly prejudicial and cannot be erased or removed from the minds of the jurors.
“The Court: Overruled.
“Mr. Edward deGraffenried: Except.”

*674 The general rule is that improper argument of counsel is not a ground for a new trial or subject to review on appeal unless there is due objection by counsel or motion to exclude, a ruling thereon by the court and an exception thereto, or a refusal of the court to make a ruling. Nichols v. State, 267 Ala. 217, 100 So.2d 750; Washington v. State, 259 Ala. 104, 65 So.2d 704.

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Bluebook (online)
120 So. 2d 904, 270 Ala. 669, 1960 Ala. LEXIS 376, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/espey-v-state-ala-1960.