Evans v. State

172 So. 2d 796, 42 Ala. App. 587, 1965 Ala. App. LEXIS 373
CourtAlabama Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 9, 1965
Docket5 Div. 632
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 172 So. 2d 796 (Evans 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
Evans v. State, 172 So. 2d 796, 42 Ala. App. 587, 1965 Ala. App. LEXIS 373 (Ala. Ct. App. 1965).

Opinion

CATES, Judge.

Evans was convicted under an indictment charging him with forging an instrument having testamentary effect. Found guilty, sentenced to five years imprisonment, he appeals from conviction and the overruling of his motion for new trial.

Zebulon Judd died September 5, 1960, intestate with some fifty-nine claimants for his lands, goods and chattels of a value of some $500,000.00.

Evans filed May 3, 1961, in the Lee County Probate Court a petition praying that an instrument therewith surrendered be probated and admitted to record as the true last will and testament of Judd.

The instrument appears in the indictment, and came in evidence as State’s Exhibit No. 1, viz:

*589 This indictment is the short form prescribed by Code 1940, T. 15, § 259, No. 64, catchlined “Forgery of will, deed, note, bill, bond, receipt, or other written instrument,” and is cross referenced to T. 14, § 200. This latter section reads:

“§ 200. Any person who, with intent to injure or defraud, falsely makes, alters, forges, counterfeits, or totally obliterates any will of real or personal property, or any deed, conveyance, or other instrument, being or purporting to be the act of another, by which any right or interest in property is, or purports to be transferred, conveyed, or in any way changed or affected; or any bond, bill-single, bill of exchange, promissory note, or any indorsement thereof, the forgery of which does not •constitute forgery in the first degree; or any warehouse receipt, or receipt for the payment of money, or any instrument or writing, being or purporting to be the act of another; or any entry in any book account, by which any pecuniary demand or obligation is or purports to be created, increased, discharged, or diminished; or who, .with such intent, utters and publishes as true any falsely made, altered, forged, or counterfeited instrument, writing, indorsement, or entry, specified or included in this section, is guilty of forgery in the second degree.”

The State apparently relies upon Evans’s having supposedly made an admission against interest which furnishes corroboration of Chandler, the State’s main witness. Snoddy v. State, 75 Ala. 23; Harris v. State, 32 Ala.App. 519, 27 So.2d 794.

Evans, in testifying, admitted that the paper on which the State’s Exhibit No. 1 was typed up and signed was not delivered to him by Mr. Elmer Sellers, a job printer of Auburn, Alabama, until sometime in January, 1959. This the State contends is contradictory of and establishes fraud in the use of the stated date, “December 9, 1958,” at the top of Exhibit 1.

I.

The State’s Evidence

The alleged scheme required the complicity of the subscribing witness, Herman Chandler.

Chandler testified that in April of 1958 Judd had him witness Judd’s signature to a paper. “It was a one page paper * * * it was a note that Mr. Evans owed Doctor Judd. Further down toward the end it was agreement to leave each other the .coop factory in case of one of them’s death, the other one got it all.”

Chandler recalled asking Judd if he was making out a will. To which Judd rejoined laughingly, “Well you can call it that.”

Chandler denied that what he saw at that time was the instrument set out in the indictment, Exhibit No. 1, supra. The paper he saw then (April, 1-958)- had no letterhead on it.

On the 27th of March, 1961, some six months after Judd’s death, Chandler testified that Evans called him asking.him to come to his place of business. Thence the two men rode in Evans’s car. The record then shows:
“A He told me that he had a paper that he would like to get me to sign. And I took the paper and read it. . It is the paper that I just saw "there, that you showed me.
“Q That is State’s Exhibit one? [See above for text]
“A Yes, sir. And I asked him '-if that was legal, for me to sign that paper. He said that they had 'found a law that I did not have to be — ^-a'witness did not have to be in thé presence of the maker of the paper or of the other witness of the paper. And he said that he wanted to use this paper, because the lawyers for the estate were trying to prove Doctor Zebulon Judd insane at the time of the first paper. And he wanted'to use *590 this paper — the words he used were, to throw in their lap, to show that he could.notbe.insane two different times. And Lsigned the paper.
“Q That is' your signature there on State’s Exhibit one ?
“A Yes, sir. That is my signature.
“Q I show you State’s Exhibit one and ask you if that is the paper that you signed?
“A Tha!t 'is the paper I signed on the 27th of March, 1961.
“Q Now, did you later have a conversation with Tom Evans?
“A Well, that same day we went up to Mr. Sid Cook’s office and I signed another statement in his office. That he typed out himself.
“Q You signed a statement.
“A In Mr. Sid Cook’s office. Which is also dated the 27th of March, 1961.
“Q And what was the contents of that statement that you signed there? What was it ?
“A It was stating what I testified as of the paper I signed in 1958. And it was not dated. Where it says on or about on that paper, there is no date there, which I said, do not include a" date there, I am not sure of the date 'until- I go and check with the company and find out when I actually signed that paper. In 1958.”

An oddity of the so-called 1958 paper was that Chandler described it in terms of a contract for mutual testamentary disposition of the chicken coop factory. Yet, his testimony never refers to Evans’s having signed it.

The State Toxicologist, Dr. Rehling, was called and gave as his opinion that all signatures were genuine. He testified that the typewriter used was an L. C. Smith machine. Dr. Rehling observed an Underwood typewriter at Dean Judd’s home; its lettering was quite different in character from that appearing on State’s Exhibit No. 1.

After the State had first gone into the matter, the defense showed by a certified copy of a judgment that Chandler had been convicted of robbery in Georgia.

The trial court judge charged the jury:

“ * * * The evidence shows that he had been convicted of a crime involving moral turpitude. That is, he had been convicted of the crime of robbery, which is a crime involving moral turpitude. Now Gentlemen of the Jury, that conviction of that crime did not render him incompetent to testify as a witness. The evidence as to-his former conviction of a crime involving moral turpitude only goes to-his credibility. And that is for you Gentlemen of the Jury to determine, the credibility of his testimony.”

See Code 1940, T. 7, § 434.

II.

Corroboration of Accomplice

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Bluebook (online)
172 So. 2d 796, 42 Ala. App. 587, 1965 Ala. App. LEXIS 373, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/evans-v-state-alactapp-1965.