Evers v. State

128 So. 465, 23 Ala. App. 533, 1930 Ala. App. LEXIS 141
CourtAlabama Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 20, 1930
Docket8 Div. 803.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 128 So. 465 (Evers 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
Evers v. State, 128 So. 465, 23 Ala. App. 533, 1930 Ala. App. LEXIS 141 (Ala. Ct. App. 1930).

Opinion

RICÉ, J.

Appellant was indicted for the offense of murder in the first degree, tried, and convicted of the offense of murder in the second degree. His punishment was fixed at imprisonment in the penitentiary for the term of fifteen years.

He killed Norris Scarbrough, a deputy sheriff of Marshall county, by shooting him with a pistol, on May Í0,1928; the occurrence taking place in Douglas, a country, crossroads, trading point, or village, in said county.

Leading up to the killing, the testimony faintly discloses trouble between a family named Wright, living in sight of the defendant’s home, the defendant living between the home of said Wright and the village of Douglas. Mrs. Wright is the'sister of the deceased. It also appears faintly from the testimony that the deceased himself was activa in the institution or prosecution of some cases in the county court against the defendant, and his stepdaughter, one charging the defendant with having shot at the deceased’s son and one charging the defendant’s stepdaughter with abusive language. These two cases were set for trial in the county court at Albertville for Monday May 12, 192S.

On Friday, May 9,1928, the defendant made a trip to Albertville, procured summonses for witnesses for the defendant and his stepdaughter in the county court eases, and there is alleged to have had a conversation with the deputy clerk, Thomason, who testified to threats by the defendant against the deceased. Thomason says he did not tell the deceased about the alleged threats. Deputy Sheriff Teal claims to have seen the defendant in Albertville on that day and that the defendant made certain remarks to him about the deceased in connection with the serving of the defendant’s witnesses. Deputy Sheriff Charles Adams testified to certain remarks made by the defendant relative to the deceased when he went to arrest the defendant under the warrant charging the defendant with shooting at deceased’s son, for which he was to be tried in the county court.

On the same Friday, May 9th, Lenard Evers, son of the defendant, and Floyd Douglass, a son-in-law of the defendant,- made a trip to Boaz to purchase certain farming implements. Some of the evidence tends to show that on the same Friday, after the defendant had left the clerk’s office at Albertville, the deceased deputy sheriff, Scarbrough, visited the clerk’s office and obtained from the clerk a list showing the names of the defendant’s witnesses turned in by him and also made to the clerk, Thomason, certain derogatory remarks against certain of the defendant’s wit *534 nesses, and then, on the same day, in Boaz, had some words with defendant’s son and son-in-law, and threatened the defendant’s son and threatened the defendant’s life and charged the defendant with having been at Albertville on that day telling certain lies to the clerk, Thomason. The defendant’s son, Lenard Evers, testified that he told his father, the defendant, that Scarbrough had threatened his life. Two witnesses, John Mason and Olaud Brewer, testified to conversation on Friday night May 9th by the deceased at Boaz, wherein the deceased made statements in the nature of threats against the defendant, and stated that he was going to pass the defendant’s home the next morning.

The state’s theory, as we gather from the evidence, was that the deceased, on the morning of the killing, went from his home by the defendant’s house to carry dinner to where two of his sons were working, and returned by the defendant’s house, and was followed by the defendant and his son, who went to Douglas in a car in a few moments after the deceased, but without any real business calling them to the village.

The defendant’s theory, gathered in the same way, is that the deceased was not really in fact passing along the road for the purpose of carrying dinner to his sons, but' was engaged in matters pertaining to the prosecution of the defendant; that the witnesses he received subposnas for from the clerk at Albertville on Friday lived along that road and in that vicinity; that the defendant and his son remained at home at work until after dinner, working on a car top, and went to Douglas after dinner to get thread and a tire vulcanized; that, instead of the defendant following the deceased, the deceased hunted up the defendant, and, after a conversation with one Moon, out in the street, attacked the defendant with a pistol, the defendant fleeing around a mule and being followed by the deceased ; that a shooting scrape resulted in which the deceased deputy sheriff was slain.

State’s witness testified that the deceased accused the defendant of having a pistol and stated that he was going to arrest the defendant and that this led on to the killing.

The defendant pleaded self-defense. He relied upon the statute with reference to carrying a pistol, that he had been threatened and had reason to apprehend an attack. He denied that deceased said anything about arresting him; he claimed that he was suddenly attacked by the deceased with a deadly weapon really relieving him of the duty of retreat, and that, although he did manage to dodge behind a mule in an effort to escape, the deceased followed him around the mule, which made his escape by further retreat perilous and shooting of the deceased necessary self-defense.

What we have set out above, while scant, perhaps will, we think, serve to illustrate the few rulings we shall make. It shows, or is intended to show, that the evidence in the record leaves no room to doubt that hostility of a rather vicious sort — in fact, as events developed, of a deadly sort — existed between defendant and deceased. Whether defendant “followed” deceased to Douglas, on the tragic occasion, in the sense of “trouble hunting,” as was plainly sought to be shown by the state’s evidence, or whether defendant was casually or incidentally or on legitimate business in Douglas at the time, became, under the circumstances, a very important fact.

State’s witness Dr. Lindsey, whose testimony was very damaging to appellant, and who was shown to be a physician with-an office there in Douglas, etc., was allowed to state, over appellant’s timely objection, and proper exception, that, prior to the day of the fatal difficulty between deceased and appellant, he (witness Dr. Lindsey) had not seen appellant in or about Douglas for “seven or eight months.” Perhaps we are expressing outselves none too well, but, from a careful study of the whole record, we are convinced, and hold, that the court erred to the prejudice of appellant in allowing this 'testimony. Doubtless the learned trial court considered it wholly immaterial and entirely unimpor-' tant. But, while agreeing that it was immaterial, utterly, because appellant, under the evidence, could have been in Douglas many times without witness having seen him, from a survey of the whole situation we are of the opinion that said testimony very probably worked to the serious prejudice of the appellant.

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Related

Baggett v. State
133 So. 2d 33 (Alabama Court of Appeals, 1961)
Evers v. State
148 So. 333 (Alabama Court of Appeals, 1933)

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Bluebook (online)
128 So. 465, 23 Ala. App. 533, 1930 Ala. App. LEXIS 141, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/evers-v-state-alactapp-1930.