Frazier v. State

366 So. 2d 360
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Alabama
DecidedDecember 19, 1978
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 366 So. 2d 360 (Frazier 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
Frazier v. State, 366 So. 2d 360 (Ala. Ct. App. 1978).

Opinion

Appellant was indicted by the grand jury of Covington County, Alabama, for assault with intent to murder Henry Frazier. In the presence of counsel, appellant was duly arraigned, entering a plea of not guilty to the charge against him. A jury found appellant guilty of assault and battery and fined him five hundred dollars. Adjudging appellant guilty in accord with the jury's verdict, the trial court imposed the fine set by the jury and as additional punishment the Court sentenced appellant to five months and twenty nine days in the Covington County Jail.

This incident arose from a family dispute over a land line. The victim in the case was appellant's eighty-three-year-old uncle. It is only to these two facts that the parties agree, all other evidence surrounding the fracas being in hopeless conflict.

Henry Frazier, the victim, testified that on August 20, 1977, appellant and his father, J.D. Frazier, Henry's brother, drove up to the house in a Volkswagen. Appellant's four-year-old son accompanied them. Frazier's home was on the Elba and Andalusia road, near Sasser's Cross Roads in Covington County.

When appellant and his father arrived at the house, Frazier was sitting on the porch. Appellant walked up and sat down beside Frazier, while his father, known as "Dee" to the family, sat down beside a big tree in the front yard. Frazier's wife was "going and coming," but she too sat out on the porch for some time also. Shortly after appellant sat down, he sent his son to the car to bring back a quart of whiskey.

Henry Frazier had not invited his relatives over to visit and when appellant began "cussing about every breath he drawed," Frazier asked Dee to take appellant home before there was trouble. Appellant then told Frazier that his mother had sent him there "to do a job," and appellant was going to do it. *Page 362

Henry Frazier asked Dee again to take appellant home, but appellant spoke up, saying "that is what we come up there for is trouble." Appellant then called Henry Frazier a "son-of-a-bitch," whereupon Henry Frazier hit him with his fist. A general melee ensued, appellant and victim falling off the porch, when they "tangled up." Appellant struck Frazier on the head and in the mouth, Frazier falling again. While Henry Frazier was on the ground and unable to get up, appellant began to kick him, the reason for which Henry Frazier testified, "I have been hobbling today."

At this point, Mrs. Frazier, seventy-six years of age, walked out of the house with a small pistol. Appellant tried to take the pistol away from his aunt and struck her on the head. Appellant and his father then left.

Henry Frazier further testified that he required hospitalization for four days. He also identified two photographs depicting himself wearing a full length cast on his left leg. These photographs were received in evidence without objection.

Mary Lou Frazier testified that she was the victim's wife. On August 20, 1977, as Mrs. Frazier was about to take a bath, the doorbell rang. Mrs. Frazier opened the door and saw appellant standing on the walk with a quart of whiskey in his hand. Appellant was drunk, cursing, and he wanted to go inside the house. However, Mrs. Frazier told him to wait outside and Mr. Frazier would be out in a minute.

Appellant and Mrs. Frazier then sat down on the porch. The record reflects the following occurred:

"Q. And who was he cussing?

"A. He was cussing — He first began on Mr. Reeves, calling him all kinds of son-of-a-bitches.

"Q. Mr. who?

"A. Mr. Doug Reeves, all kinds of son-of-a-bitch, and I begged Dee to take him home and he looked up at me, he said, shut your god-damned mouth, you god-damned old bitch, said my daddy knows what I come up here for. My mother sent us up here to do a job and we are going to do it before we leave.

"Q. If you will, if a ruckus started there or if a fight started, how did it start?

"A. When he just come in a cussing about the land, he said he come up there and we were sure going to have to sign a deed, that we had deeded some land away that didn't belong to us. And we didn't have no land there to deed. We had done deeded it about seven or eight years before then. We didn't have no land down there to deed.

"Q. He said that you were going to sign a deed?

"A. He said we had to, or he was going to beat — I think, I wouldn't be for sure, he said he was going to beat something out of us. He said so much, I couldn't tell you what all he did say.

"Q. All right, what brought on the first blow and who hit the first blow.

"A. Well, Henry hit the first blow.

"Q. Well, what brought it on.

"A. He called Donald a god-damned-son-of-a-bitch and he called Henry a god-damned-son-of-a-bitch, and when he did Henry hit him in the mouth, and I got up and tried to get Dee to take him on but Dee wouldn't do it. He just stood there and laughed about it. And so I got up and I begged him, and I cried and I begged him, I said Dee take him off. And he had his bottle in his hand and he was hitting Henry in the breast with his fist. Just hitting him and I said Dee please take him off, before Henry has a heart attack. He said you shut your mouth, you god-damned-old-bitch, my daddy knows what I come up here to do. And my mother sent me up here to do it and I'm going to do it.

"Q. All right, what happened then?

"A. And then is when I went in the house and got the gun and come out and pointed it at him and told him if he didn't quit I was going to shoot him, with it. So he pushed Henry over on me and hit me right there with his fist, just as hard as he could. And when he did, I come around with the gun and meant to hit *Page 363 him. If I didn't hit him, it wasn't because I wanted to, I tried. And then he picked me up and throwed me out in the yard and he jumped out there on me and then Henry knocked him off of me, and Dee was sitting out there laughing about it. And he had me down to where I couldn't get up. He had Henry down there kicking him just as hard as he could kick him and all. So I crawled back to the door and got on the inside and I got to the telephone. It is just a little ways, my kitchen, and I called the operator and told them to get the police for me and I don't know when they left. I just don't know. I don't know no more when they left than nothing."

Mrs. Frazier further testified that both she and her husband were in the hospital for a week.

Mr. Frazier's hospital records were then introduced into evidence through Bernice Forman, the custodian of records for Mizell Memorial Hospital in Opp, Alabama.

Dr. J.E. Dunn testified that he was a general practitioner in Opp, Alabama. On August 20, 1977, Dunn examined Henry Frazier at Mizell Memorial Hospital. At that time Mr. Frazier was "quite upset," and complaining of pain in his left knee and right hand. Dunn X-rayed Mr. Frazier and admitted him to the hospital. Dr. Dunn turned the patient over to Dr. Lee who was his regular physician.

Dr. A.V. Lee testified that he examined Henry Frazier at Mizell Memorial Hospital on August 21, 1977. Lee stated that Mr. Frazier had suffered a fracture of the left femur just above the knee. Lee also noticed swelling in Mr. Frazier's right wrist; however, no fracture was present there. Mr. Frazier had had difficulty with arteriosclerosis in the past.

At this point the State rested its case and appellant made the following motion, which was denied by the trial court.

"MR. PRESTWOOD: May it please the Court, at this time we move that Your Honor exclude the evidence of the State, and the State has rested, of course.

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Bluebook (online)
366 So. 2d 360, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/frazier-v-state-alacrimapp-1978.