Fry v. State

1950 OK CR 65, 218 P.2d 643, 91 Okla. Crim. 326, 1950 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 218
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma
DecidedMay 17, 1950
DocketA-11112
StatusPublished
Cited by45 cases

This text of 1950 OK CR 65 (Fry v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fry v. State, 1950 OK CR 65, 218 P.2d 643, 91 Okla. Crim. 326, 1950 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 218 (Okla. Ct. App. 1950).

Opinion

BRETT, J.

Plaintiff in error, Leo Fry, defendant below, was charged by information in the district court *328 of Latimer county, Okla., with the crime of the murder of Lawrence Riley on March 23, 1947. The defendant was tried, and convicted by a jury of first degree manslaughter, which fixed his punishment at 25 years in the State Penitentiary, and judgment and sentence was entered accordingly. From said judgment and sentence, this appeal has been perfected.

Defendant makes numerous assignments of error which will be considered in the order of the propositions presented in his brief. It appears from the record that as. an afterthought the defendant Tommie Burke was charged jointly with the defendant Fry with the commission of the alleged crime. A severance was granted and Fry was tried separately and convicted and sentenced as hereinbefore indicated. On the trial there was a great deal of conflict in the evidence of the state and the defendant. These conflicts are the result of what may be termed a legal dilemma. The state was compelled to rely for its evidence in chief on the oral statements made by the defendant to Sheriff Bill Alexander of Pittsburg county, Sheriff R. D. Prock of Latimer county, Deputy Sheriff DeLoach of Latimer county, and others, as to the killing, the details of some of which the defendant denied. By charging Tommie Burke as a codefendant this impasse was created. This record certainly does not support a charge of murder against Tommie Burke. It presents him only. in the role of a bystander and not a participant. The state gained nothing by charging Burke. The procedure adopted was unnecessary since the defendant admitted the killing, and the stories related by the officers, as well as the defendant, as to the reason and the manner thereof in the main were substantially the same. The conflicts in the evidence appear as to incidental matters. A brief resume of the evidence discloses *329 the following uncontroverted and uncontradicted facts. It appears that the defendant Fry was 28 years of age, that he had lost a leg in an oil field accident some years prior to the crime herein involved, had an artificial leg, and at the time of the killing his home was in Harts-horne, Pittsburg county, Okla., though he had formerly lived in Latimer county. Before the killing on August 23, 1947, the defendant and decedent Lawrence Riley were friends. On Friday afternoon of August 22, 1947, the defendant and the deceased Lawrence Riley, together with the codefendant Tommie Burke and a Mrs. Whaley, met at a beer parlor in Hartshorne, Okla., around 5:30 p. m. There they engaged in beer drinking until about dark, or around 8:30, when they all loaded into Tommie Burke’s truck, and went to a place designated as Antonel-li’s and run by a Mr. Pat Mahan, where they continued their drinking until around midnight when the proprietor moved them out and closed up. Mrs. Whaley was a relative of the defendant’s brother’s wife. During the round of drinking at Antonelli’s the victim of the killing left with Mrs. Whaley and they were gone 20 or 30 minutes. They returned about 11:30 p. m. Shortly thereafter Mrs. Whaley left with some friends. Thereafter the defendant rebuked Riley for taking her out and admonished him “Lawrence, if I were you I would be careful with that woman. She has got some little children”, to which Riley replied “Its none of your damned business. What you. need is a good working over”. The uncontradicted record shows that Fry challenged Riley to go outside. Defendant admits that he did so. A difficulty between them was prevented there only by the intervention of Mr. Mahan who told them he did not want them to have any trouble in his place. They obliged and resumed their beer drinking until he closed up. Some time during the drinking they were joined by Jody Critchard. About mid *330 night Riley, Burke, Critchard and the defendant got into Burke’s truck and drove to Gowen where Critchard got out. The record shows from the time of the difficulty at Antonelli’s there were no further words between Fry and Riley. Leaving Gowen they proceeded down Highway 270 towards Hartshorne but in Latimer county. According to the statement given to the officers by the defendant shortly after his arrest, just east of the Pittsburg county line, Riley, who was then driving, drove the auto onto a sideroad about 30 ór 40 feet and abruptly stopped, and according to the record became the aggressor, saying “Here is where something is going to happen”. He got out of the truck and came around to Fry’s side, Burke being in the middle of the seat. Burke said “Lawrence, there is no use of that”. The defendant opened the door and said “Lawrence, there is no use of having any trouble”. The defendant tried to push him back with his foot, and Riley grabbed and pulled him out of the truck. The defendant tried to get away, started around the truck but Riley jerked him back and turned him around and said “You son-of-a-bitch, this is where you get yours” and struck him on the left shoulder with some kind of heavy instrument. The record does not disclose what kind of instrument he used, nor does the record show that anything in the nature of such an instrument was found other than a wrench which belonged to the defendant and was in the defendant Fry’s left hip pocket at the time the alleged assault was made upon him. Fry says the blow staggered him and the next think he knew they were on the ground. He said Riley was on top of him, choking and beating him. He said he could hardly breathe, that he was afraid that he would choke him to death. The defendant then got his pocketknife out and stabbed Riley in the left leg, he said, to get him off, as he feared for his life. The wound thus *331 inflicted resulted in severing the femoral artery and the saphenous vein so that Riley bled to death within a few minutes thereafter. Such is the evidence of the killing as delineated by the officers, as it was told to them by the defendant and as testified to by the defendant in his own behalf.

The conflicts in the evidence that appear in the record and which no doubt played an important part in the verdict were as follows: The defendant testified the reason he remonstrated about the deceased’s attention to Mrs. Whaley was because the deceased had confided in him some time before that he had a venereal disease. He did not know how, when or where or who was present when this information was conveyed to him but that Burke heard it. Burke, of course, being a codefendant and having asked for a severance in the case did not testify. It appears that Riley did not tell the facts to the officers as to the reason he remonstrated with Riley, when they first interrogated him. Moreover the record shows a short time before the crime Riley had had a blood test and had given blood for transfusion for his father-in-law. The test did not disclose any trace of a venereal disease. No one else testified to Riley being so infected. In light of the test this cast a bad light upon the claim of Riley’s being infected with a venereal disease. In fact, it gave it the appearance of being a defense figment of .Fry’s imagination. Riley’s wife testified he never had a venereal disease. Another conflict which reflected on the defendant’s character for truthfulness was the evidence when first interrogated by the officers he said a hitchhiker whose name was Bill killed Riley. Only after Burke told Officer Alexander that the story was not true did the defendant tell that he himself killed Riley.

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Bluebook (online)
1950 OK CR 65, 218 P.2d 643, 91 Okla. Crim. 326, 1950 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 218, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fry-v-state-oklacrimapp-1950.