Fry v. State

1974 OK CR 227, 529 P.2d 521
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma
DecidedDecember 12, 1974
DocketF-74-357
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 1974 OK CR 227 (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, 1974 OK CR 227, 529 P.2d 521 (Okla. Ct. App. 1974).

Opinion

OPINION

BUSSEY, Judge:

Appellant, Howard Lewis Fry, hereinafter referred to as defendant, was charged, *522 tried and convicted in the District Court, Nowata. County in Case No. CRF-69-137, for the offense of Murder. He was sentenced to life imprisonment and from said judgment and sentence has made a timely appeal to this Court.

Briefly stated, the facts show that on October 26, 1969, the defendant allegedly shot and killed one Maynard “Rusty” Stan-art in Nowata, Oklahoma. On motion of his attorneys, the defendant was committed to Eastern State Hospital in Vinita for mental observation on December 9, 1969 and was subsequently deemed by hospital psychiatrists as not being sane or able to participate in his own defense efforts at trial. On September 26, 1973, the court was notified by hospital officials that the defendant was deemed presently sane and now able to stand trial. Therefore, on December 3, 4 and 5, 1973, the defendant’s trial was held.

At the trial Mrs. Juanita Moody, whose name, on October 26, 1969, was Juanita Hewitt, testified that on that date she resided at 428 S. Pecan in Nowata with her daughter and the deceased. After identifying the defendant at trial the witness told the jury that on October 26, 1969, in the early morning hours, the defendant tore her front screen door open, broke the front door glass and entered her home. At the time, her daughter was in the back of the house asleep and the deceased was in bed in the front bedroom located to the left of the front door. She said that as soon as the defendant entered the house he walked directly to the front bedroom, saying nothing and closing the door behind him. Mrs. Moody testified that she heard no conversation or noise of any kind, but that moments later the defendant emerged from the bedroom and told her “I killed Rusty.” (Tr. 12) She said that she went into the bedroom to investigate and the defendant proceeded to use her telephone to call Mrs. Moody’s mother, the now deceased Mrs. Lettie Riley. According to the witness the defendant told her mother that he had killed Rusty and that she (Mrs. Riley) should come and be with Juanita (Mrs. Moody) saying “I don’t want her by herself.” (Tr. 13) After making the call the defendant left the house carrying with him what was described by the witness as a “long gun.”

On cross-examination Mrs. Moody admitted that she and the deceased had been living together for over a year. She also testified that she had not seen the defendant for more than six months before the incident.

Next to testify was F. E. “Cotton” Snider, an investigator with the District Attorney’s office in Nowata County. Mr. Snider said that he arrived at the scene at approximately 2:15 a. m. and he identified State’s Exhibits No. 1 and No. 2 as photographs of the front door, depicting how it looked when he arrived. He also identified State’s Exhibit No. 3, a picture of the deceased’s body, which he took. Following his identification, the Exhibits were admitted into evidence.

Dr. John R. Reid, former medical examiner for Nowata County, testified that he received a call at 1:40 a. m. on October 26, 1969 regarding a fatal shooting and that when he arrived at the residence on Pecan he found the body of Maynard “Rusty” Stanart.

Ray Lambert, Firearms Examiner for the Oklahoma State Bureau of Investigation, testified that he examined one rifle slug from a shot shell and four shot shell wads submitted to him by F. E. Snider from the October 26, 1969 shooting. The witness identified the items marked as State’s Exhibits Nos. 4 through 6 as a slug and wads from a .410 rifle shell. Following this testimony, the objects were admitted into evidence.

The State concluded its case with Dr. Jess Green, who on October 26, 1969, was the Deputy State Medical Examiner for Northeast Oklahoma. Dr. Green told the jury that on October 26, at approximately 11:15 a. m., he performed an autopsy on Maynard Lee “Rusty” Stanart and determined that his death was the result of a gunshot wound to the left chest. He iden *523 tified Exhibit No. 4 as resembling the spent bullet he removed from the deceased and said that he had also removed several pieces of cotton wadding from the chest cavity.

Testifying for the defense, Rogers County Sheriff Amos Ward said that he first met the defendant in 1966 when called to the defendant’s wife’s home to quell a disturbance in which the defendant had allegedly been firing a gun into the ground and air around a group of children at a party. Charges were filed in the incident but later dismissed when the defendant entered the Veteran’s Hospital for treatment. The Sheriff testified that he next saw the defendant in 1968 when he was being committed to Eastern State Hospital at Vinita.

Ava Powell, a semi-retired Associate District Judge of District 12 in Northeastern Oklahoma, testified that it was he who committed the defendant to the Vinita hospital in 1968 following a complete sanity hearing conducted by two doctors and a lawyer. The judge testified that at the time there was no question in his mind that the defendant was mentally disturbed and should be committed. Judge Powell testified that some time after this hearing he received a threatening telephone call from the defendant who was at that time undergoing treatment in the Veteran’s Hospital in Topeka. The judge further testified that he was notified on the night of the Nowata shooting that the defendant had shot a man in Nowata and was reportedly coming to “get” him. He added that the defendant was apprehended a few hours later, however.

John Carle, an attorney from Claremore, testified that he had known the defendant since 1966 when he represented the defendant’s late wife in their divorce and that during that time period the defendant had threatened his life. He said that he had also represented the opposing party in a child custody suit involving the defendant’s son, and that as a result of the defendant’s behavior he had bought a gun to protect himself. Mr. Carle also told the jury that to his knowledge from 1967 to 1969 the defendant was from time to time committed to either the State Hospital at Vinita or a Veteran’s Hospital.

The final witness at the trial was Dr. R. D. Garcia, a forensic psychiatrist at Eastern State Hospital, who testified that he first spoke with the defendant in October, 1972 and later performed the psychiatric examination on him on September 25, 1973, at which time it was found that he was presently sane and, also at which time, the defendant denied any involvement in the Nowata shooting.

Dr. Garcia testified that his diagnostic impression of the defendant was that of schizophrenia and that during the active processes of the problem the schizophrenic person would be incapable of distinguishing right from wrong. He further testified that since the defendant had been hospitalized he had shown remarkable improvement, a remission of the mental condition, but that it could relapse at any time. He also pointed out that the defendant had been hospitalized for three years and ten months.

At that time defendant’s Exhibit No. 1, a letter from the late Dr. Peterson of Eastern State Hospital, who had first examined the defendant when he was admitted in 1969, was introduced. In that letter the defendant was termed psychotic and unable to distinguish right from wrong. Dr. Garcia also testified that:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1974 OK CR 227, 529 P.2d 521, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fry-v-state-oklacrimapp-1974.