Goldsmith v. State

344 So. 2d 793, 1977 Ala. Crim. App. LEXIS 1493
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Alabama
DecidedFebruary 1, 1977
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 344 So. 2d 793 (Goldsmith 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
Goldsmith v. State, 344 So. 2d 793, 1977 Ala. Crim. App. LEXIS 1493 (Ala. Ct. App. 1977).

Opinion

Murder, first degree; life.

I
The State filed a motion to strike the entire record and dismiss the appeal based on an alleged late filing of the record.

The record indicates that on August 5, 1975, judgment was rendered and a notice of appeal was given. On September 3, 1975, the motion for a new trial was filed and a hearing held. After the expiration of four thirty-day continuances, ranging from October 2, 1975 to January 2, 1976, the record on appeal was filed with this court on May 28, 1976. In a supplemental record filed with this court on June 18, 1976, there was an order dated June 16, 1976, denying the motion for a new trial. The order also stated that the motion was taken under advisement by the trial court on February 2, 1976. Basically, the State maintained there should have been continuances for the motion for the new trial until there was a ruling on it. The State contends, the beginning of the running of time for filing the transcript was the date from the notice of *Page 794 appeal and not the time of the ruling on the motion.

The rule outlined in Holman v. Baker, 277 Ala. 310,169 So.2d 429, is that the taking of the motion under advisement operates to keep the motion alive and the matter rests in the breast of the court until a judgment on the motion is rendered.

In following this rule, the motion for a new trial would have continued to be alive in the breast of the court for the duration of the period that the court was considering the matter so that the time for filing the transcript with this court would have been computed from the date the court denied the motion for a new trial.

II
On Friday, March 8, 1975, Gladys Goldsmith left her home in New York and came to Montgomery to attend the funeral of her brother. She was accompanied by her brother, J.D. Morris and his friend, Debbie Foster. On their arrival, they went to the St. Francis Motel where they spent the night with her brother and Foster occupying one room and Gladys Goldsmith occupying another, alone.

Sometime in the early morning hours of Saturday, March 9, Gladys Goldsmith gave birth to a male child. She was alone at the time and according to her statement to the police, she blacked out after giving birth to the baby. In her statement, she related that she left the child on the bed until after 1:00 P.M. and then after inserting the baby in a paper bag, placed it in a suitcase. Subsequently, she dressed and after they placed the luggage in the car, they drove to her mother's house at 3428 Homeview Street in Montgomery, where the suitcase was placed in a bedroom. They then left and attended her brother's funeral in Autauga County.

Ada Mae Thomas testified that she was the appellant's aunt and was present at the Homeview Street address on the day in question. She stated that Elaine Morris told her that she had heard a baby crying in a suitcase. Thomas went to the back room and picked up the suitcase and laid it down. She stated that: "There was something moving in there that I could hear . . . like some kind of whine. . . . Whine, going on, you know, like they were smothering." Thomas said she did not open the suitcase but called her eight-year-old nephew, Bruce Morris, to open it. In the suitcase she saw a baby in a brown paper sack along with some dirt and a green pants suit. The baby was alive and according to some witnesses, there was blood on the child and the sack. According to Elaine Morris it was around 2:00 P.M. when they discovered the baby in the suitcase. Various other witnesses testified that they saw the baby during that time and that it was having difficulty in breathing.

Roberta Minor was present when the baby was discovered and stated that she had seen the appellant wearing the green pants suit found in the suitcase.

None of the witnesses had any knowledge of the appellant's pregnancy.

Shortly after the discovery, the police were summoned and in ten or twenty minutes they arrived and the baby was taken to St. Margaret's Hospital.

Subsequently, the appellant returned to her mother's house after the funeral and when she made her identity known to the police, she was taken to the Youth Aid Division of the police department for questioning. There she was informed that she was charged with assault with intent to murder and questioned about the baby. After signing a form waiving her "Miranda rights," she gave a statement which she signed.

On the morning of March 10, 1975, the baby died. Dr. Keith Hester was the pathologist at St. Margaret's Hospital, who performed the autopsy. According to Dr. Hester, the cause of death was "adrenal hemorrhages" and in addition, "there was pulmonary edema, some hemorrhage into the lungs and failure of complete expansion of the lungs." The doctor said that the adrenal hemorrhage was due to shock and indicated that it caused the baby's death. *Page 795 He said the shock was due to the baby not being cleaned or having his air passages cleared and from not being kept warm. Dr. Hester testified that he knew nothing about the baby except what was on the hospital chart and that his only encounter with it was during the autopsy. On cross-examination Dr. Hester stated there was no indication of strangulation, bruises or anything that would indicate physical mistreatment.

At the completion of Dr. Hester's testimony, the State rested its case and the defense called Dr. Thomas Nolin, after its motion to exclude was overruled.

Dr. Nolin's specialty was pediatrics. He testified that the baby came in during the early afternoon of March 9, 1975, about 3:00 P.M. Dr. Nolin said that in his very brief examination of the baby, he pulled the blanket from it and determined the baby had been carried a full term of pregnancy. It was active and still covered with the "usual body juices." Further, he said that the umbilical cord was nice and clean but that the child seemed cold. He also stated that the baby was very active and alert and seemed to be slightly larger than an average baby. Dr. Nolin said that except for being cold, the baby was normal. He acknowledged writing a summary of the baby's case for the hospital records. In that discharge summary, he referred to a possible coagulation deficit that could have caused or been a contributing factor in the baby's death. According to Dr. Nolin: "The fact that the baby had unusually prolonged bleeding at the sight of the puncture done on its heel, for routine blood work and blood sugar," supported his ". . . finding as far as clotting deficiency." The doctor added that he did not give the baby a thorough physical because he thought the most urgent thing was to get it warm.

The defense next called Dr. Charles Harold Smith, a physician practicing psychiatry in Montgomery, Alabama. He testified that he had seen the appellant, Gladys Goldsmith, on March 28 and again on March 31, 1975. The meetings were in his office and were for about an hour each. Dr. Smith stated that it was his impression that, at the time of the original interview, the appellant was suffering from extreme depression which was very close to becoming a psychotic depression. Further, at the time he saw her on March 28 she was not legally insane and was able to distinguish right from wrong. Dr. Smith could not say with medical certainty that appellant was psychotic at the time of the incident, but did say that there was better than a "50/50" chance that she was.

On the second day of the trial, Gladys Goldsmith was called to testify in her own behalf. She stated that she worked for a senior citizen's home in New York where she had lived for nine years. Appellant said that she was married and the mother of four children.

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Related

Partridge v. State
431 So. 2d 1377 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Alabama, 1983)
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367 So. 2d 998 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Alabama, 1979)

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Bluebook (online)
344 So. 2d 793, 1977 Ala. Crim. App. LEXIS 1493, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/goldsmith-v-state-alacrimapp-1977.