Goodman v. State

291 So. 2d 358, 52 Ala. App. 265, 1974 Ala. Crim. App. LEXIS 1067
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Alabama
DecidedMarch 5, 1974
Docket6 Div. 652
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 291 So. 2d 358 (Goodman 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
Goodman v. State, 291 So. 2d 358, 52 Ala. App. 265, 1974 Ala. Crim. App. LEXIS 1067 (Ala. Ct. App. 1974).

Opinion

HARRIS, Judge.

Appellant was convicted of murder in the first degree and sentenced to life imprisonment. He made known to the court that he was unable to employ counsel to defend him, and the court appointed two distinguished and outstanding members of the Cullman Bar to represent him.. These two lawyers were present at the arraignment when appellant pleaded not guilty, and they also represent him on appeal.

At the time of his death Frank Luker was 51 years of age. He and his wife operated a combination grocery store and service station in the Jones Chapel Community of Cullman County. The Luker home was about one-hundred feet from the store. On the second day of January, 1973, Mrs. Luker left the store around five thirty p. m. and went to their home. Some thirty minutes later, Mr. Luker came to the house mortally wounded from a pistol shot wound and was bleeding profusely. He feel to his knees and said to his wife, “Oh, Lord, Iris, Oh, Lord, Iris. I am shot. I am dying.” His wife asked him who did it and he said, “It was that Hartselle gang.” He then fell on the floor and said, “You told me.” He was dead on arrival at the hospital.

When Mrs. Luker left the store, she saw a green or blue car parked in the lot of a church near the store. She saw two men on the front seat and thought she saw a third person on the back seat. She had never seen the defendant before the trial. She knew a Harold Singleton, who was also indicted for the death of her husband. Singleton pleaded guilty. She also knew one Billy Patterson, who testified for the state and implicated both the defendant and Singleton. Patterson was not indicted.

Mrs. Luker further testified that in September, 1972, she and her husband were sitting on the porch of the store when a *268 car occupied by Singleton, Patterson and two others on the back seat drove up and parked about twenty-five feet from the store. Someone in the cat called Mr. Luker over, and he talked to the occupants for a few minutes and the car was driven away. Some time later, this same car came back and a colored man got out and walked by the store. They watched him walk out of sight going toward Cullman.

In November and December, 1972, Singleton and Patterson were back at the store again. In December, they came in the store and stayed a few minutes. Around noon on the day of the homicide, Singleton came in the store alone and had a brief conversation with Mr. Luker. Mr. Luker left the store to pick up a plate lunch at a nearby cafe for Mrs. Luker, and Singleton went with him but did not come back with her husband.

In September, 1972, about four months before Mr. Luker was murdered, a conspiracy to rob him was formed in a pool hall in Hartselle, Alabama. Those participating in this conspiracy were appellant, Harold Singleton and Billy Patterson. Appellant and Singleton came to the pool hall to see if Patterson, a part-time employee there, was interested in helping them pull the robbery. According to Patterson, the plan was to drive up to the gas pump and when Mr. Luker came out to service the car, they would force him into the car and drive away. They were going to lock him in the trunk of the car and then abandon the car. The driver was to wear a wig and one of the others, wearing a mask, was to lie down on the back seat until Mr. Luker came to the car. They bought a wig and made a mask with eye holes from the sleeve of a sweater. They purchased a roll of tape to tie up the victim. Patterson was not familiar with the Luker place and wanted to look it over before deciding if he wanted to be involved.

Patterson was an ex-federal convict. He had served three terms in a federal penitentiary, one for burglary, one for violating, the Federal Firearms Act — possession of a sawed-off shotgun, and a parole violation. While in prison, he became friendly with a negro convict named French Ford. Patterson wanted Ford in on the robbery. Ford was living in Atlanta, Georgia, and sometime in September, 1972, Patterson went to Atlanta and got Ford. Ford registered in a motel in Decatur, Alabama. Ford, too, wanted to see the Luker place before making up his mind about participating in the robbery. Patterson left Hartselle in his car with appellant and Singleton and drove to Decatur to pick up Ford. The four then drove to Mr. Luker’s place and Ford got out and walked by the store. After the trip, Patterson told appellant and Singleton that he didn’t want to have anything to do with the robbery, “because there wasn’t any way you could get away from there.” Ford said he didn’t want to have anything to do with the robbery either. The four left Cullman County and went to a motel in Decatur where Patterson went to sleep. Sometime later, appellant waked him and said someone was at the door. Appellant opened the door and found Sergeant R. E. Hancock, a Criminal Investigator with the Alabama State Department of Public Safety, and two other law officers. They had a warrant for appellant’s arrest. While making the arrest, the officers found a wig, a mask and a roll of tape. The officers confiscated these items, and they were introduced at appellant’s trial, after being identified by Patterson.

After appellant was released from jail, he returned to the motel and tried to persuade Patterson to go with him and Singleton to rob Mr. Luker, but Patterson refused to go with them.

The night before the murder, Singleton drove his automobile to a local auto parts company. There was another man in the car with him. A short time later, Singleton’s car was seen leaving this place and was followed by another automobile. The *269 owner of this business testified that he had two green Bel-Air Chevrolet automobiles on his lot at the time Singleton came to the lot. One of these automobiles was missing from this lot the next morning. After the murder, the officers found this automobile parked on a road eight-tenths of a mile from the Luker store. The motor was still running, but no one was around the car. It had been abandoned.

On the morning of January 3, 1973, Patterson learned that Mr. Luker had been killed the night before. Around one p. m. on that date, Singleton went to the pool hall in Hartselle and told Patterson that he and appellant wanted to go to Southgate, Michigan, but neither of them had a driver’s license and asked Patterson to drive them. Patterson drove them to Southgate in Singleton’s 1969 Nova Chevrolet. They went through West Virginia, Kentucky and Cincinnati, Ohio, on the way to Michigan. Appellant drove the automobile from Cincinnati to Southgate and Patterson rode in the back seat. During this trip, Singleton said he hoped no one saw them throw the gun in the waters of Flint Creek (in Cull-man County), and appellant said he didn’t think anyone saw them as there was an old house near the creek, and he didn’t think anyone lived there.

When they arrived in Southgate, Singleton made contact with a used car dealer and traded his Nova Chevrolet for a 1968 Ford automobile and a cash difference of $225.00 He requested the dealer to put title to the Ford in Patterson’s name. The dealer lived in Somerset, Kentucky, and the trio had to go to Somerset to get the title papers. They arrived in Somerset on Saturday and learned they could not get the title papers until the following Monday. They registered in a local motel. The Somerset police arrested all three men and charged them with possession of burglary tools.

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Bluebook (online)
291 So. 2d 358, 52 Ala. App. 265, 1974 Ala. Crim. App. LEXIS 1067, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/goodman-v-state-alacrimapp-1974.