Gosa v. State

139 So. 2d 321, 273 Ala. 346, 1961 Ala. LEXIS 595
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedSeptember 28, 1961
Docket6 Div. 650
StatusPublished
Cited by35 cases

This text of 139 So. 2d 321 (Gosa v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gosa v. State, 139 So. 2d 321, 273 Ala. 346, 1961 Ala. LEXIS 595 (Ala. 1961).

Opinion

*348 COLEMAN, Justice.

This is an appeal from a judgment whereby defendant was found guilty of murder in the first degree and sentenced to death by electrocution.

The evidence tended to show that defendant killed his five-year-old daughter by stabbing her. Defendant and his wife had been divorced, remarried, and again divorced. They were living apart at the time of the homicide. Their two children, the deceased daughter and an eleven-year-old son, were living with the mother.

About 5 p..m., January 27, 1959, when it was beginning to get dark, defendant came to the front door of the mother’s house. She saw defendant through glass in the door. He “was ramming at the door.” The mother told the children to follow her out the back door. The girl went back in the house and the boy followed the mother who heard the girl calling. The mother went to a neighbor’s house and called the police. The boy testified that he went back into the house and saw defendant running out the door and the daughter lying on the floor. On returning to the home, the mother found the daughter on her knees in the living room, dead.

The coroner testified that he went to the house about 6 p. m., found the screen door latch pulled loose and on the floor, the bedroom door had been splintered, the closet door was standing open and the jamb behind it was splintered. A blood stained butcher knife was found in the-front yard. The knife belonged to the-kitchen of defendant’s uncle’s house where defendant was living and where he ate supper about 5 p. m. on the day of the-homicide. The child’s body showed one stab wound, extending into the body six or seven inches. The wound severed the breast bone and went through the heart and liver into the stomach. The aorta was severed.

By order of the court dated March 2, 1959, defendant was committed to the State Hospital for the Insane at Mt. Vernon for observation. In April, 1960, the Superintendent of the Hospital and two assistants filed their report, which states in pertinent part as follows:

“After full study and a long period of observation, it is the opinion of each of us separately, and our opinion jointly and collectively, that the said Wilmon Gosa is presently sane and competent. It is also our opinion that he was sane and competent at the time of his admission in Searcy Hospital. It is our further opinion that this patient, at the time of the commission of the crime for which he is charged, had for a period of time been under considerable stress and as a result was abnormally depressed. This depression was evidenced by some concern about continuing to live under what he considered extremely stressful circumstances, that is being separated from his wife and children. There is some evidence in the history that he considered ending his life and there is further evidence that immediately after the commitment of the act for which he is charged, he seemed little concerned about what would happen to him. There is further the history of his drinking rubbing alcohol and a mouth wash preparation prior to his visit to his wife’s home and the commitment of the act for which he is charged. While this Commission *349 did not have a chance to observe or examine the patient shortly before he committed the act or immediately after, it is impossible to state positively that there is exhibited mental illness at the time; however, examination and interviews with the patient doej bring in our mind strongly the possibility of the . existence of an abnormally disturbed mental state at the time of the commission of the crime. We do feel, as stated above, that he presently is sane and competent.”

On the night of the homicide, and shortly thereafter, defendant wrecked his automobile and was hospitalized. A deputy sheriff testified that defendant said he was trying to get away and that he had stabbed his daughter for “revenge from his wife,” and that defendant also told the deputy that defendant had been drinking rubbing alcohol, “about half a bottle,” on the night of the homicide. A week or two later defendant was again hospitalized with a head injury, allegedly caused by attempted suicide.

Defendant offered evidence to show that his general reputation was good. Defendant testified concerning his military service, his marriage, his divorces and his work.

He testified that on the day he was arrested he worked, that he was worried about something, that he had been concerned about his former wife and children and had financial problems, that after work that day he went to his uncle’s house, that he did not know whether he tried to eat, that he did not think he ate anything, that he did remember drinking a pint of rubbing alcohol and a pint and a half of mouthwash, and that he remembered nothing after drinking the alcohol and antiseptic until he was in a jail cell where some man asked defendant “Did you go to your daughter’s funeral ?”

On cross-examination, defendant testified that he did not remember anything about being at the hospital, or talking to a deputy sheriff who had testified as to a statement made by defendant, or signing his name to a statement, or making a statement, or the night his daughter met her death, or leaving his place of employment that day. In the record of the cross-examination of defendant the following appears:

“Q. What you are trying to do, Wilmon, is to come up here today and play crazy so these gentlemen won’t send you to the electric chair, isn’t that what you are tryiñg to do ?
“Mr. Edward deGraffenried: We object to that statement. It was not a question. It was a statement.
“Mr. Nicol: It is cross examination.
“Mr. deGraffenried: And we want to move to exclude it. First, I want to object to that. We object to it, and move to exclude that statement from the jury. Illegal and prejudicial for the Solicitor to make such a statement.
“The Court: Overruled.
“Mr. deGraffenried: We except. And then we also make a motion for a mistrial on the strength of that statement being highly prejudicial, and cannot be completely removed from the jurors’ mind.
“The Court: Overruled.
“Mr. deGraffenried: We except.
“Q. You told Mr. Evans over there in the jail, then, you did not want to die, didn’t you? A. I don’t remember telling anyone that.”

Defendant argues that the court erred in overruling appellant’s motion for a mistrial based on the “highly prejudicial questions or statements made by the solicitor” to the defendant.

The question objected to was not answered. The rule is that improper questions not answered are harmless. Plant v. State, 140 Ala. 52, 37 So. 159; Strickland v. State, 269 Ala. 573, 114 So.2d 407. If the question be regarded as a statement, as appellant insists, it does not assume the *350 existence of an independent fact as did the question in Wright v. State, 247 Ala. 180, 23 So.2d 519, where the question tended to show defendant’s conviction of a separate offense. In Bell v. State, 140 Ala. 57, 37 So.

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Bluebook (online)
139 So. 2d 321, 273 Ala. 346, 1961 Ala. LEXIS 595, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gosa-v-state-ala-1961.