Graham v. State

374 So. 2d 929, 1979 Ala. Crim. App. LEXIS 1413
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Alabama
DecidedMarch 27, 1979
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 374 So. 2d 929 (Graham 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
Graham v. State, 374 So. 2d 929, 1979 Ala. Crim. App. LEXIS 1413 (Ala. Ct. App. 1979).

Opinion

374 So.2d 929 (1979)

Richard GRAHAM
v.
STATE.

4 Div. 685.

Court of Criminal Appeals of Alabama.

March 27, 1979.
Rehearing Denied April 17, 1979.

*930 David C. Emery, Ozark, for appellant.

William J. Baxley, Atty. Gen., and Edwin L. Yates, Asst. Atty. Gen., for the State, appellee.

LEIGH M. CLARK, Retired Circuit Judge.

Appellant was indicted for murder in the first degree of "Donna M. Wilcynski, by stabbing her with a knife or other sharp instrument." A jury found him guilty of murder in the first degree as charged and fixed his punishment at life imprisonment. He was sentenced accordingly.

Appellant submits as the only issue on appeal:

"Whether or not sufficient evidence was presented to sustain the verdict of first degree murder."

We have no doubt that there was bountiful evidence that the alleged victim was brutally slain, in the manner charged in the indictment, by some fiend, and that the homicide was murder in the first degree. The only controverted issue on the trial was whether defendant-appellant committed the homicide.

The record indicates, and almost conclusively shows, that there was no eyewitness to the homicide other than the victim and her murderer(s); that they were the only persons in the apartment of the victim at Byrd Apartments, Ozark, when she was killed, between 11:00 P.M. and midnight on April 11, 1978. Her death resulted from multiple stab wounds in various parts of her body, from front to back and from head to feet. They were so extensive and numerous that the physician who examined her body was unable to number them. He grouped them in a description of them in his testimony as shown by six complete pages of the record. That she was dead before or immediately after the completion of the stabbing of her, there can hardly be any doubt. Her body was not discovered until late in the afternoon on April 12, 1978, after neighboring apartment dwellers had become concerned about her, one of them noting that her automobile was at its accustomed place at the apartment, that she was nowhere to be seen, that her apartment was locked and that efforts to get her to the door were futile. One of them called an officer and soon thereafter a number of them arrived.

Upon arrival of the officers, a master key was obtained, and thereby her apartment was entered by one of the officers, who found her body in the bathtub. He promptly secured the scene and sent for an investigator of the Police Department of Ozark, *931 who soon arrived; he looked at the body in the bathtub, and then observed a three-year-old child in the bedroom of the apartment. He then called the coroner and personnel from the crime laboratory and secured the building for a thorough and accurate on-the-premises criminal investigation by experienced personnel, which was assiduously performed, continuing for about two hours at the scene. Blood samples were obtained, latent fingerprints were lifted, numerous photographs were taken, samples of hair were gathered from the apartment and other physical items of evidence were taken into custody.

The victim's body in the bathtub was lying on its back. All but the face was covered with sheets and other coverings from her bed. Upon removal of the bed coverings, her body was completely nude. There was no water in the bathtub; the drain thereof was closed. The floor of the bathroom was dry, but the carpet or rug in the hall was soaked with water, and the carpet or rugs in the victim's bedroom and in the child's bedroom were wet. A test made by an officer showed that water from the overflowing bathtub would run into portions of the floor of the apartment that were wet.

Bloodstains were found at several places in the apartment, including the mattress and the box springs of victim's bed, the floor, walls, curtains, and on the outside handle of the door to the apartment.

The furniture in the bedroom appeared to be ransacked. The living room appeared to be normal. There were pry marks on the outside of a window to the apartment.

The evidence, consisting of the testimony of twenty-seven witnesses and numerous exhibits, is almost, if not entirely, free of substantial conflict. Witnesses for the State may be grouped:

(1) Those testifying as to conduct of defendant while at Byrd Apartments on Sunday, April 9, 1978,

(2) Those testifying as to his conduct at Byrd Apartments the night of the murder, April 11, 1978,

(3) A few who heard noises in the victim's apartment between 11:00 P.M. and midnight, April 11,

(4) Expert and lay witnesses as to the condition and contents of the victim's apartment at the time her body was discovered therein in the late afternoon of April 12,

(5) Witnesses, chiefly expert witnesses, as to (a) the condition of the corpse, (b) fingerprints, (c) samples of blood found in the victim's apartment, (d) samples of hair from victim's apartment, (e) what was revealed by a search of defendant and his home, (f) statements made by defendant after the murder and (g) what was found in defendant's automobile that he was driving the night of the murder.

Evidence on behalf of defendant consisted of defendant's own testimony as to his conduct on Sunday, April 9, and on the night of the murder and the testimony of his wife, which pertained chiefly to his conduct prior to his going to the Byrd Apartments on April 11 and his return to their home after midnight of the night of the murder.

Some of the witnesses for the State who testified as to the presence and conduct of defendant at the Byrd Apartments on Sunday, April 9, 1978, said they saw him at the courtyard with his young son Sunday morning; that there was a "cookout" party that afternoon and that defendant and his son and the victim and her daughter, the child who was in the victim's apartment the night of the murder, were at the party; that defendant played with Mrs. Wilcynski's child, and inquired of some at the party as to Mrs. Wilcynski. There was some evidence that he attempted to converse with Mrs. Wilcynski but that she did not talk with him. Captain William Dortch, of the United States Army, a friend of appellant (a warrant officer of the Army) had an apartment at the Byrd Apartments. Defendant was visiting Captain Dortch on Sunday, April 9.

According to defendant's testimony, he was invited by Captain Dortch to stay for the cookout late that afternoon.

*932 Appellant returned to the apartment complex on the evening of April 11. As much of the testimony is merely cumulative as to undisputed facts, no attempt will be made to particularize the testimony of all of the individual witnesses or to name all of them.

Mrs. June Napier, who had seen appellant in the courtyard on Sunday afternoon, testified also that as she was unloading groceries from her automobile on the night of the murder, appellant approached her, picked up a bag of groceries and stated that he would help her take them up the stairs. She said,

"I told him that was all right, that I could get them and he said, `Well, I understand how it is. It's awful hard to raise children alone, isn't it?' and I told him that I wasn't alone.
". . .
"I took the groceries in the house and he just came in with a sack of groceries and put them down and—
". . .
"He was talking to me and I can't remember what he was saying, because I was in a hurry and trying to get dinner ready before Vincent [her husband] came home. I was a few minutes late, and— my little girl cut her finger.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
374 So. 2d 929, 1979 Ala. Crim. App. LEXIS 1413, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/graham-v-state-alacrimapp-1979.