Green v. State

1957 OK CR 116, 319 P.2d 321, 1957 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 233
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma
DecidedDecember 11, 1957
DocketA-12458
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 1957 OK CR 116 (Green 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
Green v. State, 1957 OK CR 116, 319 P.2d 321, 1957 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 233 (Okla. Ct. App. 1957).

Opinion

POWELL, Judge.

Claude Green was charged by information filed in the district court of Choctaw County with the crime of murder, was tried before a jury and convicted of the included offense of manslaughter in the first degree, and his punishment fixed at ten years confinement in the State Penitentiary.

The information charged that the defendant did on the 1st day of July, 1956, make an assault upon Alean Green (his divorced wife) with a certain loaded pistol, and that he shot her and she died from the effect of the wounds inflicted.

For reversal of the conviction, six specifications of error are advanced, which will be considered in the order presented. But a short summary of the evidence is indicated for clear understanding.

The deceased, Alean Green, was the mother of three girls, the eldest 15 years, another 13, and a younger girl. They lived with her in the rear of a beer tavern located on the Hugo-Paris, Texas, highway, and north of Red River. The defendant was the father of the children, and he and the deceased had only recently been divorced, and had prior to the divorce jointly operated the beer tavern, but the wife in the divorce proceeding had gained the care and custody of the children, and title to the tavern fixtures, to afford her a business for the support of the family.

Defendant said that he arrived at the beer tavern on- the Red River to see his children and confer with his ex-wife the morning of July 1, 1956.

Verdie Lee Green, daughter, aged 13 years, testified that her father arrived about 9 o’clock; that the family was up and a man called “Sis” was in the tavern; that her father and mother visited and then her father left but came back after a time. The eldest daughter and her boy friend had left the place at the time the father returned. Witness was asked if she heard any conversation between her mother and father, after he came back. She testified:

“A. Yes, sir, when he came back. You know he went off and came back, and me and her [her mother] and my littlest sister went to the car and he said he wanted to take us to town to the show, and she said, 'Claude, go on and cool off, if you come back maybe they can go somewhere with you’, and *324 she went in the house. She did not get all the way until he got his gun out and she came back and I followed her.
“Q. I did not follow you. When your mother told him to go on and cool off, what did your mother do? A. Christine went in and I went in. She got in two or three steps of the house and I guess she saw him in the window, there was a mirror at the window, and she turned and hit me on the leg and I turned to the door and then I followed her.
“Q. Did you see your father? A. Yes, sir, I saw him out of the window.
“Q. What was he doing? A. He was fooling with the gun. I don’t know what he was doing with it.
“Q. While your mother was at the house? A. Yes, sir.
“Q. And she had told your father to go on and cool off? A. And come hack.
“Q. And you and her and Christine, your baby sister had gone to the house ? A. We got in the house. She got in two or three steps and turned around and hit me on the leg, didn’t mean to, and kind of grabbed me and I turned around and followed her out of the door.
“Q. At the time you turned around was your mother still in the house ? A. No, I don’t know how many steps she took out of the door. I got about one step out of the door.
“Q. You say when you turned around you could see your father ? A. Yes, out of the window.
“Q. And your mother had just turned around to go out of the doorway? A. I don’t know how many, one or two steps and I followed her and took about one step out of the house.
“Q. And your father was in the yard? A. Yes, sir.
“Q. When you first turned around did he have the gun in his hand at that time? A. Yes, sir.
“Q. What did your mother do then? A. She went towards him and he was backing up.
“Q. What did she say ? A. ‘Claude, don’t do’ — and that was all, she got a part of that, but didn’t get all that out of her mouth.”

She testified that her father fell to the ground after backing up. Her mother was on the ground, and she went to her father and took his hand that was holding the gun and admonished him, “Don’t do that.” She said that her father got up and got help to put her mother in a car for the purpose of taking her to a hospital in Paris, Texas. Other parties took her mother to the hospital.

Claudette Green testified that her father called at her mother’s place in Choctaw County the morning of July 1, 1956, and she observed them talking. She was asked:

“Q. Do you know anything at all about what they were talking about at that time? A. No, sir, except she wanted him to go on and leave her alone. She wanted him to leave.
“Q. Did she say why? A. She wanted him to quit pestering her.
“Q. Was your father that morning imbibing any, in other words, could you say whether or not your father was drinking? A. I don’t know. He either had been drinking or he was drinking.
“Q. He left the impression with you that he was somewhat under the influence of intoxicating liquor? A. I guess so. I am not sure, but he had the odor of it.”

She testified to having heard her father, after the divorce proceedings were instituted by her mother, threaten to kill her if she did not live with him.

On cross-examination by defense counsel, it was developed that the deceased and de *325 fendant quarrelled frequently, but witness denied that she had heard her mother threaten her father. She said that she had seen her father strike her mother. She denied hearing her father say, “Now, Alean, I know you are sick with diabetes and I am not going to fight you”. She did admit that her mother had fought with her father. She was asked: “But most of the time he would stand and let your mama beat him, wouldn’t he? A. That was because he wasn’t able to hit back, he was intoxicated.”

Clarence Clawston testified to being at Mrs. Alean Green’s place the morning of July 1, 1956. And to Mrs. Green getting in defendant’s car and talking with him for quite a while; to defendant leaving and thereafter returning. He said that he was in the place reading a book on astrology; that he first sat at the counter and then got in a booth. He heard the defendant and deceased talking outside and heard the defendant mention that he wanted to take the children to a show, or some place. He denied ever advising Mrs. Green not to permit the defendant to do that. He said that he heard a shot fired and that he got up; that he was in a booth next to a window on the north side; that he looked out and saw defendant with a gun in his hand; that the deceased was four or five feet away. He said that Mr.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1957 OK CR 116, 319 P.2d 321, 1957 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 233, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/green-v-state-oklacrimapp-1957.