Grubbs v. State

1966 OK CR 42, 413 P.2d 328, 1966 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 221
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma
DecidedApril 13, 1966
DocketA-13735
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 1966 OK CR 42 (Grubbs 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
Grubbs v. State, 1966 OK CR 42, 413 P.2d 328, 1966 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 221 (Okla. Ct. App. 1966).

Opinion

BRETT, Judge:

This is a post-conviction appeal, permitted under the provisions of Senate Bill No. ■152, passed by the Oklahoma Legislature in 1965.

This is the fourth time this defendant has been before this Court in connection with this same conviction. On July 8, 1964 -he filed an application for mandamus to require the district court of Tulsa County to furnish him a case made, without cost to him. Writ was denied on July 22, 1964. Grubbs v. Johnson, District Judge, Okl.Cr., 394 P.2d 540.

Thereafter, on November 4, 1964 defendant filed herein an instrument denominated a “Petition for writ of error coram nobis,” which was treated as a petition for writ of habeas corpus, and denied on December 9, 1964. Grubbs v. State, Okl.Cr., 397 P.2d 522.

On May 7, 1965 defendant filed an application for post-conviction appeal under the provisions of Senate Bill No. 152. All of defendant’s pleadings up to and including this application were prepared and filed by him without the assistance of counsel. On June 10, 1965 we granted an appeal (In re Grubbs’ Appeal, Okl.Cr., 403 P.2d 260), and ordered the district court of Tulsa County to have the court reporter prepare a case made in case No. 20505 in said court, State of Oklahoma v. Delmar Johnson Grubbs; and to appoint an attorney to perfect such appeal to this Court. This order has been carried out.

Petition in error with case made attached was filed on July 14, 1965 by the attorney appointed by the court to represent defendant in the appeal of his case tried on April 15 and 16, 1964. This attorney subsequently filed a brief in support of his petition in error. In his brief counsel asked permission to file a supplemental brief, and the Court, when the case was submitted, allowed him ten days in which to do so, but no further brief has been filed. The Attorney General duly filed a brief on behalf of the State.

A statement of the facts in this case seems to be in order.

This defendant was charged on February 14, 1964, together with Ronnie Charles Lee and Paul Goldsmith Warner, with robbery with firearms, on the night of January 30, 1964; and it was alleged that this *330 defendant had been previously convicted in Tulsa County with robbery with firearms in three separate cases, in each of which he was sentenced to serve five years, the sentences to run concurrently.

All three defendants entered pleas of not guilty, and all three waived trial by jury, and were tried together before the court, who found them guilty.

‘ This defendant was sentenced to serve not less than IS, and not more than 50 years in the State Penitentiary. Judgment and sentence was entered on April 21, 1964. Notice of intention to appeal was not given, and motion for new trial was not filed.

1 We have thoroughly examined the case made now before us, and given every consideration to the rulings of the trial court, and the defense set forth; and have also again' considered the contentions made by this defendant in his former pleadings filed in this Court.

This defendant was and is an indigent person, and was represented at his trial by a public defender of Tulsa County.

The defendants named in the information were charged with robbing the liquor store of one Jerry Perrine, doing business as the Suburban Acres Liquor Store, and taking and carrying away certain money and property of value.

Jerry Perrine testified that two negro boys came into his store about 9 p. m. on the date mentioned, one of them carrying a gun, which he described as “a 22 or 23 Armi-Ga-lesi automatic”, stating, “Guns are my hobby. I know guns.” He described the way the two were dressed, and stated that they held the gun not over a foot from his face. One of them said, “This is a hold up” and they forced him to go into the back room. They took $494.67 from the cash register, and took some whiskey. Witness identified a coat introduced in evidence as being like one that one of the men was wearing; and testified that a bottle of whiskey recovered from an automobile in which the three were riding had his stamp on it. The two boys came into his store by the front door, .and left through the rear door. Witness identified this defendant and the defendant Warner as the two men who entered his liquor store and conducted the robbery.

Herschel W. Vahldick testified that he was retired, and was “just an officer, civil defense.” He stated that his son found the gun offered in evidence, or one exactly •like it, and a pair of jersey gloves and a blank check near his home, about ten feet off the road in the neighborhood where the automobile was abandoned, and the defendant was picked up.

The State introduced five other witnesses, all police officers. Officer Lyle Washburn testified that he was travelling north on the night in question, and saw an automobile going south that had been reported .over his “air aerial” as having been stolen. He turned around and chased the car about a mile, the car stopped and three men jumped out and ran. The officer followed one of them, and found him approximately one hundred feet from the car, lying in a drain water ditch. He identified this defendant as one of the persons he saw get out of the car, and the one he later found in the drainage ditch. He testified that this defendant was very uncooperative, and would give him no information whatever, but finally told him his name.

Officer Kermit Horn testified that he and officer Harold Harrison interviewed the defendant Paul Warner, who told him that the three defendants were together and decided to pull a robbery. They walked down the street, saw a car, he and Grubbs walked around the corner, Lee took the car and drove around and picked them up. That shortly thereafter Warner took the wheel, and they drove to the rear of the liquor store, Grubbs and Lee got out and went around to the front, and when they returned to the car Lee had the money. They drove away, and soon discovered a police car following them. The car was not running properly, and Warner was unable to drive •faster, so he stopped the car and all three got out and ran. That Grubbs ran in one direction, and Lee in another, and Warner said he followed Lee, because he had the *331 money. The two ran some distance, 'hid behind some shrubbery near a house until they thought it safe to leave. They went to a house and called a taxi, and went to Lee’s sister’s home where they- divided the money. Warner said that he got approximately $111. He asked Lee what happened to . the change, and Lee said he threw it away as they were running from the car.

Wayne Edmonds, police officer, testified that he was assigned the follow-up investigation on this robbery, and to question this defendant in the city jail. He was accompanied by officer Jim Garrett. He testified that defendant Grubbs told him that he was walking down the street when two men picked him up (he did not know them, and did not know their names), and asked him if he wanted to go to Muskogee. He got in the car with them. They parked behind a liquor store and the two got out, and he sat in the car. The other two went in the building, then returned and got in the car, .and defendant did not know anything was wrong until they discovered they were being followed by a police car.

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Related

Livingston v. State
1990 OK CR 40 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma, 1990)
Langdell v. State
1982 OK CR 205 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma, 1982)
Fox v. State
1976 OK CR 307 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma, 1976)
Taggart v. State
1968 OK CR 33 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma, 1968)

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Bluebook (online)
1966 OK CR 42, 413 P.2d 328, 1966 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 221, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/grubbs-v-state-oklacrimapp-1966.