Hafford v. State

674 So. 2d 1386, 1995 Ala. Crim. App. LEXIS 354, 1995 WL 614148
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Alabama
DecidedOctober 20, 1995
DocketCR-94-0444
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 674 So. 2d 1386 (Hafford 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
Hafford v. State, 674 So. 2d 1386, 1995 Ala. Crim. App. LEXIS 354, 1995 WL 614148 (Ala. Ct. App. 1995).

Opinion

LONG, Judge.

The appellant, Isaac Hafford, was charged with capital murder for killing William Leon Smith by stabbing him with a knife during the course of committing a theft. See § 13A-5-40(a)(2), Code of Alabama 1975. The appellant was found guilty of the lesser included offense of murder and was sentenced to 28 years in the penitentiary..

[1387]*1387The state’s evidence tended to show that in November 1992, the appellant was employed with Boone and Sons, Inc., a construction firm that was renovating the Holiday Inn motel in Hoover, Alabama. He, along with some of the other construction workers, was living at the hotel while the renovation work was being done. While staying at the hotel, the appellant met William Leon Smith, a waiter at the hotel who also worked with the construction crew during the day.

On the night of November 23, 1992, Smith clocked out of work at 10:30 p.m. Later that night, Smith was found dead, lying in the middle of a road in Hoover, with a white-handled knife sticking out of his chest. Testimony indicated that the handle of the knife found in the victim bore the brand name “Dexter Russell” and that the knife was similar to those used in the kitchen of the restaurant at the Holiday Inn. Testimony elicited at trial indicated that because of their work at the motel, both the appellant and Smith had access to the knives in the restaurant kitchen; however, the manager of the restaurant did not recall ever lending the appellant a knife.

Robert McIntyre, a co-worker of the appellant’s and Smith’s, testified that he had seen a knife similar to the one that was used to kill Smith in the appellant’s room approximately two weeks before Smith’s death. McIntyre also stated that a few days before Smith was killed, he and several other construction workers were gathered in his room, when the appellant came in and indicated that he wanted a ride to Atlanta to visit his girlfriend. According to McIntyre, the appellant asked if anyone knew how to steal a car.

In early December 1992, the victim’s car was found by police officers in Washington, D.C., and on December 6,1992, the appellant turned himself in to the Washington, D.C., Metropolitan Police Department. The appellant 'gave a statement to the police, which was admitted at his trial. In this statement, the appellant told the police the following about the events of November 23,1992:

“I came down to the restaurant about 10:30 p.m. I talked to Lee at the cashier’s stand. I asked him could he go get me some drugs that night. He said ‘Yes, after work, as soon as I get off.’ When he got off I met him in the lobby of the Holiday Inn. We went outside together and got into his car. We went somewhere in Hoover and bought some cocaine. We went riding around getting high. I asked him about getting a large amount of cocaine. He replied yes he could. He drove back to the place that we were the first time. I sent him in with $150 to get an eight ball of cocaine. He only came out with a gram. I did some of that gram and I asked him where was the rest of my coke. That’s when we got into an argument about my money. We had been driving around when we were arguing. He pulled over and stopped at a stop sign. As we was arguing he pulled out a knife. We got into a scuffle. That’s when I took the knife and stabbed him. The car started to rolling backward' — he had his foot on the clutch and the car was in gear. I pulled up the brake and stopped the car. I ran to his side to get him out. His door was locked so I had to come back around to my side to unlock his door. Then I drug him out of the car. I got into the car and drove off. When I drove off I just drove to Birmingham. Then I got on Highway 20 and left out of Alabama. I drove straight here to Washington. I would sleep on the side of the road and in parking lots. When I got here I stayed in the car. This morning I came back to where I had the car parked and it was gone. I spend [sic] the day finding this place.”

(C. 209.)1

The appellant further stated that Smith pulled the knife from between the driver’s seat and the door of his vehicle and that he placed the knife in the appellant’s face. He told the police that the knife was the type “that they have in the restaurant kitchen” and that “[i]t was a big butcher knife with about ten inches to a foot blade on it and a white handle.” (C. 211; R. 535.) The appel[1388]*1388lant indicated he was not injured, but that it “just freaked [him] out.” (C. 212; R. 538.)

In response to police questioning concerning the subject of his argument with Smith, the appellant stated:

“I was asking about my money. He was saying, T didn’t f — k up your money, the guy was short on drugs.’ Then I told him that he wasn’t that short to sell me a gram for a hundred and fifty dollars. Then Lee said to me, I can’t go back and get your money. I told him I think he f-d me out of my money. That is when he got the knife and said what are you going to do.”

(C. 213; R. 539)

The appellant’s trial testimony was similar to the statement that he gave the police. He testified that he met Smith while he was working at the motel in Hoover and that they became friends. The appellant stated that Smith had purchased drugs for him many times, but that he had never gone with Smith before the night of November 23, 1992. The appellant testified that on the night of November 23, he approached Smith, who was working in the motel restaurant, and asked him to buy some drugs and that Smith agreed. When Smith got off work, he and the appellant left the restaurant in Smith’s car. According to the appellant, they went to Smith’s home in order for Smith to change clothes. The appellant testified that he watched television while Smith changed clothes and made a telephone call to his “connection.” (R. 605.)

The appellant then testified as follows:

“And after he had changed from his work attire to his casual dress we went and picked up some drugs. I got a small sample, and I used it, and I asked him could he get me a larger amount since I was satisfied with the quality of what he had gotten for me then.
“Then we rode around. When he got that we went riding some more. And what I had asked him to get me was an eight ball, which was a hundred and fifty dollars. And so we went riding around. After he had got that for me, he had gave me a small amount of that, which is not nothing unusual, but then when I asked where was the rest of it at, because I paid for an eight ball and only had a gram, and so while we were riding we got in an argument about that. And I am asking, ‘Where is the rest of my money?’ and he said, ‘The guy is short.’ And I’m wondering, ‘Why, what that has to do with me? If he is short you should have my change or you shouldn’t have got nothing from him.’
“So we are riding around discussing that and we get into an argument over it, and as we are still in the Hoover community, and then we get into a struggle over the argument. He stops at a stop sign, and then he comes out from the left side of the car, which is between the driver’s seat and the door with a big knife, pointed it in my face. And he is asking me what am I going to do. And from the fear of a big knife just flashed out in my face, and we already in a heated argument, and from fear of that, I just responded to it only natural, to go for the knife, try to get it out of my face. And we struggling over the knife and wrestling around and tussling.

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Related

Spencer v. State
201 So. 3d 573 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Alabama, 2015)
Peraita v. State
897 So. 2d 1161 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Alabama, 2003)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
674 So. 2d 1386, 1995 Ala. Crim. App. LEXIS 354, 1995 WL 614148, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hafford-v-state-alacrimapp-1995.