Hardie v. State

68 So. 2d 35, 260 Ala. 75, 1953 Ala. LEXIS 32
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedAugust 6, 1953
Docket6 Div. 441
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 68 So. 2d 35 (Hardie 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
Hardie v. State, 68 So. 2d 35, 260 Ala. 75, 1953 Ala. LEXIS 32 (Ala. 1953).

Opinion

GOODWYN, Justice.

Appellant was convicted of murder in the first degree and sentenced to death by electrocution. His appeal here is under the provisions of the automatic appeal statute. Act No. 249, appvd. June 24, 1943, Gen. Acts 1943, p. 217, Code 1940, Tit. 15, § 382(1) et seq., Pocket Part.

The indictment charges that appellant “unlawfully, and with malice aforethought, killed John Foster King by shooting him with a shotgun.” Appellant pleaded “not guilty” and “not guilty by reason of insanity.”

The evidence clearly shows that appellant shot deceased with a shotgun, thereby causing his death. The theory of the defense is that the shooting resulted from a mistaken identity; that appellant thought the deceased was one of the parties who had threatened him earlier in the evening; that the shooting took place on appellant’s home premises and, under the circumstances, was justified. The facts of the case, in substance, are as follows:

Appellant is a 53-year old Negro farmer who lived in a small cábin on the Montgomery highway, a short distance from Tuscaloosa, Alabama. He had been “keeping company” for about a year with a woman named Desiree Cook. There was testimony that they were planning to get married. In the early part of the night of the killing, Desiree came to appellant’s house to get some whiskey. ' After obtaining it, she left, saying she had to catch a bus. Appellant followed her out to the road where she got in a car containing four Negro men. At appellant’s request, she got out of the car and went back to the cabin with him. Two of the men from the car followed them. Appellant testified that he' heard them curse him and say they were going to run him away from there and take the girl off. As they approached the house, appellant came out the rear door with his shotgun and fired one shot into the air. The two men then ran back to the car and drove away. About a half-hour later, the car returned and two of the men came up to the cabin. Appellant saw them coming and again went out the back door carrying his shotgun. One of the men knocked at the side door. As he stood there, appellant, from a place of concealment in a cotton patch to the rear of the cabin, fired twice, wounding the man with the second shot. The wounded man’s three companions took *78 him to th'e hospital and while there met the deceased, a police officer of the City of Tuscaloosa. The deceased, accompanied by another police officer, went to appellant’s cabin, together with the three men, to investigate the shooting. The deceased, riding in a city police car with a spotlight on the top, followed the car containing the three men. In the meantime, appellant returned to his cabin. He testified that he then decided to walk down the highway to a store to get some cigarettes; that on the way he saw three cars pass, and recognized one- of them as the car which had ’been there ea.rlier in the evening; that he then returned to his cabin, got his shotgun and some shells, and again went out to the field in the rear of the cabin. He testified that he did not want to be “hemmed in” in his cabin and went out in the rear in order to defend himself. According to the state’s evidence, as the cars in which deceased and the three men were riding approached appellant’s cabin, they met him walking along the highway towards town. After passing appellant, both cars turned around and proceeded back to where they had passed him. The car carrying the three men developed á flat tire and the occupants stopped to fix it. The police officers stopped their car at the place where they had passed appellant and shined'their spotlight around the area, but were unable to locate him. The officers then went up to his cabin. Desiree had remained in the cabin during all of this time, and when the officers reached the cabin, she was asleep on the bed in. the front room. The officers entered the cabin and awakened Desiree. They examined the two rooms of the cabin, and then deceased stepped out the side door. As he walked out the door and reached a point a few feet from the cabin, appellant, from a place of concealment behind a bush to the rear of the cabin, fired his shotgun and fatally wounded the deceased. After the shot, Desiree ran out and exclaimed, “Willie, you done shot the police.” She then re-entered the house. The other officer, who had been in the kitchen, ran out the same door and was also shot by appellant with his shotgun. After'this'last' shot, appellant left his shotgun in the woods and fled without returning to the cabin. He was apprehended about 17 miles away, near Moundville, Alabama. -The evidence shows that the moon was shining and that it was a bright moonlit night. The deceased was not in uniform. The other officer accompanying him was wearing his police uniform.

Appellant admitted shooting somebody, but stated that when deceased came out of the cabin deceased was in a shadow and he could not tell who deceased was, or even whether he was white or colored. He further testified that he did not know deceased was a policeman, but that he had expected that the police would come sooner or later to investigate the earlier shooting.

The defendant was ably represented on the trial and on this appeal by two members of the Tuscaloosa Bar who were appointed by the court to defend him.

The principal questions argued by counsel for appellant are, generally stated, as follows: I. That the indictment alleges the killing of “John Foster King,” whereas the deceased was referred to in the evidence as “J. Foster King,” “Foster King” or as' “Mr. King”; that this constitutes a material variance between the allegations of the indictment and the proof, thereby necessitating a reversal. II. That it was error to admit in evidence, over objection, a diagram of the scene of the killing which was drawn by one not an eyewitness to the killing. III. That it was error to admit in evidence, over objection, an alleged oral confession made by appellant, for the reason that it was not freely and voluntarily made. IV. That it was error to sustain the state’s objections to questions directed to appellant on direct examination as to whether he was “excited,” “frightened,” or “nervous.”

I. We do not think the variance with respect to the name of deceased is fatal. While it is generally held that a material variance between the allegations of an' indictment and proof thereof is fatal, the rule with respect to a variance in the name of deceased has been stated in Jones v. State, 241 Ala. 337, 339, 2 So.2d 422, to be as follows:

*79 “We may observe that a variance is not fatal, if the name of the deceased, or person injured, as indicated in an indictment and as shown by the evidence, is slight or immaterial and such as to leave no doubt as to the identity Of the deceased or. person injured named.”

The rule is thus stated in McCoy v. State, 232 Ala. 104, 106, 166 So. 769, 770:

“True the name of the dead man must be correctly stated, and a material variance is fatal. But .a mere inaccuracy, where the identity of the person named in the indictment with the one named in the evidence is established, is not' fatal under the modern rule. 31 Corpus Juris, 847. The rule adopted in this state is that if the variance in the name be so slight as scarcely to be perceptible, and the deceased would have been readily known by the name thus called, then such variance is immaterial.”

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Bluebook (online)
68 So. 2d 35, 260 Ala. 75, 1953 Ala. LEXIS 32, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hardie-v-state-ala-1953.