Harris v. State

1965 OK CR 29, 400 P.2d 64, 1965 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 200
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma
DecidedMarch 10, 1965
DocketA-13476
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 1965 OK CR 29 (Harris 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
Harris v. State, 1965 OK CR 29, 400 P.2d 64, 1965 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 200 (Okla. Ct. App. 1965).

Opinion

BUSSEY, Presiding Judge.

Henry Harris, hereinafter referred to as the defendant, was charged by information"' in the District Coürt of Pittsburg County with the crime of Murder. His co-defendants having requested and received a severance, he was tried by- jury who found him guilty of the included offense of Manslaughter in the First Degree and assessed his punishment at 8 years imprisonment in the State Penitentiary at McAlester, Oklahoma. Judgment and sentence was pronounced in accordance with the verdict of the jury, and from said judgment and sentence., he'áppeals.

Testimony offered on behalf of the State at the trial was substantially as follows: -

Emmitt Edward . Tánner testified that about noon, he went to the J-Bar in Mc-Alester, Oklahoma, and that he visited and drank beer with Alvin. Turnbow, Alvie William Stacey and Elbert Robert Stacey. That they had been seated together in a booth when he left to go to the rest room, and upon returning from the rest room he observed Alvin Turnbow, whose head was bleeding, and a man near him with a gun, and that he saw Alvin Turnbow go for his gun. At this point the witness hid behind a partition where he could not see what happened, but that he heard a series of shots fired. He stated it was quiet then and the police were summoned.

Alvie William Stacey testified that on the 26th day of March, 1962, he and his brother, Elbert Robert Stacey, were seated in the J-Bar with Alvin Turnbow when the Harris boys and Floyd Watkins came up behind Turnbow in the booth. That one of the Harris boys struck Turnbow on the head with some object, while Watkins placed a knife at Turnbow’s throat. He stated that at this time Henry Harris had a gun in his hand and that Turnbow was putting out a cigarette. The witness and his brother jumped out of the booth, stepped over the shuffle board and ran for the door. He testified that he did not see what transpired thereafter.

Elbert Robert Stacey testified that he and his brother were seated in the J-Bar when the two Harris boys and one Watkins came up behind Turnbow in the booth. That they started beating on Turnbow and that as he left the booth he observed Henry Harris with a gun in his hand. That as he ran for the door he saw the deceased Turnbow, attempting to inject a shell into a gun after he had been beaten. The witness testified' that he heard shots fired, saw-Henry Harris slump but that he could not tell whether or not Turnbow had been hit.

Officer E. J. Sutterfield testified that on the afternoon of the 26th day of March, 1962, in response to a call, he went to the" J-Bar where he found Turnbow wounded but still. breathing. The witness testified that he measured the room, that he found a .25 caliber cartridge underneath the booth where Turnbow had been sitting and a .45 caliber shell, a .25 caliber hull and a .25 caliber slug. He marked these for identification and turned them over to the Chief of Police, Elmer Durant.

Officer Bob Oliver testified that on the 26th day of March, 1962, he went to the premises of the, J-Bar and while there, with other officers, conducted a search of the premises. He identified State’s Exhibits 1 through 9, the same consisting of a .45 *67 caliber automatic, a small caliber automatic and holster, and a number of spent cartridges and slugs from the .45 caliber automatic and spent cartridges and slugs from a smaller caliber weapon. These exhibits -were admitted in evidence without objection being interposed by the defendant. The witness testified that a number of the shells had ricocheted off the wall and were found on the floor in the bar.

Elmer Durant testified that on the date in question, while acting as Chief of Police, he proceeded to the J-Bar and upon arriving there was informed that the persons involved in the altercation had been removed .to the Municipal Hospital. Durant then ■proceeded to the hospital where he, together with one Dr. Floyd T. Bartheld, examined the body of Alvin Turnbow. He ■described abrasions and bruises on the body •of the deceased, a point of entry wound in the chest and identified a .45 caliber slug which was removed from the back of the •deceased. This witness testified that Watkins, K. C. Harris and Henry Harris had .all been wounded. Watkins had apparently been shot in the hand, K. C. Harris had been struck by one bullet and Henry Harris had been wounded twice. This witness identified a .45 caliber automatic and a .25 ■caliber automatic which had been previously introduced in evidence.

Dr. Floyd T. Bartheld, Pittsburg County Medical Examiner, testified that he examined the body of Alvin Turnbow in the McAlester Municipal Hospital and subsequently with Dr. Greenberger performed ■an autopsy upon the deceased. This witness testified to lacerations and bruises on the head and ear of the deceased apparently inflicted by a blunt object yielded with considerable force, but stated that the cause of •death was produced by a gunshot wound in the chest of the victim, which in his opinion, produced immediate death. He testi■fied that after this injury had been received by the deceased, the deceased would not have been able to fire a gun.

At this point in the trial the State called Deputy Sheriff Eugene B. Thompson and Mrs. Ida Roberts, secretary to the County Attorney, and after hearing the testimony of these two witnesses the trial court admitted into evidence the testimony of Eugene Fite, Ruth Dooley and Mary Elizabeth Shropshire taken at a preliminary hearing on the 9th day of May, 1962 before Judge E. W. Thomas, at which preliminary hearing the defendant, Henry Harris, was jointly charged with his co-defendants, K. C. Harris and Floyd Watkins, who after having been bound over to the District Court requested and were granted a severance. To such ruling of the .court defendant excepted, which exception forms the basis of his assignment of error #4 urged on appeal.

It is urged that the trial court erred in admitting said testimony. In his brief on appeal the defendant urges that the transcript of testimony taken at preliminary hearing was not taken by a qualified court reporter and is therefore inadmissible.

The testimony of Mrs. Ida Roberts was that she had been employed as a legal stenographer for the firm of William Jones, Attorney at Law for a period of thirteen years prior to becoming the County Attorney’s stenographer. She further testified that she had worked for the County Attorney’s office for three years and had on several occasions transcribed the testimony taken at preliminary hearings before justices of the peace from her shorthand notes and from a tape recording of such proceedings. She further testified that on the 9th day of May, 1962, she transcribed by shorthand and tape recording the testimony offered at said preliminary and that from her shorthand notes and tape recording so taken, she prepared a typewritten transcript of the same by comparing the shorthand notes with the tape recording of said proceeding, and had prepared three copies of said transcript which she had duly indexed and certified, one copy of which was kept by the County Attorney’s office, while another of the copies had been delivered a few days after its preparation to Mr. Willard Gotcher, one of defendant’s attorneys.

*68 It does not appear that counsel for defendant ever questioned the accuracy of Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
1965 OK CR 29, 400 P.2d 64, 1965 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 200, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harris-v-state-oklacrimapp-1965.