Henderson v. State of Florida

113 So. 689, 94 Fla. 318
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedAugust 1, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by41 cases

This text of 113 So. 689 (Henderson v. State of Florida) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Henderson v. State of Florida, 113 So. 689, 94 Fla. 318 (Fla. 1927).

Opinion

STATEMENT OF FACTS.

Plaintiffs in error were convicted on July 29, 1926, in the Circuit Court for Hillsborough County, of murder in the first degree and sentenced to death by electrocution. The case is before us for review upon writ of error sued out in November, 1926, the transcript being filed in this Court January 27, 1927. Pursuant to request, oral argument was granted and the case was argued orally before this Court on April 26, 1927.

There are thirty-eight assignments of error, a considerable portion of which have been abandoned.

At about nine o’clock on the night of May 11, 1926, two men entered La Florida Restaurant, fronting on Four *321 teenth Street at the corner of Eighth Avenue in the City of Tampa, rifled the cash register and shot and killed Antonio Regueria, one of the proprietors. Besides the deceased there were in the restaurant at the time S. Garcia, a partner of the deceased; Jose Regueria, son of the deceased, and acting as manager of the restaurant; Lopez and Flores, waiters; Martinez, the cook; and two guests. Another guest, F. R. Wheyland, a local newspaper man, had just left the restaurant and gone to his automobile across Fourteenth Street, which street was brilliantly lighted. After the shooting he saw one of the men rushing out of the Fourteenth Street entrance across the sidewalk and into the street, where he whirled around and then fled down the street.

When the two men entered the restaurant, Jose Regueria and the waiter, Flores, were eating their supper at one of the tables; Lopez, the other waiter, was standing nearby; the cook was in the rear putting on his hat and coat, preparatory to going home; Mr. Garcia was back in the office just a short distance in the rear of the sandwich counter, called the “eanteén”; the two guests, Moller and a friend, were seated at one of the tables; Mr. Antonio Regueria was standing behind the counter of the canteen. The men entered quickly, flashed their pistols, and the taller of the two, a rather tall man with a bump or scar on the side of his face, ordered all present not to move. He then advanced to the cash register and pulled it around with one hand, while the other man, not so tall but more stockily built, went back to the far end of the canteen and covered Regueria with his revolver. About that timé, Martinez, the cook, preparing to go home, came by the canteen, and the stockily built man turned and shoved him out of the side door on Eighth Avenue. At this, seizing the opportunity at once, Regueria rushed back into the office at the rear of the canteen, *322 secured his pistol from the desk, and came back with his pistol in his hand, pointing downward, followed by Garcia. When Regueria returned to the canteen both bandits fired at him; the one at the cash register three shots, and the man across the counter from him twice. One of the shots, evidently fired by the stoekily built man, because it entered his left side below the armpit and went through his body, was fatal, and he died quite soon thereafter without having uttered a word. As he fell he fired, or his pistol went off, the bullet hitting above the front door. The bandits then escaped; the tall man, who had taken some $265.00 from the cash register, by the front door on Fourteenth Street, and the other by the rear or side door.

. Those present described these men as being bareheaded, dressed in light-colored shirts and dark trousers, in their shirt sleeves, without collars, shirts open at collar; one a rather tall, blondish man with a bump or scar of some sort on the side of his face, and the other not so tall, more heavily built than the other and darker, or of a brunette type.

Six days later, on May 17th, these two defendants were arrested in Pensacola and brought, to Tampa. Garcia, young Regueria, and the two waiters, Lopez and Flores, were taken to the jail. The defendants were placed in a line, with some seven or eight other adult male prisoners, in the lobby of the jail and the said eye-witnesses were brought in one at a time. Each time a new witness was brought in the position of the defendants in the line had been changed. Each of these eye-witnesses to the robbery and killing picked these two defendants out of the men in the line as the men who had entered the restaurant on the night of May 11th and perpetrated the. robbery and killing. In their testimony they stated they positively identified the defendant Henderson as the taller man, with the bump *323 or sear on the side of his face, who had advanced to and robbed the cash register, and the defendant Costello as the man who had gone back to the canteen and fired the shot which killed Regueria. There was evidence that before this the pictures of these men had appeared in two of the Tampa papers. They were asked if they had not seen the pictures of these men in the newspapers before identifying them at the jail, but they said they spoke very little English and did not read the newspapers printed in English and had not seen any pictures of these men at the time.

The cook, who was pushed out of the side entrance, identified Costello as the man who had thus used him; Whey-land, the newspaper man, who was in his car. across the narrow street, was positive that Henderson was the man who ran out of the front entrance immediately after the shooting, whirled and fled down the street; Moller, one of the guests, ducked under the table as soon as the shooting began, but said: he “believed” the defendant Henderson was the man who went to the cash register and turned it around.

Francis Delgado, clerk in the DeLux Drugstore on Nebraska Ave. Street, identified Henderson as one of two men who entered the Drugstore at about 8:30 the same night that Regueria was killed, and rifled the cash register, leaving the Drugstore at 8:30. He said he could not place the other man but he recognized Henderson on account of the bump on his face. E. F. Bario, who worked in the same Drugstore, identified both defendants and said they were in the Drugstore about eight to ten minutes.

H. D. Wade, who was working at a filling station at Florida Ave. and Oak Streets, testified that two men came to his filling station around 8:30, but he could not be positive that the defendants were the same men. He said' one of the men, a tall man, “had a knot on his right jaw. *324 Looked like lie might have had a bad lick, or something like that. He didn’t have on any hat, and was in his shirt sleeves. * * * He had on dark trousers. * * * He was in his shirt sleeves and had on more than one shirt. * * * Because when he went to put his gun back in his bosom he opened his shirt to hide his gun.” He said, however, that this man appeared to him to be a heavier and larger man than Henderson, though he resembled him very much and had features very much like his.

Jose Regueria, Garcia, and the two waiters, testified positively that the two men on triahwere the same two men who entered the restaurant on the night of May 11th. Young Regueria said, on cross examination: "I have a picture placed in my mind of these two men, and as long as I live I won’t forget them.”

The defendants denied that they were in Tampa at the time and introduced evidence tending to prove an alibi.

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Bluebook (online)
113 So. 689, 94 Fla. 318, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/henderson-v-state-of-florida-fla-1927.