Highfill v. State

1924 OK CR 102, 224 P. 729, 26 Okla. Crim. 420, 1924 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 102
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma
DecidedApril 5, 1924
DocketNo. A-4138.
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 1924 OK CR 102 (Highfill 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
Highfill v. State, 1924 OK CR 102, 224 P. 729, 26 Okla. Crim. 420, 1924 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 102 (Okla. Ct. App. 1924).

Opinion

MATSON, P. J.

Bennett Highfill was convicted on the 4th day of June, 1921, in the district court of Harper county, Olda., of the crime of robbery in the first degree, and sentenced to serve a term of 10 years’ imprisonment in the state penitentiary. From the judgment rendered against him, defendant appealed to this court by filing herein on December 3, 1921, petition in error with case-made attached.

It is contended that the evidence is insufficient to sustain the conviction, in that there is no sufficient corroboration, of the accomplices Joseph Hierholzer and Charles Brankel.

This is a companion case to that of Tom Dickson v. State, 26 Okla. 403, 224 Pac. 723, this day decided. The pros- *422 edition involved the robbery of the Citizens’ State Bank of Salt Springs, Okla., on the 30th day of March, 1921. The record in this case is very voluminous, including about 900 pages of typewritten matter. To enter into a lengthy discussion, therefore, of all the circumstances tending to corroborate the accomplices Hierholzer and Brankel, and to connect this defendant with the commission of the offense, would prolong this opinion to too great a length. We will confine the discussion only to a few of these circumstances which we believe are sufficient for that purpose.

The defendant, Highfill, was a resident of Woodward county, Okla., a married man, about 45 years of age, and his family consisted of a wife and several small children. About two months previous.to. the robbery of the Salt Springs bank, Bob Rancho, who had been a resident of the community in which Highfill lived, appeared at Highfill’s house driving a Buick automobile in which Joe Hierholzer, Hershel Trainer, and Frank Gates were also riding. These men had escaped from the jail at Clayton, N. M., and the car in which they were riding was a stolen car. They stayed at Highfill’s house for several days. About a week after they had first arrived there Trainer and Gates, and perhaps Rancho, made a trip by automobile to Mooreland, Okla., and there became intoxicated and created a disturbance in that town which caused an investigation by the officers there that afterwards led to the arrest of Trainer and Gates near Highfill’s place and the return of Trainer and Gates to Clayton, N. M. High-fill had knowledge of the fact that Trainer and Gates had been arrested and taken by the officers. At the time of the arrest of Trainer and Gates, Hierholzer was concealed some place on Highfill’s premises, and the officers failed to find him. Thereafter Highfill assisted Hierholzer in making a removal to the premises of Thomas Dickson, where Hierholzer *423 stayed until the time of this bank robbery, a period of time covering about 6 or 8 weeks. During this time Highfill made several trips to Dickson’s place, and the evidence shows he was in consultation with Dickson, Hierholzer, and Charles Brankel on Dickson’s place. One of these consultations occurred on the day immediately preceding the bank robbery; another on a day about a week preceding the bank robbery.

The evidence further discloses by the accomplice Brankel that he and Highfill furnished the. horse which Hierholzer rode at the time he robbed the bank. The circumstances disclosed by the state’s evidence are sufficient to corroborate Brankel to the effect that Highfill assisted him in procuring this horse. ITighfill’s conduct on the day immediately preceding the bank robbery and on the day of the bank robbery indicates that he had knowledge that the robbery was to take place, and that he was a guilty participant therein. After the robbery was committed, Highfill assisted his confederates Dickson and Brankel in taking Hierholzer, who was then wounded, from the place where he had been concealed on Dickson’s premises to the home of Jack McGee. This occurred late at night, and when they were apprehended in this act by the officers Highfill said, “We captured your bank robber and are bringing him in,” and Brankel said, “We are bringing him in for the reward. We captured him down in Deke Dunn’s pasture, wandering around on the prairie.” That Highfill was standing within six or seven feet of Brankel at the time he made this latter remark and made no comment on it whatever, when, as a matter of fact, Highfill knew that Hierholzer had not been captured wandering around in Deke Dunn’s pasture, but had been brought from an old cabin near a canyon on Tom Dickson’s place by a circuitous route that led through a rough and hilly country, through fields and pastures, often off of the traveled highway.

*424 Further it is disclosed' that at the time the officers arrested Trainer and Gates the following occurred:

“Q. When you went over there to arrest Trainer and Gates at that time, you had a conversation with Bennett Highfill about those boys? A. Yes. .Q. And in that conversation now, what was said; did you ask about those boys? A. Yes, sir. Q. What did he say about them? A. Well, me and Welch drove up there and Bennett was out west of the house, coming down the road to the-car and when we drove up there I says — I says, ‘Bennett, where is those boys that drove this car down to Mooreland yesterday?’ Well, he spoke up and says, ‘I don’t know.’ Well, I walked around and looked in the back of the ear and one of the boys’ hats was laying in the back end of the car, and I says, ‘Whose hat is this back here?’ And Bennett looked back there and kinda surprised and he says, ‘I don’t know whose hat that is.’ And I says, ‘Now, Bennett, you are just coming back from where those boys have gone, just got back from that trip.’ Well, he spoke up then and says, ‘Now,’ he says, ‘them boys were here last night,’ and he says, ‘They were drunk,.blackguarding, and cursing around my family and I run them off.’ And he says, ‘You might find them over to Clarence Gray’s. Q. But at first he told you he didn’t know anything about where they were? A. Yes.”

That on another occasion in the following week the same officers went to Highfill’s house to look for Hierholzer, but not finding Highfill at home they went over to Clarence Gray’s house and there found Highfill, and Highfill told them that Hierholzer had left his place on the Sunday preceding, and that he did1 not know where Hierholzer was, when in truth and in fact he did know that Hierholzer at that time was at Tom Dickson’s place, and that he (Highfill) had furnished the horse for Bob Rancho and Joe Hierholzer to ride over to Tom Dickson’s place. These transactions occurred over a month before the robbery, and show that at that time *425 Highfill was assisting in concealing Hierholzer in order to prevent his arrest and return to Clayton, N. M.

There are many other incriminating circumstances in this record which dovetail one into the other, and, when considered all together, are unexplainable consistent with the innocence of this defendant, and which in the opinion of this court tend clearly, when so considered, to connect this defendant with the commission of the crime of which he was convicted, and for that reason are sufficiently corroborative of the testimony of the accomplices Hierholzer and Brankel. As to some of these circumstances, reference may be had to the opinion in the Dickson Case.

Counsel for defendant requested the court to give the following instruction:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1924 OK CR 102, 224 P. 729, 26 Okla. Crim. 420, 1924 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 102, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/highfill-v-state-oklacrimapp-1924.