Ingram v. State

42 So. 2d 30, 34 Ala. App. 597, 1949 Ala. App. LEXIS 480
CourtAlabama Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 8, 1949
Docket7 Div. 961.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 42 So. 2d 30 (Ingram v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alabama Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ingram v. State, 42 So. 2d 30, 34 Ala. App. 597, 1949 Ala. App. LEXIS 480 (Ala. Ct. App. 1949).

Opinions

This appellant's jury trial on an indictment charging murder in the first degree resulted in his conviction of murder in the second degree and a sentence to imprisonment in the penitentiary for a term of fifteen years.

The victim of this shooting was appellant's wife, and the locale of the shooting was the house they occupied in Gadsden. Robert Montgomery, Laura Montgomery and Callie McKinney also lived in this same house. *Page 599

Laura Montgomery and Callie McKinney were witnesses for the State, and the tendency of their testimony was to the effect that appellant and deceased had been quarrelling, and eventually appellant attempted to carry the deceased toward an outer door. The deceased struggled loose and they returned to their room. The argument between them was resumed and another scuffle insued. This scuffle carried them into the kitchen and appellant went out of a door. During this second scuffle the appellant had a shotgun.

After appellant went or was pushed through the kitchen door the deceased bolted the door.

The appellant then went around to the front of the house, and after his demands that the front door be unlocked were unheeded, he broke a pane in the door and unlocked it. The deceased during this time had gone into a closet in the house.

When appellant reentered the house he demanded the whereabouts of deceased and began searching for her. Eventually he opened the closet door and the deceased then came out, or was dragged out, of the closet. They again resumed their struggles, the appellant still being in possession of the shotgun.

About this time Laura Montgomery and Callie McKinney, who had been present in the house, fled to a neighboring house, where in about three to five minutes after they had left their home, they heard the report of a gun.

Upon arrival of police officers some minutes later the deceased was found in the kitchen of her home severely wounded in her abdominal area from gunshot. She died shortly thereafter.

The appellant testifying in his own behalf sought to justify his conduct on the ground of self-defense. He asserted that the first struggles with his wife resulted from his efforts to get his wife out of the house and into fresh air to sober her up. He denied he had a shotgun during any of these struggles, but asserted that when "he returned into the house after having been ejected in the first struggle that his wife first got the gun. In his attempts to keep her from shooting him they wrestled into the kitchen and in that room his wife picked up an ice pick, and while still holding to the gun attempted to stab him. During this phase of the encounter the gun went off. Appellant claimed not to know whether his wife was wounded by this explosion. He did at this time gain possession of the gun, and left the house.

Appellant fled to Opelika, where he was arrested some five or six days later.

The appellant was arrested and jailed in Opelika around 7 P.M. We gather from the record that on that same night police officers of Gadsden arrived in Opelika around 11:45 P.M., and appellant being given into their custody they started back to Gadsden within about fifteen minutes. On their arrival in Gadsden around 3:30 A.M. they placed appellant in a jail cell by himself. In the late afternoon appellant was taken to a room in the jail and interviewed by two police officers of the City of Gadsden, one of whom was Detective Cartee. During this interview appellant signed a statement confessory in nature, but in which appellant in nowise claimed that the deceased was attacking him with an ice pick at the time the gun was fired.

Mr. Cartee testified that no threats, inducements, rewards or hope of reward were made or held out to appellant to induce him to make a statement, but on the other hand the appellant's actions were entirely voluntary.

He further testified that appellant did not bear signs of mistreatment when he first saw him in the jail at Opelika, and he was not in any way mistreated on the drive from Opelika to Gadsden. Appellant did not bear any signs of mistreatment when he saw him at the interview when the statement was signed, nor did appellant make any claim that he had been mistreated in any way by anyone during the time he was in the Opelika jail or in the Gadsden jail.

After the above testimony by Mr. Cartee the confession was offered in evidence by the Solicitor.

Appellant objected to its admission on the following grounds, among others:

"We object to any confession being offered until they comply with the recent ruling *Page 600 of the United States Supreme Court and the Supreme Court of this State. They have got to account for this man every step of the way from the time of his first, from the time he is first arrested until the confession is in.

"Mr. Randall. I am sure your Honor is more familiar with that ruling than Mr. Pilcher."

These objections were overruled by the court and the confession was received in evidence.

The appellant's objections we presume are based on the so-called "McNabb Rule" enunciated by the Supreme Court of the United States in the case of McNabb v. United States,318 U.S. 332, 63 S.Ct. 608, 615, 87 L.Ed. 819. In the McNabb case the illiterate defendants for several days, and before being carried before a committing magistrate, were "subjected to unremitting questioning by numerous officers," they were kept in a barren room with no place to sit or lie down except the floor, and one defendant was unclothed in the presence of the officers. The court held that the confessions secured after this procedure were improperly admitted "where they were the plain result of holding and interrogating persons without carrying them 'forthwith' before a committing magistrate as the law commands." Upshaw v. United States, 335 U.S. 410, 69 S.Ct. 170, 171, 93 L.Ed. ___.

The McNabb case has been variously interpreted, and its effectiveness as a mode of enforcing the prompt production statutes was considerably weakened by these varied interpretations. Some courts have adopted a broad view of the meaning of "forthwith;" others have emphasized the presence of factors present in the McNabb case, such as the constant grilling by relays of officers, in addition to the delayed commitment of the defendants, and have considered these additional factors as being the real basis of the McNabb Rule. A full discussion of the history of the McNabb Rule may be found in "The McNabb Rule Transformed," 47 Co.L.R. 1214.

All doubt as to the true doctrine of the McNabb case seems to have been dispelled in the recent case of Upshaw v. United States, 335 U.S. 410, 69 S.Ct. 170, 93 L.Ed. ___, which holds that a confession is inadmissible if made during illegal detention due to failure to promptly carry a prisoner before a committing magistrate.

Actually in the present case there is no showing in the record as to when a commitment was obtained against this appellant. We pretermit consideration of the effect of this omitted showing however, for we do not consider that the McNabb Rule is binding on us. In Townsend v. Burke,334 U.S. 736,

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Bluebook (online)
42 So. 2d 30, 34 Ala. App. 597, 1949 Ala. App. LEXIS 480, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ingram-v-state-alactapp-1949.