Johnson v. State

5 So. 2d 632, 242 Ala. 278, 1941 Ala. LEXIS 275
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedDecember 18, 1941
Docket6 Div. 873.
StatusPublished
Cited by116 cases

This text of 5 So. 2d 632 (Johnson 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
Johnson v. State, 5 So. 2d 632, 242 Ala. 278, 1941 Ala. LEXIS 275 (Ala. 1941).

Opinion

GARDNER, Chief Justice.

The appeal is from a judgment of conviction for the offense of rape, with infliction of the death penalty. The victim of the assault (Mary Sloan), was a young white woman, eighteen years of age. The crime was committed near 1 A. M. of the morning of January 14th, 1941. The young couple (the husband was also near eighteen), were in bed in their two-room house in the City of Bessemer, with their nine months old baby. A small electric light was left burning in the bedroom.

The husband had left, as usual, a shot gun on the floor by his bed. The rapist at once discovered the gun and took possession. Mary Sloan states he also had a pistol. With the use of these weapons and threats to kill all three if not gratified in his desires, the rapist accomplished his purpose upon the young woman, took some small change from the purse and escaped. ’ The details of this crime are most revolting and are better left unrelated here.

There was much conversation and in all both of these young people estimate the criminal was in the house nearly an hour and with good opportunity for identification. They each are positive in their identification of the defendant.

The defense was an alibi, supported by testimony of himself, his mother and wife that he was at his home at the time. There was no disputing the fact a horrible crime of criminal assault had been committed. Deffindant also offered the testimony of another negro, one Hambright, to the effect that while he was under arrest for the crime, the husband had identified him as the criminal, which Sloan denies.

The only question, therefore, for consideration of the jury was the matter of identification. The record discloses that during a period of eighteen days from January 13th, 1941, to and including January 31st, 1941, there were attacks made upon white women in the City of Bessemer, by a negro man. One occurred on the night of January 13th within an hour or two of the rape of Mary Sloan. Mrs. Wright makes positive identification of the defendant as the man with whom she struggled on the night of January 13th. She saw him in the “light of three lights, the light shone right in his face. * * * It is a fact that I looked him in his eyes and he looked at me”.

Next was on the night of January 26th, when a Mrs. Harrison aroused her husband as a man tried to pull her from the bed. Mrs. Harrison could only see the body of a man and could not identify, as the excitement appears to have rendered her unconscious. But her husband fought off the intruder, at last got on the light and posi *281 tively identified the defendant as the man that attempted an attack upon his wife.

On the night of January 31st a negro man attempted an assault upon a Mrs. Smith. She could only see he was a negro as distinguished from a white man. The intruder had entered the house by means of a ladder and escaped as Mrs. Smith’s brother and husband were aroused. Though the Smiths were unable to identify the intruder their screams had aroused their near next door neighbors, Mrs. Herring and her husband, who saw a negro man at the ladder of the Smith house. The husband fired a shot gun at him with bird shot, and Mrs. Herring went out to “get the law”, as she expressed it, and met the intruder between the sidewalk and her house. She testifies: “He just backs up against the house and looked at me real hard, trying, I guess, to scare me and make me leave; but I didn’t; I stood and looked at him”. She was intent upon the matter of identification and as a witness states this defendant is the man.

But there was still further identification when the purse which was found at the foot of the ladder was discovered to contain a registration card, bearing the name, Bradley Johnson and a driver’s license in the name of Frank Johnson, with uncontradicted proof this defendant had gone by both names. It was the finding of this purse and the address on these certificates which doubtless lead the officers to the arrest of this defendant.

The argument is advanced that proof of these other, though similar offenses, was irrelevant and inadmissible. The principle here controlling, however, is well expressed in 20 Amer.Jur. p. 292, as follows: “The general rule that evidence of separate and independent crimes is inadmissible to prove the guilt of a person upon trial for a criminal offense is subject to a well defined exception with respect to proof of the identity of the accused. The broad rule that where evidence tends to aid in identifying the accused as the person who committed the crime under investigation, it is admissible, in spite of the fact that it tends to show that the accused is guilty of other crimes for which he is not on trial”.

Of course, for the admissibility of such proof the question of identity must be an issue in the case. 20 Amer.Jur. p. 293. The text is well supported by the authorities generally (Paul Whiteman v. State, 119 Ohio St. 285, 164 N.E. 51, 63 A.L.R. 595 and citations noted; People v. Thau, 219 N.Y. 39, 113 N.E. 556, 3 A.L.R. 1537 and cases noted), and by the decisions of our own court. Yarborough v. State, 41 Ala. 405; Mason v. State, 42 Ala. 532; Gassenheimer v. State, 52 Ala. 313; Curtis v. State, 78 Ala. 12; Miller v. State, 130 Ala. 1, 30 So. 379; Mitchell v. State, 140 Ala. 118, 37 So. 76, 103 Am.St.Rep. 17; Scott v. State, 150 Ala. 59, 43 So. 181.

In this latter case the trial judge was careful to instruct the jury the proof was for the limited purpose of identification only, 'and so in the instant case the trial judge did likewise in a very clear and emphatic manner as to each separate offense above enumerated.

The case of Wilkins v. State, 29 Ala.App. 349, 197 So. 75, bears some analogy. And in Wilder v. State, 1 So.2d 317, the Court of Appeals had a similar question here presented. See, also, the recent United States Supreme Court case of Lisenba v. People of State of California, 314 U.S. 219, 62 S.Ct. 280, 86 L.Ed. —. The other offenses here shown were all of similar character, committed within the same territory and all within a period of eighteen days. It is to be noted also that in each instance the victim was a white woman, which bears significance in view of defendant’s remark concerning white women as testified to by Mrs. Sloan, hereinafter set out. The only issue was one of identification, and under the principle of the above-noted authorities this proof was properly admitted.

On cross-examination the defendant was asked by the solicitor had he been previously convicted in that court and sent to the penitentiary, to which he answered in the affirmative. Defendant objected “to the form of the question”. The objection was overruled without error. Fondren v. State, 204 Ala. 451, 86 So. 71.

Upon defendant’s arrest on the morning of February 1st, 1941, he was incarcerated in the city jail of Bessemer and that afternoon carried to the jail in Birmingham. While in the Bessemer jail he confessed to this particular crime as well as to some of the others above enumerated. The rule in this State as to the admissibility of evidence as to confession is well understood. Prima facie, confessions are involuntary, and there must be *282

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Bluebook (online)
5 So. 2d 632, 242 Ala. 278, 1941 Ala. LEXIS 275, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/johnson-v-state-ala-1941.