Joiner v. State
This text of 326 So. 2d 705 (Joiner v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Criminal Appeals of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
Wanda Joiner, convicted of second degree murder in the killing of her husband and sentenced to forty years imprisonment, brings an appeal.
I
The State’s case is-based on the circumstance that Mrs. Joiner was present with her fatally wounded husband under circumstances negativing accident, suicide, or the agency of a third party.
On the night of July 2, 1974, Steve Joiner was in bed with his wife. Someone put Joiner’s shotgun close to his head and pulled the trigger.
The appellant told the Sheriff and police that two negro men came intb the bedroom muttering something about showing “Whitey” that he couldn’t object to black neighbors. According to her, after they shot her husband they went out a window.
The” State's proof was negative. No scent of intruders was picked up by tracking dogs.1 No fingerprints were on the window sills. No footprints were beneath the windows.
[178]*178A male witness for the prosecution testified that (1) he had earlier showed appellant how to load and fire her husband’s gun, and (2) he had conducted a liaison with her.
Other proof was adduced as to appellant’s financial benefits upon her husband’s death due to natural causes.
She took the stand and denied killing her husband, denied copulating with the male witness and reiterated her statement as to the killing by the two black burglars.2
II
Wigmore, Evidence (3d ed.) § 131 says in part:
“When an act is done, and a particular person is alleged to have done it (not through an agent but personally), it is obvious that his physical presence, within a proper range of time and place, forms one step on the way to the belief that he did it. It is true that another person may have done it, but the former is at least within the limited number of persons who could have done it, and thus is fit to become a subject for further investigation.
“Under the evidential canon that to a fair extent the possibility of other hypotheses must be first excluded {ante, § 31), it might be asked whether the mere possibility involved in Opportunity is not too slender, whether something more than mere opportunity — for example, exclusive opportunity — should not first be shown. The answer to- this is that, by the very showing of an opportunity, countless hypotheses are negatived; and the person charged, who might otherwise have been one of innumerable other persons at the time, is shown to have been one of the limited number who are in a position to do this particular act. In short, opportunity alone, and not exclusive opportunity, is a sufficient showing for admissibility.”
[179]*179Here by narrowing the alternative hypotheses, the State made a sufficient case to go to the jury. The admissibility of evidence of the opportunity to do murder was recognized in McMurtrey v. State, 39 Ala.App. 319, 101 So.2d 88. See also Wallace v. State, 41 Ala.App. 65, 124 So.2d 110 and Cauthen v. State, 48 Ala.App. 286, 264 So.2d 208. Of like import are State v. Stallings, 154 Conn. 272, 224 A.2d 718 (15) and State v. Welch, 79 Mont. 614, 257 P. 1010(5).
This principle of admissibility does not shift the State’s burden of proof. It is a factor for the defendant to bear in mind in assaying at what point the scale may tip against him, i. e., the differentiation point at which defendant runs the risk of non-persuasion and can then no longer logically rest on the evidentiary presumption of his innocence.
Ill
We have considered the entire record under Code 1940, T. 15, § 389, including the following:
a) The clerk’s certificate; [T. 7, § 767]
b) The court reporter’s certificate;
c) The statement of the organization of the court; (Sup.Ct. R. 52);
d) The indictment (caption, charge, conclusions, and required endorsements); whether the indictment was timely brought, Calvert [v. State], 26 Ala.App. 189, 155 So. 389;
e) Judgment entry (arraignment,3 presence of counsel, twelve jurors, empanel-ling and swearing of jury, verdict, adjudication of guilt, allocutus, sentence and notice of appeal); and
f) Each ruling of the trial judge adverse to the appellant — Rule A, Ct.Cr.App. — 49
AA XXI and Rule 28(a)(7) ARAP— (including without limitation the written charges refused appellant), T. 7, §§ 273 & 274.
The judgment below is
Affirmed.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
326 So. 2d 705, 57 Ala. App. 177, 1976 Ala. Crim. App. LEXIS 1944, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/joiner-v-state-alacrimapp-1976.