Lair v. State

1957 OK CR 80, 316 P.2d 225, 71 A.L.R. 2d 856, 1957 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 199
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma
DecidedSeptember 19, 1957
DocketA-12431
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 1957 OK CR 80 (Lair 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
Lair v. State, 1957 OK CR 80, 316 P.2d 225, 71 A.L.R. 2d 856, 1957 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 199 (Okla. Ct. App. 1957).

Opinions

BRETT, Presiding Judge.

Plaintiffs in error, Oscar Lair, Gordon Bryant, and C. B. Horton, and one Bill Turner, were charged in the Court of Common Pleas of Oklahoma county, by information with the offense of unlawful assembly, 21 O.S',1951 § 1314. Turner was granted a severance and only Lair, Bryant, and Horton were tried. They were tried by a jury, convicted, but the jury was unable to agree on the punishment and left the same to be set by the trial court who fixed the same at a fine of $500 each. Judgment and sentence were entered accordingly, from which this appeal has been perfected.

It is important that a digest of the evidence be delineated. The record discloses, as developed by the State, that Fritz Black, State’s witness, testified that he and Gordon Bryant, striking members of the Teamsters Union Local 886, Oklahoma City, had been checking various picket line situations. Returning to the union hall by way of N. W. 36th and May Avenue, crossing 19th street, they observed, in the 3000 block, furniture being loaded into a Mayflower Transit Co. truck. The Oklahoma 'City agent of Mayflower Transit Co., Reliable Van Lines, was one of eleven companies on strike. Believing this operation might be in violation of the Teamsters strike by some of their own members, they returned to the union hall and there reported the situation. There, according to Black, they told Turner and Horton what they had observed. They, Black and Bryant, decided to go back out and check on the operation to see if it was any of the Teamsters Union members. Black testified they did not know if Horton and Turner were coming out to observe the operation. On arrival, they observed the loading operation from their car. He further related that at no time did he or Bryant discuss what they would do about the situation. He testified Bryant, talked to the Mayflower driver for a time, by himself, before Horton and Turner arrived. Bryant and Oden, the driver, went around to the truck cab, both finally returning smil[229]*229ing, he said. Shortly after they arrived on the scene, Horton and Turner came out while Bryant was talking to Oden. All that time, he said, Turner, Horton, and himself were in the front of his car, about twenty feet from the back end of the truck.

■No officer of the union was at the hall when they left, hut shortly after they arrived at the scene and were talking to the driver of the truck, Oscar Lair, the Vice-President of the union, came in response to a call from Mr. Oden, driver of the Mayflower truck. Mr. Lair arrived about the same time as Horton and Turner, he said. Black testified that he heard no threats made by anyone and that there were no weapons or instruments of violence at the scene.

Mrs. McClain, the party being moved by the Mayflower truck, testified that she and her son were at her residence, where the union men told her why they were there. She. said they stated they were on strike and they resented the driver moving her because it was in infringement on their rights for him to do so. They gave her the names of several other companies who could move her. She went back into the house to call them and finally some policemen came out in response to Mr. Oden’s call, after he had called his place of business in Pauls Valley, Oklahoma. Mrs. McClain further testified she heard no threats in her presence and the police arrested no one. She stated no weapons of any kind were seen by her at any time. She testified in response to the question, “The whole thing upset you?”, “Slightly.” When she first saw the union men, five of them were there. The record shows that she had been at a neighbor’s visiting for at least thirty minutes during which time the union men had arrived and she did not know when they came, and whether singly or as a group. She testified that they had a police escort out of town and a patrol escort to Pauls Valley. But, she did not testify to any facts as to why such escort was necessary. On this point, the record is a matter of surmise.

The Mayflower driver, Mr. Oden, testified that he was driving the truck for Mrs. Collier’s Transfer Company located in Pauls Valley, Oklahoma. Mrs. Collier’s Transfer Company was the agency for the Mayflower Transit Company in Pauls Valley. He said the contract with Mrs. McClain originated in Pauls Valley and that he had gone to Mrs. McClain’s home in Oklahoma City to move her to Paul's Valley. He testified his truck had a Mayflower design on it. He testified further that he had his wife and a helper with him. His evidence disclosed the truck ’ was, parked in the street parallel with the curb on the east side of the house. The car of one of the union men was parked about twenty feet behind the truck and the other one in front of the truck, he related. He was loading the truck and some men came and told him to stop. He said as far as he knew, there were five of them. (Ap-; parently, these referred to were Bryant, Black, Horton, Turner, and a Mr. Streeter. - The latter arrived sometime after Black and Bryant, but apparently before Lair.) He did not remember just what was said, except, “Anyhow, they accused me of breaking the strike. One of the five men— I wouldn’t swear which one. I believe it •was two men I talked to.” He did not definitely recall which one accused him of breaking the strike. But, he was informed that Mayflower Movers were on a 'Strike in Oklahoma City. He tried to reason with the man to whom he was talking; that he was not affected by the strike since it was a haul from Oklahoma City to Pauls Valley. He testified he offered to show this person his bill of lading and told him he was not union and his company was not on strike. Pie identified Bryant as this man and the one who told him that he, Oden, “would get a busted head, and my truck turned over.” He said he might have said something else but he did not remember what it was. He testified he called his wife,' his helper, and Mrs. McClain and asked Bryant the question, “What they would do to me if I did go ahead and load.” He said Bryant said he would not do anything,: [230]*230but to go ahead and load. He is not corroborated in this by Mrs. McClain or by anyone else. If this were true, it should have been corroborated.

The record clearly supports the conclusion that this threat was made out of the presence and hearing of the other four union men and not while Lair was present. In fact, if the threat were made, it was made while Bryant and Oden were in the cab of the truck examining the bill of lading, and the four other men, if four were present at that time, were in front of the car parked at the back of the truck. This evidence is unrefuted.

Oden testified further that threats were made neither by defendants Lair or Horton, nor by Turner, who was not on trial. In fact, Mr. Bryant was the only man who threatened him. On this point, Police Officer Stevenson testified Oden told him that somebody threatened him but he did not identify the one who did. It is well to note also at this point that Mr. Lair testified that Oden told him that someone had threatened him. Oden testified that he had a police escort out of town, and a patrol escort to Pauls Valley, but he gave no reason therefor other than the hereinbefore related threat of Bryant. He was asked if he proceeded to Pauls Valley without further incident, to which his reply was, “No, sir.” The defendants objected to any evidence of what occurred other than at Mrs. McClain’s on 19th street. The trial court sustained the objection and in this regard we are left uninformed.

On cross-examination, Oden said he called the union hall upon direction of his Pauls Valley office.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1957 OK CR 80, 316 P.2d 225, 71 A.L.R. 2d 856, 1957 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 199, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lair-v-state-oklacrimapp-1957.