Lanier v. State

196 So. 2d 731, 43 Ala. App. 586, 1967 Ala. App. LEXIS 370
CourtAlabama Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 14, 1967
StatusPublished

This text of 196 So. 2d 731 (Lanier 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
Lanier v. State, 196 So. 2d 731, 43 Ala. App. 586, 1967 Ala. App. LEXIS 370 (Ala. Ct. App. 1967).

Opinion

PRICE, Presiding Judge.

The indictment charges murder in the second degree. From a judgment of conviction for said offense, with a penitentiary sentence of eleven years, defendant appeals.

The evidence shows without dispute that Wilson Lanier killed Arthur Thomas by shooting him with a pistol. Defendant claimed self defense.

State’s witness Willie James Jones testified that about 7:30 Georgia time, March [587]*58713, 1964, he and Arthur Thomas were in his mother’s yard when defendant and Chester Seldon went next door to Jones’ brother’s house in Lanier’s car. Witness and Thomas walked to his brother’s house. Seldon was standing on the right side of defendant’s automobile and defendant was standing on the left side. Arthur Thomas and defendant started talking. Arthur told defendant “he was glad he seed him, he wanted to tell him about them stories he had been telling on him.” More words about a liquor still were exchanged between defendant and deceased. Witness started to go into the back door of his brother’s house. When he turned his back to start up the steps Thomas was standing on the right side of the automobile, leaning on the fender. Defendant was still standing in the door on the left side. As witness was going up on the porch he heard three shots. He turned and saw defendant shooting across the hood of his car. Arthur Thomas was walking away from the car, going toward witness’ home, and was about ten feet from the car. Witness heard seven shots in all, three as he was going up the steps and four after he turned around. Deceased fell after the last shot was fired. At that time he was about fifteen feet from the car. The witness stated he told defendant, “Booster, you shot Arthur.” Defendant replied, “The son-of-a-bitch trying to run my business ought to be dead.” Thomas fell on his face and turned over on his back. Witness did not see deceased with a weapon of any kind.

This witness testified on cross examination his back was to defendant and deceased when he heard the first shot;, that he did not know whether defendant was standing or was on the ground when the first three shots were fired; did not know whether deceased was hovering over defendant with a knife or whether he hit defendant with anything. Lights were on inside the house but there were no lights on the outside. When he heard the last four shots deceased was walking straight away from the car, “up a path from my brother’s house.” He had not said deceased’s back was directly to defendant. “He was walking frontwards.” Defendant was shooting straight across the car hood. Witness left the scene and went to get deceased’s wife.

W. H. Lewis, Lee County Coroner, testified he investigated the death of Arthur Thomas. Thomas was dead when he arrived at Eunice Jones’ house. He was lying on his back. A bullet found under the body when it was moved was given by witness to Dr. Paul Shoffeitt, the state toxicologist. The body was taken to the Edgar Battle Funeral Home in Phenix City. Witness was present when Dr. Shoffeitt performed a post-mortem examination. The next morning witness received a .25 caliber pistol from Deputy Sheriff Wooten, and turned it over to Dr. Shoffeitt.

Eunice Jones testified Arthur Thomas came to her house with one Harris shortly before the shooting. After a few minutes Thomas called to her brother-in-law, Willie James, and they left the house together. Shortly thereafter a car drove up in back and in a few minutes she heard shots which sounded like firecrackers being shot in a pack. She saw lights of a car backing out and a figure standing in her yard that she later learned was Chester Seldon. She did not see deceased’s body until she got an extension light. The body was in the same position when Coroner Lewis and the officers arrived as it was when she first saw it. She covered the body and removed a billfold from deceased’s overall pocket.

On cross examination the witness stated she did not see Willie James Jones from the time he went out of her house, a few minutes before the shooting, until much later in the night.

Ed E. Johnston, Jr., Clerk of the Circuit Court of Lee County, testified he had received evidence introduced at a former trial, and identified a .25 caliber automatic pistol and other exhibits as having been in his custody and stated they were in the same condition as when offered at the former trial.

[588]*588K. A. Wooten, a deputy sheriff of Lee County,' testified that the night of March 13, 1964, he received a pistol from defendant at George Hearn’s house and the next morning gave it to Mr. Lewis, the Coroner. He saw the body of Arthur Thomas at the Jones house. He did not search the body for weapons and did not see Willie James Jones at the scene. When the body was placed in the ambulance he picked up a bullet where the body had lain and gave it to the Coroner. He also identified State’s Exhibit 7 as the gun he recovered from defendant.

Dr. Paul Shoffeitt, a toxicologist and assistant director of the Department of Toxicology and Criminal Investigation, testified he performed an autopsy on the body of Arthur Thomas on March 13th, at the Edgar Ballard Funeral Home in Phenix City. Coroner Lewis was present. The witness observed several bullet wounds on the body. There was one entrance type wound in the lower abdomen to the right of the midline and an exit type wound near the midline and just below the navel. This was a continuous wound. There was another wound on top of the right shoulder, right of the neck, which ranged downward and toward the middle of the body or backbone. A bullet was removed from this area. In the right back there were two entrance wounds, one ranging generally from the right rear toward the left front. It penetrated the right chest, right lung, large blood vessel near-the top of the heart and into the tissue just below the left nipple. A second bullet was removed at this place. There was another wound of the right back that ranged generally straight across into the right Thoracic cavity. Within this cavity, down next to the diaphram, a third bullet was removed. In the right arm, midway between the shoulder and elbow, there was a wound into the tissue posterior to the rear of the large bone, through the arm entering from the lateral side, coming out on the inside. In line with that wound there was. an entrance wound ranging downward and to the left, penetrating the liver and other tissue in that area, through the area of the right kidney and toward the backbone. In witness’ opinion death was caused by hemorrhage and shock from bullet wounds to the body. Over defendant’s objections two photographs of the body made by this witness were introduced in evidence. The bullets, marked State’s Exhibits 3, 4, S and 6, were identified by the witness, who also identified State’s Exhibit 7 as the pistol Coroner Lewis had delivered to him.

This witness testified he made a ballistics test and it was his opinion the three bullets he removed from the body and the bullet he received from Coroner Lewis were fired from the pistol marked State’s Exhibit 7. Deceased was S feet, 8 inches tall and he was rather a large man, stoutly built. In his opinion there were five bullet wounds on the body. “There was one of the bullets that ranged generally straight across that could have been fired from the rear. The other wounds were more from the right rear.”

Arthur Harris testified he went to the home of Eunice Jones with deceased. In a very short time deceased left with Willie James Jones but witness ■ stayed in the house. He heard the shots and went to the door. There were no lights on the outside and it was dark.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
196 So. 2d 731, 43 Ala. App. 586, 1967 Ala. App. LEXIS 370, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lanier-v-state-alactapp-1967.