Lucas v. State

1924 OK CR 6, 221 P. 798, 26 Okla. Crim. 23, 1924 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 7
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma
DecidedJanuary 14, 1924
DocketNo. A-4869.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 1924 OK CR 6 (Lucas 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
Lucas v. State, 1924 OK CR 6, 221 P. 798, 26 Okla. Crim. 23, 1924 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 7 (Okla. Ct. App. 1924).

Opinion

BESSEY, J.

The plaintiffs in error above named, here referred to as the defendants, were by information' filed in the district court of Texas county on May 17, 1922, charged with the crime of conjoint robbery, in that they willfully and with force and threats took from the person of Otis Turner certain money and other property. They were found guilty as charged, and the punishment of each fixed at five years’ imprisonment in the state penitentiary. From the judgment of the trial court they appeal.

*25 Texas county is one of the western counties of Oklahoma, being a part of what is known as the Panhandle, bounded on the south by Texas and on the north by Kansas, and traversed by the. Rock Island Railway from Texhoma on the Texas border, diagonally across the county to Liberal, Kan., just over the border, passing through Guymon, the county seat, located near the center of the county.

Otis Turner, the person alleged to have been robbed, was a resident of Liberal, Kan., and was a traveling salesman for Swift & Co. He visited various towns in Texas county, making his rounds by automobile and selling to the merchants meats, canned goods, and other products put out by Swift & Co.

On the 2d day of May, 1922, there was a public dance held at Texhoma, on the Texas side of the town, and Otis Turner attended this dance. At this time there resided in Guymon a woman whose name was Frances Smith and who was employed as a waitress in a cafe there. She occupied rooms in the same house with these defendants, both of whom were married men living with their wives in this house, along with other roomers. On the evening preceding the dance at Texhoma Frances Smith boarded the train and went to Texhoma, where she also attended the dance. During the progress of the dance, near midnight, Frances Smith inquired of Otis Turner whether he intended to drive through to Guymon after the dance, and, if so, whether he would permit her to ride with him. Turner replied that he would not know until the dance was over. After the dance, about 2 o’clock of the morning of May 3d, Turner went to a restaurant on the Oklahoma side of Texhoma, and as he came out he again met the Smith woman, who asked permission to ride with him to Guymon. Turner told her she might, provided she could drive the car. The Smith woman said she *26 could do that, and they both got into the ear and with the woman driving proceeded along the Atlantic and Pacific Highway towards the town of Guymon. At a point about three-fourths of a mile from Texhoma two highwaymen appeared, stopped the car and at the point of a pistol forced Turner to get out of the car onto the ground and hold up his hands while the highwaymen took from him a bill-fold containing $5 in money, together with a ticket for a prize fight at Guymon and a check, issued to Turner by Swift & Co., of the amount of $94.52. Turner and the Smith woman then proceeded to Guymon, where they drove to the residence of the defendants, arriving there between 3 and 4 o’clock that morning.

Turner was probably in an intoxicated condition, and there was some disturbance at the home of the defendants. At the trial defendants offered to show that Turner was highly intoxicated and sick from overindulging in liquor and had to be assisted into his car.- After Turner left this place he drove on into Liberal, where he later notified the officers that he had been robbed. Turner was unable to identify the robbers, but for some reason the officers suspected the Smith woman and that the defendants were implicated. All three were taken to the county attorney’s office and were put through a process of “sweating.”

The Smith woman was given her liberty and she boarded a train for Kansas. After questioning the defendants together and separately, the county attorney and the sheriff both stated to them that they believed that they were guilty and that it would be better for them to confess and “come clean,” and that they could use their evidence in prosecuting the Smith woman whom they believed to have been the instigator of the crime. One of the defendants then made a confession, to the effect that the Smith woman had suggested *27 that she should go to this dance and procure some one who appeared to have money to take her from Texhoma to Guymon after the dance, and that after making such arrangements she would communicate with the defendants and they could rob her victim on the way to Guymon; that the Smith woman boarded the train in the usual manner, and they rode the blind baggage from Guymon to Texhoma; that after the Smith woman made the arrangement with Turner she told them to proceed out along the Atlantic and Pacific Highway and that she and Turner would drive along a little later; that pursuant to this arrangement they did proceed along the highway toward Guymon until the Smith woman and Turner appeared, when they robbed Turner at the point of a pistol furnished them by the Smith woman. After they had recited these details the county attorney and the sheriff wanted to know what had become of the pistol and the billfold containing the money and the check. The defendants told the officers where these articles were, and at the suggestion of the officers went out and procured them and brought them back to the county attorney’s office. The articles were produced in evidence at the trial and identified by Turner.

The defendants claim that the confession made was not voluntary, made by them while they were in custody of the officers, and that the officers by their statements led them to believe that they would be used as witnesses in the prosecution of the Smith woman, and that the confession or statements made by them would not be used in evidence against these defendants. The prosecuting attorney and the sheriff both denied that any inducements were held out or promises of immunity made to the defendants to procure this confession.

*28 The defendants objected to the introduction in evidence of the confession or statements made by them to the county attorney and other officers on the ground that whatever statements were made were induced by promises of immunity. The jury were thereupon excused,- and in the absence of the jury the county attorney and the officers were interrogated concerning the confessions, to ascertain whether or not they should be admitted as competent testimony. The examination of the county attorney at this time disclosed the following:

“I told them that if they would testify against Frances Smith in the case in the district court the state would continue their case over that term of court. * * * I don’t believe I ever would tell an individual that would ‘be lighter’ on them. The only thing I tried to convey to them was that it would be a whole lot better for them. I am quite sure I did not use the word ‘lighter.’ That it would be a whole lot better for them to tell the truth; that nobody would be willing to help them when they were convinced they were guilty and then for them to say they were not guilty — I told them that. I told them it would be better for them to tell the truth.”

The county attorney also stated that he presumed he had their confidence.

The court found, as a matter of law, that the confessions made were competent.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1924 OK CR 6, 221 P. 798, 26 Okla. Crim. 23, 1924 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 7, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lucas-v-state-oklacrimapp-1924.