Mainor v. State

348 So. 2d 1083, 1977 Ala. Crim. App. LEXIS 1299
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Alabama
DecidedApril 19, 1977
Docket3 Div. 491
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 348 So. 2d 1083 (Mainor 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.

Bluebook
Mainor v. State, 348 So. 2d 1083, 1977 Ala. Crim. App. LEXIS 1299 (Ala. Ct. App. 1977).

Opinions

MOORE, Retired Circuit Judge.

The appellant was indicted, tried and convicted for the offense of murder in the first degree. Final judgment was entered; hence this appeal.

Willie Lewis testified that he lived at 1301 French Street, Montgomery, Montgomery County, Alabama, and was living at that address on July 15, 1975. He testified that he knew appellant, Jessie Mainor, and that he knew George Chesson, the deceased. On the night of July 12,1975, Jessie Mainor and George Chesson were at his home. He said that he heard some shots fired and went into the kitchen about five or ten minutes after hearing the shots and saw Chesson standing by the stove. Chesson had not been shot at that time. After Lewis heard the shots he saw Chesson lying outside by the front door, and appellant walking around in the room with a twenty-five automatic swinging on his finger and a thirty-two nickle plated revolver in one hand. Mainor had the two weapons. Appellant said at that time, “I told you all that I would take a gun from any son of a b-” He had the .25 automatic spinning around on his finger. Lewis said appellant left the house and he did not see him again that night.

On cross-examination, Lewis testified that he was in the kitchen when he heard the first shots. He said the shots were in the front room and he did not know where the shots came from but they were in the house. Lewis stated he heard two shots but he did not know who fired them. He said about eight or ten people were in the kitchen with him and there were about fifteen or twenty people in the living room.

Dorothy Harris testified in substance that she lived at 1520 Withers Street in north Montgomery and on the night of July 12, 1975, she was at the home of Willie Lewis at 1301 French Street. She said that she got there about 10:30 P.M. and a “lot of people” were at the house, including George Chesson, when she arrived. Harris also saw Jessie Mainor there. When she saw him coming in the door he did not say anything and then she heard a shot. Harris stated they all ran into the kitchen and she then heard two more shots. She said Mainor and Chesson were on the floor “tussling up against the wall by the window” and the gun was between them but it was in Jessie Mainor’s hand. Harris was looking back into the room. It was about a minute or a minute and a half after Mainor came into the front room before she heard the first shot. She did not hear any arguing or see any fight between Mainor and Chesson be[1085]*1085fore she heard the first shot. Harris did not see Chesson before she heard the first shot and did not see Chesson with a gun that night. Later she saw George Chesson right by Lewis’ house in the bushes outside of his house. It was about five minutes after all the shots were fired that Harris saw Chesson in the bushes. She had walked out on the porch and heard someone say, “Help me” and had “walked around there and stepped on George’s hand.” Harris said Mainor came back there and that when he walked in the bushes he said: “I am going to show this m-f_who he is f_with.” Harris then called the police and was there when they came.

On cross-examination, Harris testified that she saw Mainor come in the front door but did not see who shot first. She ran in the kitchen when the first shot was fired, and saw the next two shots fired. According to Harris it was about five or six minutes between the firing of the first shot and the next two. She saw Mainor and Chesson “tussling” during that time. Harris stated: “. . . George was holding Jessie by the wrist: the hand that he had the pistol in, George was holding it.” She could not see what, if anything, George was doing with his other hand since she could not see it. Harris could only see one gun but could not see it at the time of the last two shots because, at that time, the gun was between Mainor and Chesson.

Mary Louise Butler testified in substance, that she was Jessie Mainor’s girl friend and that on July 12, 1975, about 11:00 P.M., she saw Mainor at her home on Foster Street. Mainor told her “. . he and some dude had got into it up at Lewis’ house” and that he had shot a man. He gave her the pistol that night and told her to keep it. Mainor told her: “. . . that was George’s gun that he had taken from him” and “. . . that he had shot George with George’s gun.” She and Mainor left her home and went eventually to his home, where they then went to bed. Butler heard knocking on the door about 2:00 A.M., but as she was getting up to answer the door, the police knocked in the door. When the first knocking was going on, Jessie told her to keep quiet, which she did. Butler went to police headquarters where she talked to the police. She then went home and got the pistol Jessie had given her and gave it to the police.

The appellant had a motion which had been filed to suppress the pistol as evidence as being the product of an illegal search. It was called to the court’s attention out of the presence of the jury and was denied by the trial judge. Also, at this point in the trial, and not in the presence of the jury, the attorney for appellant stated:

. .as far as the witness, Dorothy Harris, where the Court sustained the State’s objections to my going in to some past difficulties in questioning that witness, I would offer to show to the Court that my purpose in doing so was to show some difficulties that had occurred between the Defendant and that Young or a friend of hers within about two months of the date of this incident, that this witness had stated to the Defendant that she would get even with him and get him one way or the other. . . . We were trying to show bias and prejudice on the part of the witness. . . .”

The trial court’s reply to that was: “Okay. Bring the jury in.”

D. G. Johnson, a detective of the Montgomery Police Department, testified in substance, that he and C. H. Brannon, his partner, investigated the shooting in question. He saw the deceased at the 1301 French Street address and talked with three witnesses. An ambulance took the body away. Johnson and Brannon went to appellant’s apartment and knocked on the door and received no answer. After knocking again and receiving no answer, they went downstairs to the manager’s apartment. He was not there and they went back to appellant’s apartment and knocked again and announced themselves as police officers. They heard footsteps and somebody bumping into something, and “knocked the door down.” Jessie Lee Mainor and Mary Butler were in the apartment. Jessie was standing by a chest of drawers and they arrested him at that time.

[1086]*1086Johnson further testified, in substance, that at the time appellant was arrested he read to appellant his rights from a card he had. He read the card into the record. (The card as read was the complete “Miranda warnings.”) Johnson said that after reading the card to the appellant, appellant stated he understood those rights.

The witness further testified, in substance, that at 5:00 A.M., July 13, 1975, the appellant gave the statement to him which he wrote down. Before appellant gave the statement Johnson read to him from a rights form, which was kept at police headquarters. The form was identified by the witness and admitted in evidence as State’s Exhibit No. 3. The appellant refused to sign the form, Exhibit No. 3, but it was identical to the one read to him at the time of his arrest, as far as his constitutional rights were concerned. It showed appellant refused to sign it, but Johnson stated that when the same rights were read to him at the time of his arrest, appellant understood them.

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Bluebook (online)
348 So. 2d 1083, 1977 Ala. Crim. App. LEXIS 1299, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mainor-v-state-alacrimapp-1977.