McClendon v. State

813 So. 2d 936, 2001 WL 220113
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Alabama
DecidedMarch 2, 2001
DocketCR-99-0883
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 813 So. 2d 936 (McClendon 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
McClendon v. State, 813 So. 2d 936, 2001 WL 220113 (Ala. Ct. App. 2001).

Opinion

Norman Lee McClendon was convicted, following a jury trial, of criminal solicitation, for soliciting Allen Schwiening to murder McClendon's wife, Yvonne. § 13A-4-1, Ala. Code 1975. McClendon was ordered to serve 99 years' imprisonment, was fined $20,000, and was ordered to pay $10,000 to the Alabama Crime Victims Compensation Fund. McClendon appeals. We affirm.

This case presents unusual and difficult legal issues. The underlying conviction for criminal solicitation is not common in Alabama cases. Additionally, during the trial, the trial court admitted evidence of collateral bad acts that occurred nearly 20 years before the crime for which McClendon was tried; the admission of that evidence required substantial analysis under relevant legal principles in order to reach what, we believe, is the correct conclusion in this case.

Law enforcement officers testified that, on the evening of September 20, 1995, Yvonne McClendon, McClendon's wife, was reported missing by her daughters. An extensive search was conducted, but Yvonne was never found, alive or dead. A search of the McClendon house on the night of Yvonne's disappearance revealed that her purse, clothing, and other personal belongings were in the house. Only Yvonne and her jewelry were missing. *Page 939

Allen Schwiening testified that he knew Norman McClendon and Yvonne McClendon because he had dated Yvonne's daughter, Robbie Robinson, for a few months in early 1995. He had spent time with the McClendons on a few occasions, and he had seen Yvonne and Norman "fussing" on two occasions. Schwiening explained that, on those occasions, the McClendons had made comments to each other such as "I hate you," "I'll kill you," and "I would be better off without you." (R. 87.)

Schwiening testified that he had once helped Norman McClendon deliver hay to James Siggers. McClendon and Siggers had talked for a few minutes, and McClendon had become agitated. When they left Siggers's residence, McClendon drove around in the pasture behind Robbie's trailer for approximately 20 minutes. During the drive, McClendon was upset and agitated, Schwiening said, and he said Yvonne had been "keeping tabs on him." When they parked outside Robbie's trailer, Schwiening noticed that the guns in McClendon's gunrack were rusted and in bad condition, and Schwiening offered to re-blue them. After they discussed guns, McClendon asked Schwiening if he would be interested in killing Yvonne. Schwiening told him that he would not be. McClendon then asked whether Schwiening had any friends who would be interested in making some quick cash; McClendon mentioned a dollar amount, but Schwiening could not remember the amount. Schwiening told McClendon that he did not have those kind of friends. The conversation made him nervous, Schwiening said, but he did not know whether McClendon was serious. (R. 95-96, 112.)

Schwiening got out of McClendon's truck, went into Robbie's trailer, gathered his belongings, and left. He had not planned to leave at that time; he said he did so because of his conversation with McClendon. Schwiening told only his roommate in Tallassee about McClendon's solicitation, until sometime later when he received a telephone call from his father, who told him that a newspaper had reported that Yvonne McClendon was missing. Schwiening immediately contacted the Randolph County Sheriff's Office and cooperated with law enforcement in the investigation of Yvonne's disappearance.

James Siggers testified that he had been acquainted with Yvonne for many years because they had worked together at a cotton mill, and that he became acquainted with Norman McClendon when he moved onto McClendon's farm. Siggers recalled the day he met Allen Schwiening, when Schwiening accompanied McClendon to deliver some hay.

Robbie Robinson and Cindy Smith testified that Yvonne McClendon was their mother, and that Yvonne had been married to Norman McClendon for approximately 20 years before she disappeared. Smith and Robinson said that McClendon and their mother had bickered and fought constantly, and Robinson testified that the two had repeatedly threatened to kill each other. Yvonne accused McClendon of having extramarital affairs. Smith and Robinson said that, before she disappeared, Yvonne told McClendon repeatedly that she wanted a divorce and that she wanted half of his retirement payout, which he was due to receive in October. McClendon had retired on June 1, 1995, and a check for $57,000, representing the payout of his retirement, was issued on October 1, 1995.

Smith said that she last saw her mother at 4:00 p.m. on September 20, 1995, the day she disappeared, when she went to her mother's house for their daily visit. At approximately 7:00 p.m., Robinson contacted Smith because Yvonne was not at home, and Smith returned to her mother's house. McClendon did not appear to be concerned *Page 940 about Yvonne's disappearance, and he did not join in the search for her. In the weeks following Yvonne's disappearance, McClendon did not alter his normal routine.

Cindy Smith testified that Yvonne and McClendon had begun dating in 1976, while McClendon was still married to his first wife, the late Joanne McClendon. Smith said that, while Yvonne and McClendon were dating, McClendon and Rabren Cagle came to Yvonne's house and the three of them discussed ways to murder Joanne. Smith said that she was 14 years old when she overheard these conversations. Initially, they discussed killing Joanne in a car wreck, but the plan changed and they discussed having someone kill her at home for $25,000. Smith testified that Rabren Cagle contacted a man in Georgia about killing Joanne; he telephoned the man from Yvonne's house, Smith said. She said she saw McClendon give Cagle a thick envelope and a key approximately two months before Joanne was killed. Joanne was murdered in her home a few months after Yvonne and McClendon began dating.

Smith told no one about the conversations she had overheard until October 1995, after her mother had disappeared.1 Soon after Smith revealed these conversations, Robbie Robinson filed a civil action against McClendon, which Smith later joined.

Joanne and Norman McClendon's daughter, Patrice Melton, testified that her parents were not getting along before Joanne was murdered, and that Joanne had asked for a divorce. Melton knew Rabren Cagle; she said that, on several occasions in the months before her mother was murdered, she was in the truck with McClendon when he went to Cagle's house. She did not hear what the two men discussed. On one occasion, Cagle got into the truck with them and McClendon drove to some property next to the McClendons' property, and McClendon pointed out their house to Cagle. McClendon was in the hospital when Joanne was killed.

Several witnesses testified about conversations they had with McClendon during his marriage to Yvonne. Onward Hollaway testified that he knew McClendon and Yvonne, because Yvonne was his first wife's niece. On three occasions in the weeks before Yvonne disappeared, McClendon told him that Yvonne was still "fussing" at him, and that the only way to get out of it was to have another funeral. (R. 244-49.)

Leonard Lee testified that he lived in a trailer on the McClendons' property for several years. Lee said that, during the summer of 1986, McClendon confided that he and Yvonne were having problems and that she nagged him constantly. He then asked Lee if he would "do a job for him." (R. 271.) McClendon told him if he agreed to do the job, he would pay any amount of money Lee charged, or he would buy Lee a new Grand Prix automobile. McClendon also asked Lee if he knew someone who might "get the job done" if Lee could not do it.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
813 So. 2d 936, 2001 WL 220113, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcclendon-v-state-alacrimapp-2001.