McLaughlin v. State

1921 OK CR 75, 197 P. 717, 18 Okla. Crim. 627, 1921 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 240
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma
DecidedMay 7, 1921
DocketA-3574
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 1921 OK CR 75 (McLaughlin 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
McLaughlin v. State, 1921 OK CR 75, 197 P. 717, 18 Okla. Crim. 627, 1921 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 240 (Okla. Ct. App. 1921).

Opinion

MATSON, J.

This is an appeal from the district court of Okmulgee county, wherein, on the 23d day of December, 1918, plaintiffs in error, Tom McLaughlin and Allison Ivey, hereinafter designated defendants, were convicted of the crime of conjoint robbery, and sentenced to serve a term of seven years’ imprisonment each in the state penitentiary.

*628 The offense was committed near the town of Dewar on the night of October 28, 1918, about 8:30 o’clock. Clarence Vetters and Glen Wells, young men who lived in the vicinity of Dewar, testified that they were held up and robbed by. three men who held pistols on them at a time when they (Vetters and Wells) were engaged in repairing a puncture to an automobile tire on a public highway in Okmulgee county a short distance from the town of Dewar. Vettefs and Wells testified that these three men, with handkerchiefs-tied over the lower part of their faces, two of them wearing large white hats and the third a cap, approached them with drawn pistols and ordered them to hold up their hands; that Wells immediately complied, but that Vetters continued fixing the punctured automobile tire, when one of the men struck Vetters in the head with a pistol and again ordered him to hold up his hands, after which Vetters complied with the request; that thereupon the three men searched both Wells and Vetters, and took a sum of money, approximately $8, from the person of Vet-ters.

A codefendant, Jack Dodson, who was jointly informed against with these defendants, pleaded guilty, and was sentenced to a term of five years’ imprisonment in the penitentiary. Thereafter he appeared as a witness for the state and testified that he and the defendants McLaughlin and Ivey held up and robbed Vetters and Wells at the time and place and under the circumstances testified to by Vet-ters and Wells; that after the robbery all three defendants came that night to Okmulgee, and there separated, but, before separating, defendant Dodson changed hats with defendant McLaughlin; that after they separated Dodson never saw the two defendants again until they were arrested and placed in jail with him. Dodson also testified that he *629 had become acquainted with the other two defendants in West Tulsa, Okla., and had known them for.about one year ‘prior to the commission of this crime; that the three defendants left West Tulsa, Okla., on a train about 3 o’clock in the afternoon of October 28th, going from there to Sapulpa, from there to Okmulgee, and from Okmulgee to Henryetta, and from Henryetta to Dewar; that they arrived in Henry-etta after dark on the night of October 28th;’ that they left West Tulsa with the intention and purpose of staging a holdup of a store near Dewar,-Okla., and that each of them carried pistols with them, defendants Ivey and McLaughlin having large caliber Colt’s revolvers, while defendant Dodson had a smaller pistol.

After the arrest of defendants McLaughlin and Ivey in Tulsa county, some two or three weeks after the commission of the offense, they were taken to jail at Henry-etta, Okla., and there both of them were positively identified by the witnesses Vetters and Wells as having participated in the robbery. There is also some other evidence in the record substantially to the effect that three persons answering the description of these three defendants were seen in Dewar and the neighborhood thereof on the evening of October- 28th, shortly before the commission of this robbery, but none of the witnesses except Vetters and Wells were able to identify positively any of these defendants but Dodson.

The defense relied upon by each defendant was an alibi; numerous witnesses being introduced in an effort to convince the jury that both of these defendants were at their homes in West Tulsa, Tulsa county, Okla., on the afternoon and the evening of October 28th, 1918, at the time *630 it was testified to by Vetters, Wells, and Dodson that the robbery took place.

It is first contended that, the witness Jake Dodson being an accomplice, there was no sufficient corroboration of his testimony to authorize the conviction.

Section 5884, Revised Laws 1910, provides:

“A conviction cannot be had upon the testimony of an accomplice, unless he be corroborated by such other evidence as tends to connect the defendant with the commission of the offense, and the corroboration is not sufficient if it merely show the commission of the offense or the circumstances thereof.”

In this case the witnesses Vetters and Wells both identified defendants McLaughlin and Ivey as two of the parties who, acting with a third party, held them up and robbed them near the town of Dewar, Okmulgee county, on the 28th of October, 1918. This evidence, if believed by the jury, constituted sufficient corroboration of the accomplice Dodson, as it not only tended to connect these defendants with the commission of the offense, but directly connected them with its commission. The requirements of section 5884, supra, therefore, were more than complied with in this case. The argument" advanced in support of this assignment of error is lodged against the credibility of the witnesses Vetters and Wells rather than against the sufficiency of their evidence as a corroboration of the accomplice Dodson. The credibility of these two witnesses, and the weight to be given their testimony, were matters exclusively for the jury to determine. This court finds the corroborative evidence sufficient to meet the statutory requirements.

*631 It is next contended that the trial court erred in permitting evidence of other independent crimes not connected with the one for which defendants were being tried, to be introduced in evidence over objection and exception of defendants. In support of this assignment, the court is referred in the brief of counsel for defendants to the following evidence elicited from the codefendant, Dodson:

“A. When we held these boys up, I held up the least one. We all had our guns out. I |said, Tut them up/ and when they put them up he didn’t have nothing on him, the one I was holding up, but six-shooter shell, just a shell and bullet in it; and the other fellow would not put them up, and Dick hit him oyer the head with his gun, and he put them up then, and he got money off of him. I don’t know how much he had.

“Q. Was this money in anything? A. In a pocketbook part of it was. He took the pocketbook, and this man they call Vetters asked for the registration card in it. He said, ‘I cannot lose that or I will go to the pen.’ Dick said he would give it back to him, and he went around in front of the car and opened the pocketbook and came back and gave it to him.

“Q. Well, now where did you go from that place? A. Well, we went from there to Spelter City and over on the railroad track and down the track to Henryetta, and when we got down there by the coal chute we changed hats.

“Q. Who did? A. Me and Tom McLaughlin.

“Q. What kind of hats did you all wear that night? A. I had on a big white hat, ITom had on a white hat, and Dick had on a white hat; all three of us had white hats on.

“Q. All white hats? A.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1921 OK CR 75, 197 P. 717, 18 Okla. Crim. 627, 1921 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 240, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mclaughlin-v-state-oklacrimapp-1921.