Moore v. State

1942 OK CR 142, 130 P.2d 114, 75 Okla. Crim. 222, 1942 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 41
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma
DecidedOctober 14, 1942
DocketNo. A-10106.
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 1942 OK CR 142 (Moore 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
Moore v. State, 1942 OK CR 142, 130 P.2d 114, 75 Okla. Crim. 222, 1942 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 41 (Okla. Ct. App. 1942).

Opinions

JONES, J.

The defendant, Alva Floyd Moore, was charged in the district court of Pontotoc county with the *224 crime of murder, was tried, convicted and sentenced to death, and has appealed.

The attorney for the defendant was appointed by the court. We compliment him upon the vigorous and earnest manner in which he has presented his client’s cause.

The evidence of the state is substantially as follows:

Alf Hardage and his brother, Bill Hardage, owned and operated a Texaco filling station in the city of Ada. Alec Powell was a negro porter employed at the filling station. The defendant, a World War veteran, without any permanent home, lived occasionally with his brother and nephew in Ada. When the defendant was in Ada he loafed frequently at the filling station operated by the Hardage brothers.

Gene Caskey testified that on May 1, 1941, he first saw the defendant at Scotty’s restaurant near the Hard-age filling station; that at the request of defendant he drove him home after'his coat; that defendant pawned the coat and they drove to Elizabeth’s place on Broadway, where defendant bought a half-pint of whisky; that while he was with defendant, defendant took two drinks from the bottle; that defendant had a small pistol in his pocket which he showed to the witness; that defendant seemed upset and commenced crying and said that Scotty and defendant’s brother had been mistreating him. Defendant pulled a small g;un out of his pocket and said: “I had just as soon to shoot you as anybody.” Witness then told of conversation had with defendant where defendant seemed to be worried about someone telling his nephew that he had borrowed some money from a laundryman in Ada. Witness left defendant in front of the Hardage filling station.

Bill Hardage, brother of the deceased Alf Hardage, testified that defendant had loafed at their filling station *225 off and on for about two. years prior to May 1, 1941, the date of the homicide. He saw defendant at the filling station about 3 o’clock on May 1, 1941. Defendant had liquor on his breath and tried to borrow $17 and mentioned that he wanted to. go to Sherman, Tex. That defendant had tried to borrow money from them frequently to buy whisky. This witness was not present when the incidents occurred which led up to the homicide.

J. F. Cromer, who was in the electric welding business at Ada, was a customer of the Hardage brothers. He came to the filling station about 4 o’clock, May 1, 1941. He and the deceased Hardage were visiting and joking with each other and he noticed the defendant six or seven feet away. That Alf Hardage gave him a torpedo match which exploded when he struck it. That he had not paid any particular attention to defendant until he saw him put a gun on Alf and tell him to get in a car which the deceased Alec Powell had just driven to the station. That when the defendant pointed the gun at Alf, Alf kidded and laughed and said all right and started out the door to the automobile. That defendant pointed the gun at Cromer and Cromer slapped it back and asked if it. was loaded, at which the defendant replied: “You bet it is loaded, and I will shoot your guts out if you don’t get away from here.” Cromer walked on to his automobile, which was parked several feet from the automobile in which Alf Hardage and the negro porter Powell were sitting. That defendant followed witness to his car and threatened to shoot him, but finally left and went back to the car and ordered Alf Hardage to. get under the wheel. That Cromer then got in his automobile and slammed the door. When the door slammed the defendant came running back to Cromer’s automobile threatening to shoot. That Cromer then picked up a *226 gun which he had in the car, pointed it at the defendant and told him to put his gun up, whereupon the defendant wheeled and ran back and crawled into the back seat of the other automobile and ordered Alf Hardage to “Get out of here, take off.” A chase then followed across town in which the witness secured the aid of a motorcycle cop. The cars were driven at a high rate of speed on the Fittstown road. Witness first noticed the negro porter laying with his head on the back of the front seat as if he had been shot. Later he saw Alf Hardage go down and the car swerved into a ditch and ran into' a fence, where it was stopped. That he and the motorcycle cop ran up and ordered the defendant to come out of the car with his hands up. That defendant stuck his right arm out of the back window and waved a white handkerchief and later came out through the window. That defendant was shot through the jaw and was bleeding. Both Alf Hardage and Alec Powell were dead, with a single bullet Avound in the back of their heads.

Quinton Blake, the motorcycle policeman, testified to the chase which he and Cromer made after the Hard-age automobile. His testimony concerning the shooting and the other facts surrounding the homicide were substantially the same as that of Cromer.

He further testified that the gun which the defendant used held eleven cartridges, and that all of the shells had been fired except the last one, which hung in defendant’s gun. He identified a picture of the automobile in which the parties were killed and pointed out seven holes in the car which Avere made from the inside. These bullet holes Avere at various places in the car, some of them in the top of the automobile and some through the window, indicating that the defendant had apparently fired aimlessly.

*227 The defense interposed was insanity. The defendant and several other witnesses testified in his behalf. Their proof showed that the defendant served overseas in the first World War with the 90th Division. That he served in the front line trenches from August 1, 1918, until the armistice was signed, November 11, 1918, without relief. That many of the major conflicts which marked the turning point of that Avar were fought during this period. His certificate of "discharge from the United States Army was introduced in evidence and it showed that defendant fought in four major engagements at St. Mihiel, Meuse-Argonne, Villersen-Haye, and Puvenelle. The proof further shoAved that the defendant, during one of the battles, was fighting in a shell hole with three of his buddies and that a large shell struck near them, completely covering the four with dirt and debris. That defendant had to' be dug out of the shell hole and was the only one of the four who was alive. The defendant and his father had an unusually strong attachment to each other, and while the defendant was in France he received word that his father had died, which further unnerved him. That he had never drunk intoxicating liquor before he went to the war-, but that upon his return he commenced drinking. That his mother died shortly after defendant returned from overseas, after which time the defendant wandered around from place to place Avithout any permanent abode. That he spent a considerable time in veterans’ hospitals in NeAV Mexico, California, Kansas, and Muskogee, Okla.

A doctor at Ada testified that defendant’s brother had brought defendant to him for examination a few months before the homicide, at which time the defendant was complaining of severe frontal headaches. That he could find no organic cause for this ailment and ad

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1942 OK CR 142, 130 P.2d 114, 75 Okla. Crim. 222, 1942 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 41, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moore-v-state-oklacrimapp-1942.