Nix v. State

213 So. 2d 554, 1968 Miss. LEXIS 1292
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 8, 1968
DocketNo. 44852
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 213 So. 2d 554 (Nix v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nix v. State, 213 So. 2d 554, 1968 Miss. LEXIS 1292 (Mich. 1968).

Opinion

JONES, Justice.

This appeal is from a judgment of the Circuit Court of Jones County refusing to set aside a final judgment of forfeiture on a bail bond signed by the appellant as surety. We affirm.

Roy Strickland was indicted by the Circuit Court of Jones County, Mississippi, on a felony charge. In order that he might be released from prison, Deavours Nix and two other parties signed with Strickland a bail bond in the amount of $2,500. On April 20, 1967, during the March term of that court, the case was called and default made. Judgment nisi was entered directing the issuance of scire facias returnable to the next term of court, the third Monday of May 1967. At the May term, none of the sureties appeared and judgment nisi was made final.

On June 12, 1967, two of the sureties, other than Deavours Nix, appeared and satisfied the court that process had not been served upon them; therefore, the final judgment as to them was set aside. On May 20, answer was filed by the principal Strickland and Deavours Nix, and on June 9, 1967, a separate motion was filed by Deavours Nix to set aside the final judgment entered against him.

It was stipulated that on April 20, 1967, application for continuance was made by the principal and overruled, and that in event of appeal, the entire testimony on the motion for continuance should be made a part of the record. It was also stipulated that on April 20, 1967, the principal, after examination by one Dr. Bass, was brought into court at 1:30 p. m. by the deputy sheriff in response to an order of the court. It was further stipulated that he was tried on April 21, 1967, and acquitted on April 22, 1967.

Turning now to the record on the application for continuance, we find that when the principal’s case was set for trial on April 20, his attorneys appeared and made a motion for continuance to the following week, alleging that principal was not in physical condition to stand trial on that day.

Dr. E. E. Ellis was called as the first witness. He testified that Strickland was admitted to the community hospital on the night of April 19. A nurse reported to him that he had been in an automobile accident. The principal was in quite a bit of pain, but nothing appeared broken. He was given medicine to relieve pain and was put to bed until morning (the 20th), when he could be X-rayed. There was no fracture, but the doctor said the principal was stiff and extremely sore and was not able to get out of bed when he left. Dr. Ellis did not think the principal was faking. He thought it would be extremely cruel to force the principal to attend trial and believed he could stand trial better in a few days.

The principal rested and the State introduced Mr. Walter Cade, a policeman. He testified that he saw the automobile in [556]*556which the defendant claimed to have had his accident. He saw it that morning; he found no blood or any evidence of a person’s being injured inside the car, and there was no physical damage to the driver’s side of the car. Pictures of the car, made by the deputy sheriff, were introduced. The only damage was to the right front headlight area. Mr. Cade was asked about the investigating officer’s report and said that the report noted no physical injuries but that the driver complained of pain.

The next witness was Mr. Lavon Williams, also a policeman. He had examined the car at the scene of the accident prior to its having been moved. He ascertained that the driver was Roy Strickland, and that the car belonged to one Travis Buckley, a lawyer. He said he and his partner on a routine patrol passed the car and stopped at the post office at approximately 12:40 a. m. About thirty seconds later, they received a call over their radio to investigate a wreck. It was the car they had already passed. Williams said that they did not recognize it as a wreck when they passed it, it appearing that the vehicle had just been pulled up very close to a truck. They were not aware that there had been a collision.

Upon investigating, Williams and his partner found the principal lying on the floorboard, his head hanging out of the car opposite the driver’s side. Williams asked him if he were injured in any way. The principal complained of back injuries, but there were no visible signs of injury.

At the scene when Mr. Williams and his companion arrived were a truck driver, a colored employee of the postal department, and a white employee of the postal department. The truck driver worked for Smith Bakery Company, owner of the truck involved. The next person to arrive was Mr. Travis Buckley, about one minute after the witness arrived, and in addition to Mr. Buckley, one Jesse White and Mr. Deavours Nix, appellant, came. Nix arrived just a few minutes after Buckley arrived. Mr. White and Mr. Nix came together.

Williams called for the police ambulance and a wrecker. He was at the scene about thirty or thirty-five minutes. Mr. Jesse White, who came with Mr. Nix, made some pictures, but not at the request of the police. The car, Williams says, was lightly damaged. The car and truck were still touching, not having rebounded. The principal was taken to the hospital by the ambulance.

On cross-examination Williams said Strickland was drinking and that they had charged him with DWI. Williams, smelling liquor, was of the opinion the principal was driving under the influence of liquor and, at the hospital, Strickland admitted that he had been drinking.

While Williams said that they charged Strickland with DWI, he never testified that Strickland was arrested. He never said when the charge was made, or what disposition, if any, was ever made of it. In fact, it is not shown that he was arrested on the charge at any time. On redirect, Williams said that he did not call Jesse White, Deavours Nix, or Travis Buckley.

Dr. James C. Bass was introduced as the next witness. He had been appointed by the court to examine the principal. He testified he saw the principal at the hospital that morning sometime after eleven o’clock. The principal gave a history of having been involved in an automobile accident and was complaining of pain in his back and right leg. Dr. Bass could detect no neurological deficit. The principal had no abnormal X-rays and demonstrated no muscular spasms as he turned in bed. The doctor was of the opinion that the principal’s appearing in court would not affect him physically.

Willie C. Gavin, a post office employee, was called. He was carrying mail from the post office to the railroad station. He saw the automobile driven by Strickland strike the same truck twice. He estimated [557]*557the speed of the automobile the first time it struck the truck at five, six, or seven miles per hour. He said something to the driver and the driver backed off and went around the block. When Gavin was making another trip a few minutes later, the same car struck the same truck again at about fifteen or twenty miles per hour. He said it looked like the driver fell over on the seat and rolled off onto the floor.

The State rested, and the principal called in rebuttal Dewey Lee, the policeman who was with Williams. There was no material difference between this witness’s evidence and that of Patrolman Williams, except that this witness did introduce the police report showing the accident. Neither the principal nor the surety testified in these proceedings.

On this evidence, the court held:

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Bluebook (online)
213 So. 2d 554, 1968 Miss. LEXIS 1292, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nix-v-state-miss-1968.