Otey v. State

474 So. 2d 112, 1984 Ala. Crim. App. LEXIS 4679
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Alabama
DecidedJanuary 10, 1984
Docket8 Div. 921
StatusPublished

This text of 474 So. 2d 112 (Otey 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
Otey v. State, 474 So. 2d 112, 1984 Ala. Crim. App. LEXIS 4679 (Ala. Ct. App. 1984).

Opinion

LEIGH M. CLARK, Retired Circuit Judge.

Appellant-defendant was convicted of robbery in the third degree and sentenced to imprisonment for eighteen years at a sentence hearing at which it was shown that defendant had previously been convicted of grand larceny. In this circumstance, the prescribed limits of punishment for the Class C conviction of robbery in the third degree, as raised by the other felony conviction, are the limits prescribed for a Class B felony of “not more than 20 years nor less than 2 years.” Alabama Criminal Code, § 13A-5-6.

According to the testimony of two employees of “Bill’s Men’s Wear” in Huntsville, one a male and the other a female, they saw defendant while in said store on September 30, 1982, attempt to leave the store with two pairs of pants constituting merchandise of the store that defendant had stuffed under his shirt. As defendant was in the act of going out the door, the female employee attempted to stop him, and he “hit” her in the stomach twice and “threw” her to the floor. The defendant testified that he knew nothing about what happened at Bill’s, that he had never been at the store, and that he had never seen the mentioned female employee prior to trial. [114]*114This brief summary of the evidence is sufficient, we think, to show that there is no merit in appellant’s first contention for reversal that the State did not prove “beyond a reasonable doubt that appellant was guilty of robbery in the third degree.” We realize that as argument it could have appealed to some jurors. We may have some question whether defendant was the person who committed the alleged robbery, but we have no reason to believe that the jurors were not unanimously convinced by the evidence beyond a reasonable doubt that defendant was such person. There is no contention by appellant to the effect that the incident involved did not constitute robbery in the third degree, which is committed “if in the course of committing a theft” one “Uses force against the person of the owner or any person present with the intent to overcome his physical resistance or physical power of resistance.” Alabama Criminal Code, § 13A-8-43(a)(l).

Appellant states the second issue presented in his brief as follows:

“Whether or not the trial court erred in denying Appellant’s motion to exclude and motion to suppress. (R.O.A. pp. 136-138). Also, whether or not the trial court erred in not allowing Appellant time to have two witnesses testify about whether or not the key investigator in the case took Appellant’s picture to the victim while Appellant was at the police headquarters. (R.O.A. pp. 73, 74, 75).”

It is to be seen therefrom that the issue is two-pronged. It apparently pertains to a highly confusing feature of the trial, which is not clarified by the record proper or the transcript of the proceedings in the trial court. Defendant’s written motion to suppress and his written motion to exclude are directed at “the pre-trial identification(s) made by the two witnesses” who in their testimony on behalf of the State testified that defendant was the person who took the two pairs of pants from the store and hit the female employee as she tried to stop him at the door. The colloquies that procured the oral denial of defendant’s motion to exclude and defendant’s motion to suppress tend to environ the question then ruled upon with vagueness, but it is clear that testimony was introduced in the case showing that prior to defendant’s arrest on October 5, 1983, both witnesses identified defendant from one of some pictures of different individuals of substantially the same classification as to age and race as the person described by the eyewitnesses. Before the trial commenced and throughout the course of the trial, there were many references and profuse testimony as to photographs that had been shown the two eyewitnesses separately by law enforcement authorities in their effort to determine the identity of the person who had committed the robbery. Much of such references and testimony was in camera. Some of it consisted of utterances of attorneys or witnesses that apparently overlapped, or were overlapped by, utterances of other attorneys or witnesses so that it becomes extremely difficult for us to determine with reasonable certainty what particular photograph or photographs or particular groups of photographs constituted the photograph or photographs then referred to in the transcript of the proceedings. The trial judge had a better opportunity to make such determination, by reason of the fact that he could observe the body motions of the attorneys and witnesses as they spoke with reference to the photographs. Notwithstanding the confused state of the proceedings as they appear in the transcript, it is reasonably clear to us that defendant’s second issue pertains essentially to whether the trial court committed reversible error in ruling against defendant as to a request by his attorney that defendant be allowed an opportunity to present testimony by one or two officers, naming them, that, during the time defendant was first brought to jail and was in the process of being “booked,” Officer Dana Parker went with a photograph to Bills’ Men’s Wear and returned therefrom before defendant was actually booked. It is reasonably clear to us that by such proposed testimony defendant planned to corroborate the previous testimony of the defendant to the effect that he was not actually [115]*115“booked” until after he was photographed at the jail and two officers had taken the photograph taken of him there to Bill’s Men’s Wear where it was shown to one of the eyewitnesses for her identification thereof as the robber, and thereafter the defendant was promptly “booked.” The following is a pertinent part of the defendant’s testimony:

“Q. And when you went in the back, then what happened first? Did they ask for your picture first?
“A. Yeah. He asked me for my picture. I stood up against the wall and he took my picture.
“Q. And what kind of picture was it?
“A. Black and white.
“Q. Black and white picture?
“A. Yes.
“Q. Then what was done with the picture?
“A. Well, they took it over there to Bill’s and showed it to the lady.
“Q. And how do you know this is what happened?
“A. Because they took my picture — him and this other policeman took my picture and they went over there and they come back and said, “Yeah, we have got you, you are under arrest.”

The action of the trial court as to the request of defendant’s counsel that he be given an opportunity to present by one or more of the named officers testimony tending to corroborate the testimony of defendant as quoted above is in the following part of the transcript:

“MS. TESNEY [Defendant’s Attorney]: Your Honor, I call another witness. He is on his way.
“THE COURT: Who is that, please?
“MS. TESNEY: Gordon Petty.
“THE COURT: From where?
“MS. TESNEY: The Police Station.
“THE COURT: Ladies and gentlemen, if you will, go to the jury room. We will wait approximately five minutes.
“(Jury left the Courtroom.)
“MS.

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Bluebook (online)
474 So. 2d 112, 1984 Ala. Crim. App. LEXIS 4679, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/otey-v-state-alacrimapp-1984.