Plumlee v. State

1971 OK CR 309, 488 P.2d 939
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma
DecidedSeptember 1, 1971
DocketNo. A-15345
StatusPublished

This text of 1971 OK CR 309 (Plumlee 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
Plumlee v. State, 1971 OK CR 309, 488 P.2d 939 (Okla. Ct. App. 1971).

Opinion

OPINION

BRETT, Judge.

Plaintiff in Error, James Plumlee, hereinafter called defendant, was charged in the District Court of Murray County, Oklahoma, with the crime of Murder, substantially in the following language, to-wit:

“That the said James Plumlee did on the Sth day of September, 1968 unlawfully, wilfully, maliciously, intentionally and feloniously, without authority of law and with the premeditated design upon the part of the said defendant to effect the death of a human being, towit: one Horace Roper; and did stomp and pummel the said Horace Roper with his feet and further did strike him on and about the face and body with hands and fists and an unknown blunt instrument; and did then and there inflict in and upon the said Horace Roper certain mortal wounds, from which said mortal wounds the said Horace Roper did and there languish and die, etc.”

Defendant was found guilty of First Degree Manslaughter, and was sentenced to sixty (60) years imprisonment.

The evidence contained in the record reflects that the defendant and the victim, Horace Roper, were next door neighbors, and that the defendant was Roper’s landlord. The altercation, which the State claims resulted in the victim’s death, appears to have begun in defendant’s home, September 4, 1968. Both men had been drinking heavily on that day, and sometime between 2:00 o’clock and 4:30 o’clock p. m., Roper went next door to defendant’s home, in an intoxicated condition. The two men appeared to be talking, but when their conversation reached a certain point, Roper hit the defendant in the face twice, and each time knocked him down across the bed. Defendant testified that Roper reached for a knife, and so he hit him one time which knocked him unconscious. Roper was taken next door to his house, and within a few minutes came outside again.

Mr. Coll, a State’s witness, testified that defendant stomped Roper about the head and face with his bare feet, but another State’s witness, Mr. Ervin, testified that he did not see the defendant stomping Roper. Four of the witnesses testified that when the fight ended, Roper had a trickle of blood coming from his right ear; and that the defendant’s nose, or his lip, was bloody. Roper was ambulatory thereafter; he claimed to be all right; his appearance seemed to verify that fact; and he refused medical attention only minutes after the fight.

Shortly after sunset, Roper was seen trying to awaken defendant, who was asleep in his own front yard. Defendant testified that after Roper woke him up, he went into his house, locked the door and went to bed.

Two of the State’s witnesses, Mr. Burk-hart and his mother, Mrs. MayBelle Laugh-lin, lived across the highway from defendant’s house. They testified that they heard a loud voice, shortly after midnight on September 4, 1968, coming from the direction of defendant’s house. Mrs. Laugh-lin testified that she recognized defendant’s voice when he said, “Leave me alone, or I’ll knock the G-damned hell out of you! ” Her son was unable to recognize defendant’s voice, but related that he heard the statement and said, “I heard someone in a drunken, in slurred words hollering at somebody.” He related the distance between the two houses was about half a football field, or about SO to 75 yards. Mrs. Laughlin was asked on cross-examination, “How many voices did you hear [941]*941down there? ” She answered, “I would say there was three or four voices.”

The next morning the District Attorney’s Special Investigator, Mr. Wayne Warthen, investigated the scene in front of defendant’s house where the body was found. Among the items discovered, and preserved as evidence, was a portion of the concrete front porch slab to defendant’s house. That portion of the porch had a spot of blood on it, so it was chipped out and sent to the laboratory for analysis. That analysis revealed that the blood was the same type blood as that of the deceased. The investigator also found defendant’s pipe laying in the vicinity of the dead body, along with some foot-prints which appeared to have been made by someone in their stocking feet. There was no evidence of a struggle, but it was shown that defendant was in his socks, without shoes, that particular day.

Consequently, this evidence — coupled with the testimony of Mrs. Laughlin and her son, Robert Burkhart, concerning the voices coming from the direction of defendant’s house shortly after midnight- — • raises some question of a second incident of some nature; or the possibility that the deceased fell on the front porch; or that he was knocked down on the porch, which could have accounted for the skull fracture revealed by the autopsy. The record is devoid of any explanation or clarification for the voices heard by Mrs. Laughlin and her son. The defendant denied that he saw the deceased again, after he went into his house, until about 4:00 o’clock a. m., when he went outside to go to the bathroom, and found him dead in the front yard. If defendant’s story is not to be believed, and Mrs. Laughlin’s testimony is believed, then what prompted defendant to say, “Leave me alone, or I’ll knock the G-damned hell out of you! ” —as the witnesses testified. Also, if defendant went out to the body to learn, whether or not Roper was dead, that would account for his footprints. The investigator related that it did not appear that a struggle took place where the body was found. It appears very clear that what occurred, happened on defendant’s property; and except for the testimony of “stomping,” the most convincing and incriminating evidence appears to be that which was found in the vicinity of the dead body.

The Information charging the crime of Murder specifically alleges that defendant “did stomp and pummel * * * with his feet,” and “did strike him on and about the face and body with his hands and fists and an unknown blunt instrument; * * That allegation was supported mainly by the testimony concerning the fight in the afternoon, and the doctor’s testimony explaining the autopsy report. No evidence whatsoever concerning a blunt instrument was introduced. It was the doctor, who introduced the testimony concerning a “blunt instrument,” which in his opinion he said, could have been the defendant’s bare feet. The doctor’s testimony did not seem to relate to anything connected with the evidence of blood found on defendant’s front porch, except that death occurred between midnight and 3 :00 o’clock a. m.

In describing the findings of the autopsy the doctor related: “We had a fractured skull, on the left area here (indicating) and had blood on top of the skull, underneath the scalp and blood underneath the skull, between the skull and the brain. And had bruises about this area here and here (indicating) and had fractured ribs 1, 2, 3 and 4, and blood in the right chest. And a severe bruised area here (indicating) with blood all behind the breastbone. And blood through the mediastinum, which is the area between the lungs, in which the tubes from the mouth, and airway and stomach tubes go down. The tubes to your lungs and to your stomach, they all reside in this mediastinum. There was blood all through that. What we call it is a hema-toma. It is a collection of bleeding, is what it amounts to. And he had a torn liver, or lacerated, cut liver. * * * He had about two to three pints of blood in the abdomen and there was blood into the part that holds the colon up and blood all [942]*942down behind the abdominal cavity, called the retroperitoneal blood. It means behind the abdominal cavity, all down in this right side, down here (indicating).”

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Related

Williams v. State
1969 OK CR 291 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma, 1969)
Tarter v. State
359 P.2d 596 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma, 1961)
Palmer v. State
1944 OK CR 19 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma, 1944)
Moore v. State
1930 OK CR 311 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma, 1930)
Miles v. State
1928 OK CR 350 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma, 1928)
Johnson v. State
1936 OK CR 66 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma, 1936)
Isaac v. State
1946 OK CR 88 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma, 1946)
Hodges v. State
1938 OK CR 127 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma, 1938)
Welborn v. State
1940 OK CR 95 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma, 1940)
Mead v. State
1938 OK CR 94 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma, 1938)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1971 OK CR 309, 488 P.2d 939, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/plumlee-v-state-oklacrimapp-1971.