Powell v. State

100 So. 2d 38, 39 Ala. App. 246, 1957 Ala. App. LEXIS 57
CourtAlabama Court of Appeals
DecidedAugust 13, 1957
Docket8 Div. 967
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 100 So. 2d 38 (Powell v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alabama Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Powell v. State, 100 So. 2d 38, 39 Ala. App. 246, 1957 Ala. App. LEXIS 57 (Ala. Ct. App. 1957).

Opinions

[248]*248CATES, Judge.

On June 14, 1955, Hollis Powell was indicted by the Grand Jury of Morgan County of assaulting Palmer Smith with intent to murder. Tried to a jury in the circuit court, he was, on February 10, 1956, found guilty of assault and battery and fined $500, to which punishment the trial judge, pursuant to Code 1940, T. 15, § 328, added six months’ hard labor for the county. Upon failing to pay the fine and costs, Powell was (under Code 1940, T. 15, §§ 341 and 342) sentenced to 140 days for the fine and 304 days to pay $228 costs, all at hard labor. This latter sentence goes four days beyond the ten months’ maximum specified under § 342, supra, Anderson v. State, 18 Ala.App. 429, 93 So. 68; Maxwell v. State, 34 Ala.App. 653, 43 So.2d 323.

A motion for a new trial specifying some 81 supporting grounds was filed March 7, 1956, and set down by the judge for hearing on April 6. The court, having heard evidence and argument, overruled the motion on April 7. The transcript of evidence was filed in the circuit clerk’s office on March 31, and the record proper was filed here May 23, 1956, and submitted to us on briefs on October 4, 1956, the Attorney General’s brief not having been filed until after the 1955-56 Term.

March 13, 1955, a Sunday, Mr. Palmer Smith, who was then a resident of Cullman County near Vinemont, was at the church at Powells Chapel in Morgan County. The solicitor brought out that Smith, employed at Redstone Arsenal, was a veteran, married nine years, and the father of two children by that union. The day before, a Saturday, he testified he had discovered Hollis Powell had been keeping company with Mrs. Smith, seemingly for the six months last past. Powell and Mrs. Smith had been together until midnight of March 12-13.

Mrs. Smith had gone off on Sunday afternoon with the family pick-up truck and her husband testified that in order to get the vehicle back, he went to several places in the vicinity asking about his wife. Some of his hearers seem to have formed the impression that his search was concentrated more on the whereabouts of his wife and the defendant than on locating the pick-up truck.

On the Sunday evening in question, at about dark, Smith came to the church in the company of Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Powell. Services had begun. Smith went into the building but came out before the close of the ceremony. He was sitting in a parked car with two other men when Hollis Powell came into the area before the church entrance. Smith ran toward Powell and began beating on him. Powell says he brandished an open pocket knife. [249]*249Smith says that only after Powell had fired at him twice with a .22 H & R revolver, did he get his knife out of his pocket. Powell backed up to a parked automobile and on the third shot hit Smith somewhere in the region of the left shoulder.

Powell then made off afoot to his father’s home while his brother and another man took Smith to a doctor. Powell surrendered to the sheriff the next afternoon.

If the necessary mental state of the defendant is established, a shooting can be within the category of assault and battery, McGee v. State, 4 Ala.App. 54, 58 So. 1008. Powell takes no exception to the general charge of the judge to the jury. In addition the court gave fourteen special written instructions requested by the defendant under Code 1940, T. 7, § 273.

On this appeal Powell complains that he did not have a fair trial because (a) the solicitor, by improper arguments, statements and side remarks, created a prejudicial atmosphere, and (b) he was not allowed to make a showing of an absent witness, (c) the judge allowed the exhibition and receipt in evidence of certain of Smith’s bloodstained clothing, and (d) the refusal of his requested charge 43, viz.: “I charge you gentlemen of the jury that you may consider along with the other evidence in the case the fact, if it be a fact, that the defendant voluntarily gave himself up to the sheriff in deciding the guilt or innocence of the defendant.”

As to the first of these propositions, we think it needful to begin with the observation that Powell was here charged with assault with intent to murder by means of a pistol. Ordinarily, the use of such a weapon imports malice. The State in such circumstances may adduce evidence — which it did here — of a romantic relationship between Powell and Mrs. Smith. Admissibility of such evidence is to allow the jury to consider indicia of the defendant’s entertaining a reason to do away with the husband. 3 Underhill Crim. Evid. (5th Ed.), § 644, n. 27; Powell v. State, 219 Ala. 557, 123 So. 34. In Ray v. State, 253 Ala. 329, 45 So.2d 4, 5, the Supreme Court, per Simpson, J., said:

“ * * * Though proof of motive for the crime is not indispensable to a conviction, Wingard v. State, 247 Ala. 488(1), 25 So.2d 170, it is permissible testimony in aid of the State’s case. McDonald v. State, 241 Ala. 172(9), 1 So.2d 658.”

So, at the outset, we find the defendant carrying a pistol from which the jury could have inferred, among other inferences, either (1) that he had in mind to kill Smith, or (2) that he feared Smith. The verdict being an acquittal of assault with intent to murder indicates that the State did not carry the point as to Powell compassing Smith’s death in order to remove an obstacle in the path of his alleged pursuit of Mrs. Smith. Accordingly, this lessens the degree of any purported prejudice. However, if there was a prejudicial atmosphere in the solicitor’s manner of prosecuting, we have ourselves no measuring calculus for the infinitesimal gradations of the effect upon the minds of the jury. Experience teaches us that a jury’s verdict is sometimes a cathartic aimed at purging the community of an undesirable.

Plence, we consider it necessary to examine the alleged injurious conduct of the solicitor. From a reading of the transcript, it appears that he frequently employs the use of a cumulative question, i. e., summing up the answers elicited in preceding questions often with a sprinkling of opprobrious adjectives, e. g., “That while this young man was working for a living and his family and two children that this drunken gun-toter down at the church was running around with his wife; you know that?”

The questions put to various witnesses by the solicitor, of which Powell complains in his brief, are as follows:

On direct examination of State’s witness,. Palmer Smith:

[250]*250“Q. Shot you in the left of your heart after you discovered he broke your home up on Saturday?”
“Q. And this man who had broken •your home up shot you while you were at the church house in your heart ?”
“Q. He used a hollow point on you at the church house after he had your wife out on Saturday night?”
“Q. It is lodged at such a strategic location they could not remove it. You were suffering a service connected disability at the time?”

On direct examination of State’s witness, T. M. Hart:

“Q. Going away from home in that truck and this defendant following her?”

On direct examination of State’s witness, Earl Sandlin:

“Q. Did you ever see Mr. Powell and Mrs. Smith in your store at the same time?”
“Q. Did you ever' see one of them leave and the other follow close behind?”
“Q.

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White v. State
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Powell v. State
100 So. 2d 46 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1958)
Powell v. State
100 So. 2d 38 (Alabama Court of Appeals, 1957)

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Bluebook (online)
100 So. 2d 38, 39 Ala. App. 246, 1957 Ala. App. LEXIS 57, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/powell-v-state-alactapp-1957.