Pryor v. State

1926 OK CR 131, 245 P. 669, 34 Okla. Crim. 131, 1926 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 163
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma
DecidedApril 21, 1926
DocketNo. A-5268.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 1926 OK CR 131 (Pryor 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
Pryor v. State, 1926 OK CR 131, 245 P. 669, 34 Okla. Crim. 131, 1926 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 163 (Okla. Ct. App. 1926).

Opinion

DOYLE, J.

Appellant, George Pryor, was convicted upon information charging him and .one Lee Bryant jointly with the crime of robbery, committed with the use of firearms, and in accordance with the verdict of the jury he was sentenced to a term of 25 years in the state penitentiary.

*132 In support of the contention of counsel for appellant that the judgment should be reversed and a new trial ordered, numerous errors are assigned. The following statement of the material facts will answer the purpose of our consideration of.the appeal:

Reuben Jones, a colored man, conducted a small confectionary in the east part of the city of McAlester, and lived in the same building. On the 11th day of August, 1923, about 11:30 p. m., three men entered the front door of the store. One stood inside the door while the others robbed Jones of, about $25. After committing the robbery, the two men ran out the door. Jones picked up a gun, and fired at the man standing inside the door, and he fell upon the floor. Jones followed with a Winchester rifle, and fired three or four more shots at the robbers while they were getting into a Ford car. About an hour later the sheriff was notified that two men were in a dying condition about four miles south of the city. Acting on this information he went there, and found Chester Pryor and Lewis Bryant mortally wounded. He called an ambulance, and brought them to All Saints Hospital at McAlester, where both died within two days.

It appears that appellant, George Pryor, Chester Pryor, his brother, Lee Bryant, and Lewis Bryant, his brother, were that day camped about four miles south of McAlester. The next day appellant and Lee Bryant were arrested at Atoka.

Reuben Jones testified that he was in his store about 11:30 p. m., and; his wife was in the back room, when three fellows came in. One stood inside the. door. The other two asked for sodas, and, as he turned around, one said “Stick them up,” and hit him over the head with a pistol. The other reached to the cash drawer. His wife opened the back room door, and one of the robbers struck at her with a pistol, then pushed him into the back room, saying, “Don’t *133 you move or I will shoot you.” The other stood at the door all the time. When the two rushed out he picked up his gun and shot at the man at the door, and he dropped down on the floor, and he did not see him any more. That he followed them out the front door, and they commenced shooting, and rushed across to where a car was parked. Then he fired three or four more shots in their direction. That he only saw three men there. That the night before two men came into the store and appellant was one of them. That appellant was the man that stood guard inside the door. That they took from him $20 or $30 in silver and greenbacks.

His wife testified that she was in an adjoining room, and, hearing a racket, opened the door, and saw appellant standing inside the front door, and saw two men pushing her husband towards her. One of the men told her to get back in the room, and the other pushed her husband into the room. The other one took the money out of the drawer. That she saw her husband fire at the man standing inside the door.

The defense interposed was an alibi. It appears that the Pryor brothers and the Bryant brothers were driving from Muskogee to Dallas, Texas, where the Pryor brothers lived, in appellant’s Ford car. When they reached McAlester they drove south about four miles, where they camped for a day. About sundown on the night of the tragedy Lee Bryant and his brother, Lewis, and Chester Pryor drove to the city. Appellant remained at the camp. They told appellant they would be back about 10 o’clock. When they did not return at that hour appellant waited a while, and then started towards the city, and when he reached the Jefferson Highway he saw some persons fixing a car,-and they asked him if he knew anything about fixing their car. While he was working on this car, Lee Bryant and his brother and appellant’s brother, came along, he called to *134 them, then got into his car and drove to the camp. The two boys that were shot were in a dying condition, and stated they got into trouble at McAlester. Appellant went to a farm house near by, and told the man about the boys’ condition, and asked him to telephone for a doctor. The farmer telephoned for a doctor, and also telephoned the sheriff’s office.

Pat Smythe testified that his mother lives near Atoka; met appellant several times in Dallas; was on his way from Muskogee to Dallas in Tom Parker’s car with another fellow named Starks; that they reached McAlester about 10 o’clock, stopped there a while, and went on south, and had car trouble about three miles out; that, while they were working on the car, appellant came up, and he asked him if he knew anything about a Ford; that while they were there another car came by, appellant said, “I believe that is my car now,” and called to them. They stopped, and some one in the car said, “Come on, George, quick.” Appellant went to the car and got in, and that was the last he saw of him. They went on, and the other car turned into the side road.

J: S. Starks testified that he met Tom Parker and Pat Smythe in Muskogee, and arranged to go to Dallas with them on the morning of August 11th; they reached Mc-Alester between 9 and 10 o’clock; were there about an hour; then went on south, and had car trouble about three and one-half miles out; that the first time he ever saw appellant he was coming up the road while they were trying to fix the car; that Smythe seemed to know him, and asked him what was the matter with the car, and he insisted on helping fix it. When Mr. Parker started the motor, a car came along, and appellant remarked that it sounded like his car, and he hollered. The car stopped; he walked over and got in; and the car turned down the side road.

As a witness in his own behalf, George Pryor testified that he was driving from Tulsa to Dallas, and with his *135 brother met the two Bryant boys at Muskogee. They wanted to go as far as Durant with him. On the evening of August 10th they camped about four miles south of McAlester, and about three-quarters of a mile off the Jefferson Highway. That he did not return to McAlester after they reached the camp. That the next day about sundown the three boys went to town. About 10:30 he walked up to the Jefferson Highway, and met a fellow he knew, Pat Smythe, who was having some car trouble. Two men he did not know were there. That after he helped to start the engine his car came by, and he hollered to the boys, and walked over to his own car. Lee Bryant told him that the boys were shot. That he took the wheel and drove on to camp. Then they took the boys out and put them on quilts. The boys told him that they had a shooting scrape with a negro, and asked him to get help for them, and then asked him to leave, saying they did not want him to be mixed up in the trouble; that he went to a farmhouse 150 yards from the camp, and had a man there ’phone for a doctor. The man said that when he called the doctor he would come and take care of the boys until Hie doctor got there. That with Lee Bryant in his car he drove to the Jefferson Highway, and headed south, and, after going some distance, the car ran into a ditch and turned over.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1926 OK CR 131, 245 P. 669, 34 Okla. Crim. 131, 1926 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 163, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pryor-v-state-oklacrimapp-1926.