Pugh v. State

376 So. 2d 1135
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Alabama
DecidedSeptember 4, 1979
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 376 So. 2d 1135 (Pugh 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
Pugh v. State, 376 So. 2d 1135 (Ala. Ct. App. 1979).

Opinion

Burglary: two years; Probation: three years, six months of which to be served in the county jail.

On January 19, 1978, Margaret Webb lived in an apartment at 1614-A Oak Street in Montgomery, Alabama. She was working at Maxwell Air Force Base at the time and her duty hours were from 7:00 A.M. to 7:00 P.M. On the date in question, she had left her house to go to work sometime before 7:00 A.M., and prior to leaving, she was certain that all the windows and doors were locked. About 1:30 or 2:00 P.M. she received a call from the police department, left her job and went home. Upon her arrival, she noticed that the back window had been broken and "the back door was open." She testified that her sewing machine, which was kept in the bedroom, had been moved and was "at the window." Further, she said that her Panasonic stereo, including an amplifier and two speakers valued between $550.00 and $600.00, was missing.

Ms. Webb stated that, later on the same day, Detective Hayward Huffman showed her a stereo set which she identified by the serial numbers as that taken from her apartment.

During the trial, she said she did not know the appellant, Gregg Smith, Isaac McGhee or Theodore Thomas and had not given the appellant or any of the others permission to enter her apartment and take the stereo.

Detective Hayward Huffman of the Montgomery Police Department testified that, on January 19, 1978, he became involved in the investigation of a burglary at the home of Margaret Webb. According to Huffman, when the police went to the Webb apartment, he had noticed that the kitchen window had been broken and opened and that it appeared that someone had entered the apartment through that window. Further, the apartment had been "ramshackled," drawers opened and "things moved out of place."

Huffman testified that Ms. Webb had told him that a stereo was missing and said he noticed that a sewing machine had been moved "from the bedroom to the kitchen near the window." He said that he had received information from a resident of the neighborhood where the apartment was located which produced the license plate of a "van" seen "on the side of the Webb apartment."

Huffman testified that, on the day of the incident, he saw the appellant, Sherman Pugh, at 4041 Gauge Street standing near a van which bore the license plate number he had received from the witness. He recalled that the appellant was standing near the back door of the van and was with three juveniles. Huffman said that the back door of the van was open and that he saw a stereo and speakers inside. He stated that the speakers and the stereo were removed by the police and that, when they were shown to Ms. Webb later, she identified them by their serial numbers.

Huffman said he took Pugh into custody "sometime after four o'clock" on the afternoon of the incident.

During cross-examination, Huffman acknowledged that the police had received "an anonymous telephone call" concerning the burglary and that he personally received the information concerning the license plate number of the van. Further, Huffman said he had learned that a Mr. Edgar Spear lived at 4041 Gauge Street and that the van used by the appellant was owned by Mr. Spear.

Huffman stated that, when he arrested the appellant, two other "black males" were arrested at the same time. He said that a fourth person, Theodore Thomas, a juvenile, was not present at the time, but was arrested later, and that the other two males were Gregory Smith and Isaac Dwight McGhee. Huffman added that the appellant, Sherman *Page 1137 Pugh, was thirty-one years of age, Gregory Smith was seventeen and Isaac McGhee was sixteen at the time of their arrest.

Isaac McGhee, seventeen years of age, stated that he lived at 3112 West Smiley Court in Montgomery, Alabama. He said that Sherman Pugh, Gregory Smith and Theodore Thomas were friends of his, that they were all members of a band, and that the appellant, Sherman "Pie" Pugh was the leader of the band.

McGhee said that he recalled the day they went to Margaret Webb's apartment on Oak Street and stated that they had gone into the apartment on two occasions. He testified that, on the first occasion, "Cookie" (Theodore Thomas) and "Pappa" (Gregory Smith) had accompanied him, and stated that the appellant did not accompany them and was not waiting outside when they entered the Webb apartment.

According to McGhee, he was on his way to his grandmother's house at the time they entered the Webb apartment on the first occasion. He said that the three of them went inside and "ate some cookies" but did not take any goods or property on that occasion. He stated that they saw the stereo but did not remove it.

The witness said that "about an hour or two" later they "got up with" the appellant. They then went back to the apartment and he, Gregory Smith and Theodore Thomas went inside the second time.

According to the witness, the appellant drove them to the apartment in a van which belonged to Edgar Spear. McGhee testified that the van was parked on the side of the apartment and said that the appellant never went into the apartment nor did he get out of the van. McGhee said that on the second occasion, he and the two other juveniles went in through a door, which had been left open or unlocked after they entered the apartment originally. He said that "Cookie [Theodore Thomas] busted a window in the back," and let Smith and him in.

McGhee recalled that Thomas had opened the door on the first occasion, and he remembered seeing Smith go in through the door first on the second occasion. Further, he said that all three had entered through the door the second time they entered the apartment.

McGhee testified that he did not remember whether or not the door was "shut" when they returned to the apartment and that, all he remembered was "that we went in, and I did not see nobody open no door or nothing." He also acknowledged that the appellant knew that none of the three lived at that apartment. McGhee stated that the only thing that the appellant said to them was "hurry-up."

The witness testified that the stereo and speakers were then taken from the apartment and placed in the van and they drove away. He stated that they were going to sell the stereo and had gone first to Linda Williams' home, and then to Spear's residence, where they were apprehended by the police. According to McGhee, all of those involved in the theft, including the appellant, were engaged in the "dealing" involving the sale of the stereo.

During cross-examination, McGhee said that he knew Lilly Burton and that he had called the appellant from the Burton house. He acknowledged that, at the time he made the call to Pugh, he had asked the appellant to come and pick him up. He said that he did not tell the appellant that he was going to break into any house or take anything at that time.

According to McGhee, after he called the appellant, the three juveniles walked to his grandmother's house and then went to the apartment and broke in. He said that they did not take anything but "[j]ust looked at the speakers."

McGhee testified that he picked up the sewing machine but that he "put it back down." He said that he did not remember whether or not he had moved it but did not believe that he had. Further, he stated that he did not see anyone else pick up the machine on that occasion. *Page 1138

McGhee testified that, after they left the apartment on the first occasion, they went to his grandmother's house where the appellant "showed up." He said that they did not make any telephone calls to locate the appellant after they left the apartment on the first occasion.

The witness denied that he had promised to bring Linda Williams a stereo and said "[n]o sir.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
376 So. 2d 1135, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pugh-v-state-alacrimapp-1979.