Riley v. State

180 So. 2d 321, 254 Miss. 86, 1965 Miss. LEXIS 929
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 22, 1965
Docket43269
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 180 So. 2d 321 (Riley v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Riley v. State, 180 So. 2d 321, 254 Miss. 86, 1965 Miss. LEXIS 929 (Mich. 1965).

Opinion

*89 Brady, Tom P., J.

The appellant, Ollie Riley, was tried and convicted in the Circuit Court of Leake County, Mississippi on an indictment under Chapter 281, Mississippi Laws of 1958, Mississippi Code Annotated section 2412.5, supplement 1964, commonly known as the “Peeping Tom Statute.” Appellant was sentenced to a term of two years in the Mississippi State Penitentiary and prosecutes this appeal from that sentence.

The relevant facts in the case are as follows. On the night of May 4, 1963, at approximately 10:30 P.M., the Brantley family, consisting of Mr. Max Brantley, his wife, Mrs. Donna Brantley, four daughters and a son, had retired for the night. A bird dog chained in the yard began to bark and Mr. Brantley arose to investigate. The record discloses that on two other occasions the Brantley household had been disturbed by a Negro who had peeped into the windows of their home three weeks before, and three months before, the night in question.

The record discloses that Mr. Brantley seized his pistol and ran toward the front door. As he did so, Mrs. Brantley looked out their bedroom window and saw appellant standing with his face in the window. She called out to her husband: “Here he is, at the window.” Mr. Brantley ran out the front door and saw the appellant at the southeast corner of his house. When Mr. Brantley saw him, appellant started to run from the house, being then approximately six feet from the window. He told appellant to stop or he would kill him, and the appellant promptly stopped. Mr. Brantley caught hold of him and forced him to sit on the porch. Appellant stated to Mr. Brantley that he had parked his car at the foot of a hill on old Highway 61 on the side of Mr. Brantley’s house; that he had gotten out of the car and walked down to the creek bridge, walked *90 across, walked back across Mr. Syl Quick’s pasture, and up to Mr. Brantley’s home.

Mr. Brantley testified that he could not tell that the appellant had been drinking at all, nor could he tell that there was anything abnormal or wrong with appellant’s condition except that he was scared. Mr. Brantley testified that appellant admitted to him that he had made the tracks in the snow around the windows of Mr. Brantley’s house approximately three months before. These tracks went from window to window of the house. The record indicates that appellant’s car was parked some 200 yards from the side of Mr. Brantley’s home.

Mr. Brantley further testified that appellant admitted he had brought a five gallon can up to the bathroom window and peeped into Mr. Brantley’s bathroom approximately three weeks before the night in question.

Each of these former events had taken place on a Saturday night, as did the event on the night in question, May 4, 1963. Mr. Brantley’s twin daughters, Maxine and Braxine, age twelve, were permitted to testify over appellant’s objection.

Braxine Brantley testified that it was snowing on the night she first saw appellant; that when she turned on the porch light and looked out the door to see if it was still snowing, she saw appellant outside peeping in the window of the living room by the front porch, and that he fled.

Maxine testified that three weeks before May 4, 1963, at approximately 10:30 P.M., she went to the bathroom and saw appellant looking in the bathroom window; that she screamed and he fled.

While both of these girls knew and recognized the appellant, they were not able at the time to recall his name. The record discloses that appellant lives approximately a half mile from Mr. Max Brantley’s home. No indictments were sought against appellant for these two former alleged offenses.

*91 Mrs. Donna Brantley, wife of Max Brantley, Janice Brantley, a seventeen-year-old daughter, David Brantley, a son, and Maxine and Braxine Brantley, twin daughters, testified in substance to what their father had testified with reference to what transpired on the night of May 4, 1963. Janice Brantley also testified that she heard the appellant tell her father that he was drunk or had been drinking, and that he lost his head, and lost his way; that he had to go off and leave his car because he couldn’t drive it and that he was just on his way home. This corroborates the statements made by appellant.

The record discloses that, after Mr. Max Brantley stopped and held the appellant, he sent his son, David, to get his father-in-law, Mr. Hal Hamlin, and a neighbor, Mr. Sylvester Quick, who came to Mr. Brantley’s home. Mr. Tommy Boberts, city policeman of Carthage, Mississippi, accompanied by Mr. Clyde Creer, also came, and Mr. Tommy Boberts placed the appellant under arrest and took him off to jail.

Mr. and Mrs. Hal Hamlin, the father and step-mother of Mrs. Donna Brantley, both testified. Mr. Hamlin testified that he did not believe the appellant was drunk on the night in question; that he heard him talk and that he made good sense, as good as he could have under the circumstances. Mrs. Hamlin stated that she could not tell whether or not he was drunk.

Mr. Tommy Boberts testified that the appellant was not drunk; that he could smell liquor on appellant, but he wouldn’t say that he was drunk because he walked good and he “wasn’t thick tongued or anything like that.” He admitted that the appellant stated he had just gotten lost and that was the reason he was there.

Mr. Sylvester Quick, who was first to arrive at the scene after appellant was caught, testified also that appellant was not drunk but that he was drinking; that appellant did not act as though he were scared; and *92 that appellant stated, as an explanation for why he was there, that he had gotten lost.

Mr. Clyde Geer testified that he accompanied Mr. Tommy Roberts, and that the appellant was not drunk; that he could “smell a little on him,” but he was not drunk.

The appellant, Ollie Riley, took the stand and testified in his own behalf. He denied every statement which had been made by Mr. Brantley and his daughters with reference to peeping in the windows on the night of May 4th. He testified that he had taken some drinks, with a complete stranger, of something that “tasted like sweetened water,” which hypnotized him; that he was completely lost; that his mind “would be this minute one place, and the next minute be another,” and that he did not know where he was or why he had gone to the Brantley home. He testified that his “membrance” came and went, and that he did not ever look into the windows of the Brantley home. He testified that he was not drunk but that he had no mind and did not know where he was; that his memory did not come back to him until Mr. Brantley grabbed him by the arm and he looked into Mr. Brantley’s pistol barrel.

The appellant assigns four errors, but his brief treats the errors assigned as if they fall within two categories. The first category is that the court erred in permitting testimony, over objections of appellant, regarding alleged offenses of a similar nature to the crime with which appellant was charged, attempting to connect appellant thereto, and in refusing to grant á motion for a mistrial and a new trial because thereof.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
180 So. 2d 321, 254 Miss. 86, 1965 Miss. LEXIS 929, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/riley-v-state-miss-1965.