Roy v. State

136 So. 273, 24 Ala. App. 419, 1931 Ala. App. LEXIS 60
CourtAlabama Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 30, 1931
Docket3 Div. 693.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 136 So. 273 (Roy 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
Roy v. State, 136 So. 273, 24 Ala. App. 419, 1931 Ala. App. LEXIS 60 (Ala. Ct. App. 1931).

Opinion

BRICKEN, P. J.

The indictment in this case contained four counts, in each of which this appellant was charged with the offense of murder in the first degree; the specific charge being, she unlawfully and with malice aforethought killed Wesley Roy by shooting him with a gun, etc. The proof disclosed that the deceased named in the indictment was the husband of this appellant, and that they were living together as man and wife at the time he died as a result of a gunshot wound in his breast. The evidence adduced was entirely circumstantial, and counsel for appellant earnestly insist that it was wholly insufficient to support a conviction. The jury returned a verdict of guilty of murder in the second degree and fixed her punishment at imprisonment in the penitentiary for fifteen years.

State witness Dr. R. M. Golson, a practicing physician of 44 years’ experience, testified he examined the body of the deceased several hours after his death. He stated: “There was only one wound, a gun shot wound about two inches above the left nipple. The wound was about the size of a 12 bore shot gun and ranged about 30 degrees outward, and 60 to 65 degrees upward. The wound would not cause instant death. I would judge it would take about 15 minutes for him to bleed to death,” etc.

Sheriff R. H. Weeks testified that he went to the Roy home about two weeks after Roy’s death and got two boards out of the floor of the north west room of the house, and took them to Dr. Havens, of the health department in Montgomery, and that there were marks oj; stains on the boards.

One Katherine Mayfield, a witness for the state, testified she was present in the State Laboratory, where she was an assistant, when Sheriff Weeks brought some boards that were to be tested for human blood. That the hoards were turned over to Dr. Havens who was in charge. That Dr. Havens took them in his office and examined them later. That she could not swear of her own knowledge that the next time she saw the boards, or saw some boards in Dr. Havens’ office that they were the same boards, and in the same condition as they were when Sheriff Weeks handed them over to Dr. Havens. She stated that she was not in constant possession of them from the time they were brought in until the test was made. That Dr. Havens was in possession of them. She said she knew nothing was done to them in the meantime because there was nothing to be done to them until the test was made. She said, “I have Dr. Havens’ word for it, and I am sorry he is not here.” By defendant’s counsel she was asked the following question: “I will ask you if that is what you are basing your statement on, that the boards were in the same condition, upon what Dr. Havens told you and general custom, that is what you are basing your answer on, isn’t it?” To which she replied: “Yes sir.” Thereupon the defendant moved to exclude the statement of the witness that the boards were in the same condition when the test was made as they were when they were brought in, and the court granted the motion and excluded the statement aforesaid of 'this witness. But notwithstanding this the court overruled defendant’s motion to also exclude the statement of the witness that the test revealed that there was human blood on the boards. To this action of the court defendant duly reserved an exception. This latter ruling was inconsistent to the former ruling in excluding the statement of the witness, which ruling was manifestly correct, her testimony being based clearly upon hearsay, and in order to render her statement to the effect that the test of the boards in question revealed that the stains were made by human blood, the burden was upon the state to show affirmatively that the boards, when the test was made, were in the same condition as when they were taken from the floor in the Roy home -and as when delivered to Dr. Havens. Until the state had met the burden, it was incompetent and inadmissible for the witness to testify as to the result of the test thereafter made.

The theory of the state was that deceased was killed in the northwest room of his home from where the boards were taken by the sheriff, and as insisted by appellant the only evidence which could possibly support this theory was that the stains found in- the room were made by human blood. It follows that the unauthorized *421 statements made by witness Mayfield were highly prejudicial and should not have been allowed.

As to the stains on the floor of the northwest room above mentioned, the defendant insisted: First, that the stains in question were not made by human blood at all, but by the blood from a number of hogs that had been butchered and placed in said room by a former tenant, one Hanson, who had lived in this house and had used that particular room for this purpose. And, second, that if the stains in question were in fact caused by human blood, that it could have been caused by the bloody garments of the deceased having been thrown on the floor after his body had been brought from the place where it was found in the woods some quarter of a mile from his home; and that the conclusion to the effect, even if the blood stains were that of a human, would be based upon conjecture and suspicion only that deceased was killed in said room by appellant and not upon evidence as the law requires.

As to the first insistence in this connection the defendant offered as a witness the man Hanson above mentioned, and he testified: “I live up in Lamar County, near Barnes-ville. In Georgia. I lived in Autauga County up till the first of December, 1928. I lived on Mr. Wes Roy’s place at the time I left Alabama. I lived on his place from February until December. The house was built for Mr. Roy’s home. Mr. Roy stayed practically at the home of his father-in-law, he and his wife. He was at my house very often. Mr. Roy, another man and I farmed the place. When I moved there that was a new house— hadn’t been completed. There were no out buildings. I raised five head of hogs there that year and killed four of them. I killed one about the last of October and the rest in November. That was something like two weeks before I moved. I did not have a smoke house. When I killed the hogs I laid it on the back porch and cut it up and took it into the northwest room and placed it on a scaffold something like three feet from the north window. I suppose a scaffold like that would have squared five feet or upward and the heads and jowls I put on a piece of duck behind the door; the door opened out from the right, inside that room. That door entered into the room from the hall. I cut the meat up on the back porch and toted it in through the hall into that room and spread what I could on the scaffold. I also salted the meat down in that room and at the time I salted the meat down there it got large blood stains behind the door where the head and jowls were and I didn’t use any more floor than I could help. I rolled the barrel over it and it staid there until I moved away. The meat was in the barrel at the time I moved it. I haven’t been over there since I left there. I saw Wes Roy there frequently while. I lived there. During that time, the year that I lived there Mr. Roy drank quite a bit. He drank practically the entire year. He drank a great deal; practically not able to attend to business during that year, after his operation at the hospital; once I picked him up out of the swamp and took him to my house and put him on the bed and he didn’t know how that was for six or eight hours. His brother would drink with him. * * * I killed those hogs 2 weeks before I left.

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Related

Wyatt v. State
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369 So. 2d 1251 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1979)
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Bluebook (online)
136 So. 273, 24 Ala. App. 419, 1931 Ala. App. LEXIS 60, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/roy-v-state-alactapp-1931.