Sanders v. State

70 So. 2d 804, 37 Ala. App. 487, 1954 Ala. App. LEXIS 374
CourtAlabama Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 3, 1954
Docket5 Div. 420
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 70 So. 2d 804 (Sanders 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
Sanders v. State, 70 So. 2d 804, 37 Ala. App. 487, 1954 Ala. App. LEXIS 374 (Ala. Ct. App. 1954).

Opinion

HARWOOD, Judge.

This appellant was indicted for murder in the first degree.

At the trial below pleas of not guilty, and not guilty by reason of insanity were interposed.

The jury returned a verdict of guilty of murder in the second degree and fixed his punishment at imprisonment in the penitentiary for a term of twenty years.

Appellant’s motion for a new trial being overruled an appeal was perfected to this court.

The evidence presented by the State tended to show that early on the morning of 24 May 1947, on a rural road in Randolph County, the body of Robert Irwin Hand, a cab driver, was found slumped in the front seat of his cab. Hand had been shot several times, and his head had been injured.

J. T. Brown and his son, who lived about a quarter of a mile from where the cab was found had, the night before at or about 9:00 P. M., heard a series of shots apparently in the vicinity of where the cab was found, but had not investigated, and it was not until the next morning that Mr. Brown walked to the area and discovered the cab and Hand’s body.

An intensive investigation into this shooting was made by law enforcement officers at the time but no arrests resulted.

Later in the morning after the body had been discovered, and after a crowd had gathered at the scene, the law enforcement officers observed a set of human tracks leading from the cab across a nearby field. These tracks appeared to be made by a running person. The State toxicologist made a plaster cast of the print. The undisputed evidence shows this track to be 11% inches in length, and made probably by a shoe sized 8%.

In October 1952 one John Tom Lester was a prisoner in the Randolph County jail. Lester made certain statements to the sheriff of Randolph County tending to incriminate this appellant in the Hand killing.

[489]*489Thereafter the appellant was taken into custody and questioned by the Solicitor and various law enforcement officers.

From this point on the record is replete with confessory statements made to various people, or groups of people, on numerous different occasions. Innumerable witnesses testified in this regard. Several were examined on voir dire by appellant’s counsel prior to the admission of the confessory statements.

In addition to numerous law enforcement officers, the State also presented two doctors who had visited the appellant while in jail, and to whom the appellant had made confessory statements, and also the wife of a deputy sheriff who lived in the jail with her husband. The statements to the deputy’s wife were made by the appellant while assisting her in chores in the jail, no other parties being present at the time.

We have examined the rulings relative to the admissions of these various confessions in evidence, and we think it suffices to say that in no instance can error be attached to any of such rulings.

These statements, or most of them, were to the effect that the appellant and a companion had killed Hand at the place in question ; that the companion had fired one shot and given the pistol to the appellant and told him to finish the job, and he, appellant, had fired two shots into Hand and had struck him over the head with the pistol. Both had then fled the scene separately.

The evidence shows that the companion was later killed in Korea.

For the defense the appellant’s father testified that on the day the appellant was arrested he went to the sheriff’s office and was told by the then sheriff, Mr. Payne, that his son was merely being held for his own protection; that he was about to solve the Hand case, and did not want appellant to be out where he could be harmed, and for Mr. Sanders not to say anything to anyone about his son being in jail.

Mr. Sanders further testified the next he heard of the matter was some three weeks later when he learned his son had been charged with murder.

In rebuttal to this Mr. Payne testified that on this occasion he told Mr. Sanders that the appellant was being held for investigation.

The appellant appeared as a witness in his own behalf. He denied that he had had anything to do with the killing of Pland.

The appellant further testified that when he was first taken into custody he was told he would be held two or three days for safekeeping; that the officers later told him, after confronting him with the other prisoner, Lester, that it would be best for him to tell all he knew, that he would get out light and he then started talking and really did not know what he told the officers.

The appellant further testified that he did not see his father for three weeks after he was placed in jail, and was not permitted to contact his father.

In rebuttal to this latter phase of appellant’s testimony the State presented Mr. Payne, the sheriff, and the jailer, who testified that no requests were made by appellant to contact anyone, and no one was prevented from seeing appellant while he was in jail.

The defense called as a witness Mr. T. G. Kirby, the present sheriff, who testified that he had followed the tracks leaving the automobile on the day the killing was discovered.

The defense then sought to show by Mr. Kirby that he returned two or three days later and again followed the tracks further. The court sustained the State’s objection to this testimony on the ground that it was too remote in time. This is one of the errors urged in brief of counsel.

We pretermit consideration of the court’s ruling in this instance, as the record shows that shortly thereafter Mr. Kirby was permitted to testify in detail as to his efforts at following the tracks, even as to efforts he made almost a week later upon being informed of tracks around a mud hole some distance away at Wash Stinson’s place. [490]*490Mr. Kirby measured these tracks and they were the same size as those leaving the car.

Not being able to follow any tracks further Mr. Kirby went to the home of Amos Adams about a half mile away.

It should be noted that the evidence shows that the appellant, even as a boy, had very large feet, and from the time he was about 15 years of age wore a size 12 shoe.

Amos Adams and his wife each testified that on the morning that Hand’s body was found a Negro man, unknown to them, came to their home. His clothes were muddy. He washed and ironed his clothes at the Adams’ home, and then departed. Neither had seen him since this occurrence.

The defense introduced several lay witnesses whose testimony was to the effect that the appellant had .since earliest boyhood been large for his size; that he was backward in school, and could not learn his tasks when employed in a cotton mill; some of these witnesses testified that in their opinion the appellant was of unsound mind.

The State’s evidence clearly established the corpus delicti of the offense charged. The appellant’s confessions, if properly admitted, tend directly to show him to be the perpetrator of the crime charged.

In every instance in which an objection was interposed to the admission of a confessory statement counsel for appellant was first permitted to examine the witness on voir dire.

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Related

Sanders v. State
70 So. 2d 802 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1954)

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Bluebook (online)
70 So. 2d 804, 37 Ala. App. 487, 1954 Ala. App. LEXIS 374, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sanders-v-state-alactapp-1954.