Sands v. State

1937 OK CR 66, 67 P.2d 62, 61 Okla. Crim. 206, 1937 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 62
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma
DecidedApril 9, 1937
DocketNo. A-9082.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 1937 OK CR 66 (Sands 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
Sands v. State, 1937 OK CR 66, 67 P.2d 62, 61 Okla. Crim. 206, 1937 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 62 (Okla. Ct. App. 1937).

Opinion

DAVENPORT, P. J.

The plaintiffs in error, for convenience hereinafter referred to as the defendants, were *207 jointly tried with Buby Herring; were convicted and each of the defendants, Charlie Sands and Leon Siler, found guilty and their punishment assessed at death by electrocution. Motion for new trial was filed, considered, and overruled, and the defendants Sands and Siler appeal.

The record in this case is very voluminous; many pages of the testimony taken over repeated objections and incorporated in the record are wholly immaterial to an opinion in this case, and should not have been gone into by the trial court. The prosecution seems to have believed that it was necessary to' prove the crimes committed or attempted to have been committed by the defendants Sands and Siler prior to the crime committed for which they were on trial.

In substance, the testimony material in this case is that Sands and ,Siler had both been inmates of the state penitentiary; Siler was released from the penitentiary on March 15, 1935; and Sands was released on May 25, 1935; they got together at or near the city of Seminole and started west toward Elgin, using stolen cars to make the trip. According to the statement of one of the defendants, they left Seminole with the intention of robbing a bank; they went to Fletcher, and from Fletcher to Heald-ton, accompanied by the wife of Siler; at Healdton Buby Herring' joined the party and they returned to a relative of one of the defendants near Fletcher. They left Fletcher the morning of May 31, 1935, driving toward the town of Elgin; somewhere along the road in helping a party out of the mud the car they were driving stuck in the mud, and while they were pushing the car out a couple drove up in a Ford V 8; the defendants took this car from the parties and drove into Elgin and robbed the Bank of Elgin. The defendants robbed the Bank of Elgin on May 31, 1935; as they fled from the bank they were pursued *208 by officers and a posse of citizens; a few miles from El-gin tbe defendants ran the Ford V 8 into' a pasture near some brush and abandoned the car, tailing the money and guns with them; one of the men in pursuit discovered the car, and in company with another of the pursuing posse examined it, and could not see whether any one was in the car; they fired a shot into the woods and in return were fired on by the robbers. The robbers took refuge in a small farm house, which was the home of the Medrano family. After the bandits had taken possession of the Medrano home, they advised the family and other parties visiting in the home if they would keep quiet they would not get hurt.

One of the officers asked Mrs. Medrano if she had seen anything of the bandits and she told them they caught a car and had gone on. After some delay, the officers went to the house and asked for water, and Mrs. Medrano put the bucket out of the screen door and they went to the well and got water.

In the meantime one of the bank robbers, one of the defendants in this case, had gotten possession of Mr. Med-rano’s shotgun and was sitting on a box by the door leading from the bedroom to the kitchen with the gun in his hand. The other defendant had a sawed off shotgun and a pistol. The testimony further shows that after the officers got the water, one of the deputies, J. E. Wilson, the deceased, remarked that, “I believe I will go look through the house,” and went in the door leading to the kitchen. Another officer by the name of Deeds followed him. Immediately after Wilson stepped into the room a gun fired and Wilson fell. The shooting then began from the inside and outside. Many shots were fired, and both Sands and Siler were wounded.

*209 In the meantime, while the shooting was going on, Mrs. Medrano got her child and made her way to' the barn. One or more shots were fired into' the bam. The Ambrose family, who was visiting, and Mr. Medrano were compelled to> lie on the floor. About the time the officers entered the house where the bank robbers surrendered, after being wounded by the officers, Mr. Medrano was in the house and was seriously wounded, and Medrano was rushed to the hospital, where he died later on.

There is some conflict in the testimony as to' whether Medrano was wounded by one of the bank robbers or by the shots from the outside during the firing on the home of Medrano1. Both the defendants, Sands and Siler, testify. They admit the robbing of the bank; admit being-pursued by the officers and the posse of citizens; admit abandoning the car they had driven to Elgin when they robbed the bank, in the pasture near the timber; they admit taking possession of the Medrano home where his family was, and where the members of the Ambrose family were visiting, and told them to' keep quiet, and that if they would do so, they would not be harmed.

The testimony discloses that in discussing what would happen if the officers came, one of the defendants stated he would kill or shoot the first officer that came into the house. The defendants, in their testimony, admitted the shooting, that there was quite a gun battle in and around the Medrano home. The only justification they offer is they fired at the officers to keep the officers from killing them. They admit they were fugitives, trying to get away from the scene of the robbery in Elgin. They offer no* justification for their acts in killing the deceased Wilson other than they did so to keep the officer from killing them.

*210 The foregoing is all of the testimony that the court deems necessary to incorporate in this opinion.

The defendants, in their petition in error, allege 21 errors committed by the trial court which they deem sufficient to- warrant a reversal of this case. All of the errors assigned are discussed together by the defendants. It is urged by the defendants that they shot the deceased Wilson in self-defense to avoid being killed by the officers and the posse; that*they were not allowed to surrender for the reason, as the defendants contend, the officers and posse were pursuing them for the purpose of killing them. It is not disputed that the defendants, accompanied by the wife of Siler and Ruby Herring, robbed the Bank of Elgin, and after the robbery fled from the scene of the robbery pursued by a hastily organized posse; they secreted themselves in a wooded creek bottom a few miles from the scene of the robbery.

The defendants further urge that from the demonstration on the part of the officers they believed it was their intention to pursue them and kill them without allowing them to surrender; that they had taken refuge in the farm home of Medrano ; that the officers and posse were guilty of wanton, reckless, and criminal conduct at the house of Medrano before the arrest of the defendants; that the officers knew there were people in the house, but notwithstanding the knowledge of the officers and posse that the members of the Medrano and Ambrose families were in the house they recklessly fired into' the house, putting in danger the lives of the two families, and defendants insist that when Mrs. Medrano came out of the house with her child she was fired upon as she went to the bam. They urge in their argument that after they were wounded the officers came to the house or shot into' the house, wounding Mr.

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Related

Cornell v. State
1950 OK CR 49 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma, 1950)
Solomon v. State
1944 OK CR 63 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma, 1944)
Abby v. State
114 P.2d 499 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma, 1941)
Simons v. State
1940 OK CR 54 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma, 1940)
Mannon v. State
1939 OK CR 159 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma, 1939)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1937 OK CR 66, 67 P.2d 62, 61 Okla. Crim. 206, 1937 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 62, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sands-v-state-oklacrimapp-1937.