Scroggins v. State

341 So. 2d 967
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Alabama
DecidedDecember 7, 1976
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 341 So. 2d 967 (Scroggins 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
Scroggins v. State, 341 So. 2d 967 (Ala. Ct. App. 1976).

Opinion

Appellant was convicted of murder in the first degree and the jury fixed his punishment at life imprisonment in the penitentiary. He was represented by court-appointed counsel and at arraignment he entered a plea of not guilty. After sentence was imposed he gave notice of appeal and was furnished a free transcript. Trial counsel was appointed to represent him on appeal.

On the night of October 31, 1974, Mr. Glenn Harrison, the owner and operator of the Elmont Grocery Store and Service Station located on the Old Wetumpka Highway in the Madison Park area of Montgomery County, was shot with a .410 gauge shotgun. The time was around 8:45 p.m. The only persons present at the time of the shooting were the deceased and his wife. They were in the process of closing the business for the night when the shooting occurred. The deceased was at the gas pumps locking them when he was shot. Mrs. Harrison was inside the store closing and bolting the windows when she heard voices outside followed by gunshots. She rushed outside and saw her husband staggering toward the front door to the store. She saw the barrel of a shotgun in the hands of a black man who had his back toward her. She screamed and the man with the shotgun ran around the store and she did not see him again. Mrs. Harrison never got to see the gunman's face and could not identify her husband's killer.

The Montgomery Police Department was called and several uniformed officers and detectives came to the scene of the shooting. The uniformed officers were the first to arrive and they secured the scene. Detective R.E. Fisher arrived next and found Mrs. Harrison propping up Mr. Harrison who was bleeding from his chest and stomach area. An ambulance was called and the victim was carried to a local hospital. Officer Fisher was allowed to talk to Mr. Harrison just before he died in an attempt to get a description of the gunman. Mr. Harrison told the officer that he was dying and that his insides were all shot up. As he was dying he told the officer that he was shot *Page 969 by a black male, approximately six feet tall, who was wearing a three quarter length coat and had on a stocking covering his face.

Detectives Cody Wood and John Lloyd arrived at the scene of the shooting and they found a spent .410 gauge shotgun shell near the gas pumps. Wood testified that he smelled the spent shell and from the fresh odor he determined that the shell was recently fired. Another .410 spent shell was found but it was mutilated and appeared to have been run over previous to the night of the shooting. Wood also found two stockings on a dirt pile near the store and these had eye holes in them. These items were placed in a paper bag and sealed and Wood wrote his initials — CRW — across the seal. All of these items were personally delivered by Wood to Dr. Richard A. Roper, Assistant State Toxicologist, at the hospital the night of the killing.

Dr. Roper performed an autopsy on the body of the deceased to determine the cause of death. After stating his education, experience and qualifications Dr. Roper testified that death resulted from hemorrhage and shock associated with a single shotgun wound to the lower right chest. He further testified that he removed five gunshot pellets from the body of Mr. Harrison and turned them over to Mr. Charles Wesley Smith of the State Department of Toxicology.

Following the death of Mr. Harrison an intensive investigation was begun to apprehend the killer. The police took into custody a number of .410 shotguns from the residents of the Madison Park area and turned them over to Mr. Smith for examination and comparison with the spent .410 shell found near the gas pumps where the shooting occurred.

In the course of their investigation the officers learned that appellant had borrowed a .410 shotgun from Jesse Boswell between 7:30 and 8 o'clock on the night of the murder. Jesse Boswell and his wife, Eva Boswell, operated a sweets shop in the Madison Park area and about two miles from where Mr. Harrison was shot. Eva Boswell was present when appellant came to their place to borrow the shotgun and told them that he was going to shoot rabbits on the highway that night and if he killed any, he would bring them one. Jesse Boswell loaded the shotgun and gave it to appellant who then got in his car and left. According to Eva Boswell's testimony appellant returned to their shop later that night to play cards and told them that he had been stopped by a State Trooper who was on his way to the scene of the shooting and the Trooper told him that Mr. Harrison had been shot. Appellant further stated that he didn't get a chance to shoot any rabbits that night because he did not think it wise to be out shooting rabbits with so many police around.

Eva Boswell further testified that the .410 shotgun was loaded by her husband when he loaned it to appellant and that appellant returned the gun the morning after Mr. Harrison was shot and the gun was empty. A day or two later appellant came back to see the Boswells and told them they had to get rid of the gun or give it to him and he would get them another one. He explained that the night Mr. Harrison was killed, "he loaned his car to a fellow and this fellow had gone down and shot the man." Appellant didn't say whom he loaned his car to that night and who had shot Mr. Harrison. The Boswells told appellant they would not let him have the gun saying, "We would handle it from here."

Officer T.J. McLain came to the Boswell place and asked them about a .410 gauge shotgun and he gave them a receipt for the gun and took it to Mr. Charles Wesley Smith of the State Toxicology Department.

Mr. Charles Wesley Smith of the Alabama Department of Toxicology testified that he conducted a firearms comparison test on about six .410 gauge shotguns that had been collected by the police officers from the residents of the Madison Park area including the shotgun the Boswells surrendered to Officer McLean. After conducting the firearms comparison tests Mr. Smith concluded that the spent shotgun shell casing found at the scene of the shooting *Page 970 had been fired from the shotgun which appellant borrowed from the Boswells shortly before Mr. Harrison was shot on the night of October 31, 1974.

The State's evidence focused directly on appellant and he was arrested by Detective Cecil H. Humphrey and carried to the station house where he was given the Miranda rights and warnings. He signed a waiver of rights form and freely talked to the officer but told him he was not going to sign a statement. A voir dire hearing was held out of the presence and hearing of the jury. He told the officer that his brother-in-law, Alfonso Hogan, and some other men picked him up in his car at Federal Drive and Coliseum Boulevard after he got off work and they went to Hogan's home on West Fairview Avenue where they drank a fifth of gin after which he carried the men to their respective homes. At this point appellant changed his story and told the officer that he went to the Boswells and borrowed the .410 gauge shotgun which Jesse Boswell loaded for him. That he told the Boswells that when he went to pick up his girl friend at 11 o'clock that night he would be able to kill rabbits on the highway. He told the officer that after getting the gun he went home and left the men in the car while he ate supper. That after supper he carried the men home and while on his way back to his home he was stopped by a State Trooper who told him that Mr. Harrison had been shot. He then stated that he went to the house across the highway from the grocery store where the shooting took place and saw several policemen there. He then took the shotgun to his trailer and went to the Boswells and told them about Mr. Harrison.

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Bluebook (online)
341 So. 2d 967, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/scroggins-v-state-alacrimapp-1976.