Sears v. State

1945 OK CR 15, 156 P.2d 145, 79 Okla. Crim. 437, 1945 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 282
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma
DecidedFebruary 7, 1945
DocketNo. A-10347.
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 1945 OK CR 15 (Sears 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
Sears v. State, 1945 OK CR 15, 156 P.2d 145, 79 Okla. Crim. 437, 1945 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 282 (Okla. Ct. App. 1945).

Opinion

JONES, J.

The. defendant, James W. Sears, was charged with one Gaston Gordon in the district court of Jackson county with the crime of burglary; after having-been three times convicted of a felony, a severance was granted; the defendant was tried, convicted, and sentenced to serve five years in the State Penitentiary, and has appealed.

J. M. Carter owmed and operated a drugstore and post office in the town of Martha. On the night of October 6, 1941, the front doors to said building were pried open and several articles of personal property, including a various assortment of cigarettes and tobaccos, one bottle of Luminal tablets, and two 37 cent books of postage stamps, were stolen. Also, a small safe was taken from the building and placed on two posts about eight feet in length. The roads were muddy and the ground was soft from recent rains. There were tracks discernible where the posts had been attached to the rear of an automobile and the safe dragged about a quarter of mile from the store where one of the posts had broken causing the safe to drop. The safe had been opened at that place and it was there found the following morning. The officers of Jackson county were notified and some of them came to Martha and made an investigation early in the morning while the tracks were still fresh and the imprint plainly discernible. After the car which had dragged the safe had *439 disengaged the posts and left the safe, it had been driven on down the road half a mile where it skidded into a ditch and became stuck.

A fanner living near where the car was stuck testified that a man fitting the description of the defendant came to his house about 3 a. in., and requested his help in getting his car out of the ditch. This farmer testified that in his belief the man who came to his house was the defendant Sears, although he refused to positively identify him. This farmer refused to assist in getting the car from the ditch, but suggested that they see his neighbor who lived about one-quarter of a mile north of him.

This neighbor, Guy Cearley, testified that about 3:30 a. m. a man awakened him at his home and asked to be pulled out of a mudhole. Cearley took his tractor and, with the man riding with him and directing him, went over a quarter of a mile to where a car was stuck on the side of a road. Cearley testified that there were two men at the car. That they produced a tow chain. That he pulled the car from the mudhole with his tractor. That the man who came to his house was a tall, slender man about defendant’s size, height and all, and to the best of his judgment, was the defendant. That the car was an old Chevrolet.

The sheriff of Jackson county and his deputies testified to making plaster of paris casts of certain imprints left by the automobile tires driven by the parties who had committed the burglary. After getting a description of the men from the farmers near where the car was stuck, officers in adjoining counties were notified and the sheriff of Beckham county advised them that he knew of two parties who fitted the description. These men were the defendants, James W. Sears and Gaston Gordon. Gordon *440 owned an old model Chevrolet sedan. When the officers arrested him, the car was muddy with black mud, although the soil in Beckham county at Gordon’s place was red, while the soil at Martha, where the crime was committed, was a black, sticky loam. A log chain and a wooden bar which was commonly known as a truck standard were taken by the officers from the car. This chain and truck standard, together with the posts which had been used to haul the safe, were identified by George Hamilton as his property which was stolen on the night of the burglary from his premises adjacent to the Carter store building.

In a search of the defendant Sears’ home, the officers seized a bottle of Luminal tablets, 6 packages of Lucky Strike cigarettes, 1 package of Camel cigarettes, 1 package of Sensation cigarettes, 1 package of Top tobacco, 1 package of Bugler tobacco, 1 thirty-seven cent book of postage stamps, and a hypodermic syringe and needle.

At the trial, the owner of the drugstore testified that in his best judgment these cigarettes and other articles were some of those taken from his store. He related that the off-brand cigarettes had been in his store for a long time and had the old three-cent stamp on them, while the more popular brands of cigarettes had not been in his store so long and had the five-cent stamp which was required after the passage of a new cigarette tax act in the spring of 1941. The bottle of Luminal tablets had been in his store for over four years. The cap on the bottle was faded and showed its age. The owner of the store refused to say positively that the various articles taken from the defendant’s home were those stolen from his building, but he did relate certain circumstances connected with their appearances which caused him to state that in his opinion they were the articles taken from his building. '

*441 On the following day, tlxe officers went back to the home of the defendant and on the back porch found defexxdant’s khaki clothing soaking in a water bucket. The trousers were muddy up to the knees with black mud like that from the place where the car was stuck. They also found on the porch a pair of defendant’s shoes covered with the saxne kind of black mud. The shoes were takexx to where tlxe car had been stxxck in the mud and fit perfectly in the tracks there.

One of the tires on the Gordon automobile was a new tire axxd the other three tires were well worn. The new tire was rexxxoved by the officers and introduced in evidence at the trial. Testimony showed that the tread made by the new tire was identical with the plaster of paris imprint taken by the officers at the place where the car had been stuck in the xxxud.

F. K. Doughty testified that while he was at a filling station in Martha, about 8:30 p. xxx., the night of the burglary, an old model car with axx out-of-county license tag stopped at the filling station and was serviced. That the car was there for several minxxtes and was a gray car and becaxxse of its apparent age seemed pecxiliar to him. He later saw the same car parked outside of the jail in Altus. (This car at the jail was admittedly the Gordon car.) Doughty further testified that Gaston Gordon was driving the car and the defendant was sitting on the front seat with Gordon. He was positive in his identification.

Joe Flanagan testified that the defendant Sears and Gaston Gordon came into his cafe in the town of Sayre together about 10 or 11 o’clock a. m., preceding the commission of the burglary that night, went to a booth and sat down together.

*442 The defense was in the nature of an alibi. The defendant produced two ladies who swore they had knoAvn the defendant for many years. That on the night of October 6, about 9:30 p. m., they became stuck in the mud near defendant’s home and the defendant came to their rescue and assisted them in getting out of the mud-hole. That they then went to defendant’s home and stayed all night Avith defendant and his wife. That they sat and talked until 1 or 1:30 before going to bed. That the defendant did not leave his home at all that night.

Some other neighbors testified that Mrs.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1945 OK CR 15, 156 P.2d 145, 79 Okla. Crim. 437, 1945 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 282, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sears-v-state-oklacrimapp-1945.