Smith v. State

342 So. 2d 422
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Alabama
DecidedFebruary 1, 1977
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 342 So. 2d 422 (Smith 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
Smith v. State, 342 So. 2d 422 (Ala. Ct. App. 1977).

Opinion

342 So.2d 422 (1977)

Willie Morris SMITH
v.
STATE.

3 Div. 581.

Court of Criminal Appeals of Alabama.

February 1, 1977.

*423 Charles Tom Payne, Montgomery, for appellant.

William J. Baxley, Atty. Gen. and Joseph G. L. Marston, III, Asst. Atty. Gen., for the State, appellee.

MOORE, Retired Circuit Judge.

The appellant was indicted, tried, and convicted for robbery. Final judgment was entered on May 27,1976 and appellant gave notice of and took an appeal on that date.

Clifford A. St. John, Sr., testified in substance that he is eighty years of age and lived at 110 Broadway on November 21, 1975. That morning he went out to his tractor to haul some fertilizer and while he was getting ready to go he was shot from the rear. He stated the bullet penetrated under his right shoulder and ". . . came our right here (indicating)." He was in his back yard at the time working on the truck and he heard the report of a rifle. After he sensed this he blacked out. The next thing he remembered was lying on his face a little further toward the house. He crawled into the house where he dragged the telephone off of a shelf onto the floor and called his daughter-in-law. Afterwards he was in the hospital ten days. St. John stated that on that day, he had the following money in his pocket: two tens, three fives, and six ones. He testified his wallet was in his pocket when he walked outside and that he has not seen the money since. He did not know the appellant and had never seen him before. St. John did not give anyone permission to take any money out of his wallet or to take his wallet. He stated his home is in Montgomery County, Alabama. St. John further testified he did not see the person that shot him.

Dorothy St. John testified that she lived next door to Clifford St. John, Sr., who was her father-in-law. On November 21, 1975, she went to his home in answer to a phone call and found him with his feet on the back steps and lying half-in and half-out the door. She saw that he had blood on his chest and she called the "emergency" number. Later an ambulance and the police arrived.

Detective R. E. Fisher, a Montgomery policeman, testified that he arrived at the scene of the shooting, 110 Broadway, about 9:00 o'clock. St. John, Sr. had already been taken to the hospital when he got there. Fisher found blood on the edge of the pickup truck parked about 115 feet from the back door of the house. He also found a walking stick and a hat lying on the ground about twenty feet from the back door. When other detectives came to the scene, Fisher went to the hospital to check on St. John and the case was turned over to Detective Alford.

Detective E. B. Alford testified in substance that he investigated the shooting at 110 Broadway. He arrived at the scene about noon on the day in question and used a metal detector and recovered a .22 caliber spent hull on the fence behind the truck where St. John was shot and about 75 feet from where St. John was shot. A pecan tree was "on" the fence south from where St. John was shot and the hull was found four feet northeast of that tree. He received the hull which he kept in his possession and turned over to Charles Smith, a State toxicologist. Alford identified State's Exhibit No. 3 as the hull and the envelope the hull was placed in after it was found. He said the hull, part of said exhibit, was the one he turned over to the toxicologist. Alford also stated that the pecan tree near where the hull was found, had a place on it about four and one-half feet high, where the bark had been brushed off which was very fresh. He testified there was a plowed area, garden-type spot, behind the tree with a hedge row about twenty-five feet behind that beside the railroad track in a ditch. The railroad track was behind St. John's house. Alford further testified that someone else, between 9:00 and 12:00 o'clock the day of the shooting took place, could possibly have made the marks on the *424 tree and that the shooting took place about 8:00 A.M. This witness identified a diagram of the scene drawn by Sgt. Terry and it was admitted as appellant's Exhibit No. 1.

On cross-examination, Alford testified that he did not place the hull in the envelope marked State's Exhibit No. 3, but that he and Detective Johnson put it into the envelope together.

Clifford St. John, Jr., testified in substance, that he lived at 106 Broadway and that Clifford St. John, Sr. was his father. He saw his father about 8:30 A.M. on November 21, 1975. He was called at work and came home, where he saw his father in the backyard on a stretcher. He then carried his father to Jackson's Hospital. St. John Jr., then came back to the house and looked for his father's billfold, but it was the next morning when he found it on the railroad track west of the house. He did not move the billfold from where he found it, but called the police. Some papers were there near the billfold and St. John, Jr. found a rifle back there. St. John, Jr. was shown State's Exhibit No. 1, a rifle, and he stated he could not say it was the exact one he saw but it was similar. He further testified that a black policeman came and picked the rifle up and left with it.

John Goldman testified in substance that he lived at 456 Shannon Hill and that on November 18, 1975, a .22 caliber rifle was missing from his home. He stated State's Exhibit No. 1 was his rifle that was missing from his home.

Detective Sidney Williams testified in substance that he received a phone call from St. John, Jr., November 22, 1975, and went out to St. John's home at 110 Broadway. St. John, Jr. showed him a rifle at a point two hundred feet in a westerly direction from the house down by some railroad tracks and some identification papers were also there in the weeds. This witness was shown State's Exhibit No. 1, and said it was the rifle he was shown by St. John, Jr. by the railroad tracks. He brought the rifle back to headquarters, initialed it, and the toxicologist came and he turned the rifle over to him. Williams identified State's Exhibit No. 4 as the papers found in the weeds near the rifle. He also found a wallet at the same place. Williams turned the papers over to the toxicologist, Charles Smith, along with the rifle. Exhibit No. 4 was admitted in evidence.

Charles Wesley Smith testified in substance that in November, 1975, he was a State Toxicologist. His qualifications were stipulated. He ran tests on and examined the .22 rifle hull and the .22 rifle (State's Exhibits 1 and 3). He found the evidence hull and test hull to be consistent in major class characteristics, meaning the shape of the marks, etc. However, he did not find enough individual characteristics to definitely state that it came from the same weapon, but did not find any inconsistent markings.

Harvey Daniel testified that he went to Stella Mae Ford's home in November, 1975 and saw appellant there. He was at that house twice. On the first visit he bought a "component set" from appellant. He bought a rifle from him on the second visit. In addition to the rifle he bought, the appellant had another rifle there in his possession. This witness was shown State's Exhibit No. 1 and he identified it as the rifle he saw in appellant's possession on the second visit. On cross-examination, this witness said if the State's Exhibit was not the rifle he saw appellant with, it was just like it. He further testified that Charles Cotton and Stella Mae Ford were at the Ford home on his second visit.

Charles Everett Cotton testified in substance that he knew appellant back in November, 1975. In that month he saw appellant at Stella Ford's home and saw Harvey Daniel buy a rifle from him.

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Bluebook (online)
342 So. 2d 422, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-state-alacrimapp-1977.