State v. Dixon

321 P.2d 305, 212 Or. 572, 1958 Ore. LEXIS 268
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 29, 1958
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 321 P.2d 305 (State v. Dixon) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Dixon, 321 P.2d 305, 212 Or. 572, 1958 Ore. LEXIS 268 (Or. 1958).

Opinion

ROSSMAN, J.

This is an appeal by the defendant from a judgment of the circuit court which adjudged him guilty of the crime of robbery, not armed with a dangerous weapon (ORS 163.290), and sentenced him to imprisonment for a term of one year.

In appealing, the defendant submits eight assignments of error. Before giving them attention we will state pertinent facts. The defendant was 17 years of age at the time of the alleged crime, June 8, 1956. Upon the evening of that day, he and four companions of corresponding age were riding around in the defendant’s automobile in the vicinity of Monroe, which is in Benton county. His companions were Jack Wall, *574 Keith Baueher, Louie Kaping and Clifford Sullivan. About 11:00 p. m., the defendant saw ahead of him a car which was traveling in the same direction as his and whose driver, it later developed, was Arlie E. Sheppard, to whom we will refer frequently. After the defendant had seen the car ahead he proposed, according to Sullivan, aforementioned, “Let’s pull him over.” When the proposal met with favor, the defendant drove his ear into close proximity of Sheppard’s, blinked his lights and then two of his companions thrust their heads out of the car’s open windows and made a noise like the siren of a police car. At that juncture Sheppard drove to the side of the road and stopped. The defendant, as a witness, testified that he thought the driver of the car ahead was Francis Bales, a friend of his, and that his purpose was to play a prank upon Bales. He swore that when he projected his proposal to stop the ear ahead, his words were “There’s Francis Bales. Let’s stop him.”

After the Sheppard car had drawn to the side of the road, the defendant stopped his to its rear and then, upon walking to Sheppard’s open window, demanded that he he shown the driver’s license. Sheppard complied with the demand and in so doing exposed his wallet to the defendant. Next, the defendant declared, “Your taillights is out.” The defendant testified that at that juncture the occupant of the accosted automobile spoke and that when he (defendant) heard the voice he realized that the person was not Francis Bales. According to the defendant, he thereupon said something about a mistake and started back to his car.

Sheppard testified that after he had been told “Your taillights is out” he answered, “Well, they wasn’t just a few minutes ago.” Then, according to *575 Sheppard, the defendant replied, “They are now. * * * If you don’t fix them we are going to have to take you to court in Monroe.” Since Sheppard knew that no court was held in the small community of Monroe, he protested, so he testified, “"What’s going off here, there’s something fishy,” and started to get out of his car. Then, if he told the truth, the defendant summoned one of his companions and in so doing, stated, “Well, he don’t believe what I’m telling him. * * * We’ll take his license number.” About that time the defendant moved toward the rear of Sheppard’s car and Jack Wall, aforementioned, came forward. Sheppard swore that just as he got out of his car Wall struck him a blow which knocked him against a part of the open door of his car whereby he was stunned and fell to the ground. He claimed that when he was down, one of his assailants kicked him in the jaw and “it practically knocked me out.” The defendant and Wall conceded that Sheppard’s head struck the door of his car as he fell, but each asserted that Wall had not struck him; they said he merely gave him a shove. The defendant, referring to Sheppard as he lay upon the ground, testified: “He wasn’t out cold.” Both denied that either kicked Sheppard. The latter swore that immediately following his fall to the ground four of the occupants of defendant’s car pinned bim to the ground while one of them took his wallet. According to his account, Wall, while the defendant was “standing right there,” removed the contents of the wallet and then threw the empty container into Sheppard’s car. At that point Sheppard was permitted to regain his feet and the defendant thereupon ordered him to “get going,” so the victim swore.

The defendant denied that he held Sheppard to the ground. According to him, he helped Sheppard *576 arise and was wholly ignorant of the taking of the wallet.

Sullivan corroborated Sheppard’s testimony. He swore that Wall hit Sheppard, and not merely shoved him. According to that witness, the defendant held Sheppard to the ground while one of the group took his billfold. His words were: “Bob Dixon held him down and then somebody took his billfold.” By the name of Bob he referred to the defendant. After the billfold had been taken, Wall, so Sullivan said, walked to the front of the defendant’s car and there, with the aid of its lights, examined the billfold’s contents and removed its money. In the meantime, according to Sullivan, the defendant continued to hold Sheppard to the ground. Next, “Jack (Wall) threw his billfold back in the car,” so Sullivan swore, “and Bob let Mr. Sheppard up and Mr. Sheppard got back in the ear and Bob told him to take off.” In the following testimony we are told by Sullivan what took place after the defendant and Wall were back in the car:

“A Well, they were just talking about the money that they got from him.
“Q Now, ‘they were talking.’ What do you mean ‘They’?
“A Well, Jack and Bob.
“Q And what did they say about the money?
“A Well, they just said they’d split it up with us.
“Q Did they?
“A Yes.”

Sullivan testified that when Wall re-entered the car he announced that he had obtained six dollars from Sheppard’s wallet, and thereupon divided the money by keeping two dollars and giving one dollar .to each of the other four occupants.

*577 The defendant’s brief claims that Sullivan’s testimony is consistent with an interpretation that the defendant could “have been helping Arlie E. Sheppard up as holding him down.” The brief, referring to Sullivan, says: “He, in fact, did not know which was occurring.” The contention is based upon the following part of the testimony given by Sullivan upon cross-examination:

“Q Now, isn’t it true that Robert here went back and was trying to pick up Mr. Sheppard and help him up, didn’t he do that?
“A Well, he had his hands on him. I thought that he was holding him down.
“Q You don’t know, do you, what he was doing there?
“A Well, he didn’t get him up if he was trying to help him up.
“Q But you don’t know whether he was holding him down or trying to help him up.
“A Not for sure.”

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Bluebook (online)
321 P.2d 305, 212 Or. 572, 1958 Ore. LEXIS 268, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-dixon-or-1958.