State v. Spence

155 S.E.2d 802, 271 N.C. 23, 1967 N.C. LEXIS 1155
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedJuly 24, 1967
Docket657
StatusPublished
Cited by59 cases

This text of 155 S.E.2d 802 (State v. Spence) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Spence, 155 S.E.2d 802, 271 N.C. 23, 1967 N.C. LEXIS 1155 (N.C. 1967).

Opinion

Parker, C.J.

The State’s evidence tends to show the following facts: On 4 January 1966 defendant Spence visited the office of Dr. Jerome Rex Eatman in the city of Raleigh. At that time he had in his possession a .38 caliber Smith and Wesson pistol with a stag horn type handle. The pistol contained six bullets, two of which had been fired. Dr. Eatman unloaded it, and placed it and the empty shells in his desk. This pistol was in his possession on the morning of 26 February 1966. About 2:30 in the afternoon of that day defendants Spence and Williams came into the office, and took the pistol and left. He turned the bullets over to Detective Larry Smith of the Raleigh Police Department on -1 March 1966. .

About 6 p.m. on 26 February 1966 defendants Spence and Williams entered the men’s department in W. T. Grant Company, Lakewood Shopping Center in Durham, and purchased therein certain articles of clothing, including pants, sweaters, and shirts. Mrs. Shirley Lorene Blaylock was employed as a supervisor in the store. She watched the defendants while they were there, because they were drinking and ácting»'“funny.” She-saw ’defendant Williams had .a pint bottle of vodka, and saw it .fall out from under his shirt. The *26 bottle did not fall all the way to the floor because Spence caught it just as it fell out. After putting on the new clothes they bought in the Grant’s store in a rest room there, they entered a Broadway Yellow taxi in the parking center, and departed; Spence carried their old clothing in a bag furnished by the store.

The taxi stopped at a grill located on Old Highway #70 on the outskirts of Durham, and then the taxi proceeded westwardly to Greensboro and stopped at McCuiston’s Gulf Service Station at the intersection of Asheboro and Gorrell Streets in Greensboro, arriving there about quarter to eight in the evening. At the service station the taxi driver and both defendants got out of the taxi. Cordice Goins, who is the service station attendant at McCuiston’s Gulf Service Station, noticed that there were some holes in the -windshield in the taxi in which the taxi driver and Spence and Williams were. After they left, Goins called the police department in Greensboro and reported that there was a Yellow Cab and a cab driver from Durham and two men in the cab and one of them had a gun. He thought they were holding him as a hostage. Defendant Spence asked for the key to the men’s rest room, and .the taxi driver and defendant Williams went inside the service station with the attendant who was on duty when defendant Spence returned from the rest room. He gave the key to the attendant and as soon as he had done so he left the service station to walk down Gorrell Street, leaving behind him the taxi driver and defendant Williams. After Spence departed from the service station, the taxi driver and defendant Williams remained at the service station for awhile, and then the taxi driver and defendant Williams in the taxi proceeded down Gorrell Street in the same direction which Spence had walked.

On 26 February 1966 Homer Diggs was a taxi driver for United Taxi Company in the city of Greensboro. Between 8:10 and 8:20 p.m. on 26 February 1966 he was in the vicinity of Martin and Gor-rell Streets. He kept straight across Gorrell Street on Martin Street and just as he was passing the office he detected an out-of-town taxi sitting beside their offlce, somewhat down from the office on the right-hand side of the street. The taxicab was parked. Just as he approached the taxi, he detected three white males sitting in the cab. One white male was sitting on the front seat beside the driver, and the other was sitting behind the driver, directly behind the driver. The meter seemed to be in an earning position. There was a light on the meter with an “R” on it. The next time he saw this cab was on the same night in the 800 block of Bellevue Street. There were a lot of Homicide Squad policemen and a lot of spectators around it, and the area was roped off when he arrived. This was piretty close to 10 p.m. The taxicab was yellow in color.

*27 About 8:50 p.m. on 26 February 1966 Lilly Ann Thompson and Earline Gainey went to 880 Bellevue to get a hot plate. About four houses from 830 Bellevue Street they saw a yellow cab with a person in the driver’s seat with his head lying up against the window. The motor was running, and the taxicab was parked. The windshield had several holes in it. They went home and told Earline’s sister, Ola Gainey, that they had seen the taxicab with holes in the windshield. About 15 minutes later the taxicab was still there, and she went up to it. She looked in it and all the windows were up, and the man did not look around. She saw blood running out of his mouth. She called the police.

About 8:50 p.m. on 26 February 1966 Dr. Allen B. Coggeshall, a practicing physician in Greensboro, was called by the Greensboro Police Department, and informed that there was a dead man in a taxicab in the 800 block of Bellevue Street. When he arrived there was quite a large crowd there and numerous police on the scene. The door on the driver’s side was opened so that he could get a better view. He saw in it a small brunette man with blood on his face and clothes, lying with the left side of his head over towards the door. A cursory examination showed that he had been shot in the right side of the head and that he was dead. He suggested that the body be removed to the morgue at the Wesley Long Hospital in Greensboro, where it could be examined.more carefully, and that was done. An-.examination at-the morgue. showed that he had two bullet holes in'his Head: approximately the size of a .38 caliber pistol bullet. One wound was in the right .side of the head with the- bullet going down through the ear. lobe right directly into the bone there, and the- other wound on the top of his head admitted a .38 caliber bullet.from the officer’s belt as they held one in the right side. The bullet from the side appeared to be going directly transverse from this side over, towards the left ear. The body was identified as that of Alton Arta-mous Maynard. He drove a Yellow taxicab in Durham;

A Carolina Trailways bus left Greensboro about 9:35 p.m., and defendants Spence and Williams purchased tickets to ■ Raleigh, and boarded the bus. They got off the bus in Burlington and the bus left without them.

Thomas Franklin on the night of 26 February 1966 had an old model Chevrolet, License No. B-5780, parked on Maple Avenue in Burlington. It was parked about 50 yards from the bus station; That night the car was stolen. About 3 a.m. on the same night - the police department in Raleigh called his house. The next day he went to Raleigh and saw his automobile.

- ' Defendants Spence and Williams were arrested at the Chic Chic Grill about 1 a.m. on 27 February 1966 by the Raleigh Police De *28 partment for the larceny of an automobile. Williams had in his possession about §156 in money and some change. The defendants were later turned over to Guilford County upon a capias for their arrest upon a charge of murdering Alton Artamous Maynard, the taxicab driver.

Elbert Spencer Smith, a man with a long criminal record, on 2 March 1966 was in the jail of Guilford County. On that day defendants Spence and Williams were put in the cell he was occupying. Only three of them were in the cell. Williams and Spence engaged in many conversations on the first night and every night after-wards.

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Bluebook (online)
155 S.E.2d 802, 271 N.C. 23, 1967 N.C. LEXIS 1155, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-spence-nc-1967.