State v. Terrell

144 So. 488, 175 La. 758, 1932 La. LEXIS 1899
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJuly 20, 1932
DocketNo. 31801.
StatusPublished
Cited by33 cases

This text of 144 So. 488 (State v. Terrell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Terrell, 144 So. 488, 175 La. 758, 1932 La. LEXIS 1899 (La. 1932).

Opinions

OVERTON, J.

The three defendants, named in the title, appeal from the sentence of death pronounced against them. These defendants, together with two others, namely, Arthur Williams and Joe Anderson, were indicted by the grand jury for the parish of Orleans for the murder of William Blumstein. Anderson had not been apprehended at the time of the trial, and therefore was not tried. Williams was not brought to the bar for trial by the state, but a severance, at the instance of the state, was granted as to him. As to the remaining three, named in the title, the jury, after the case was submitted to them, returned a verdict, finding each of the three guilty as charged.

The theory upon which the state conducted the prosecution is that, on the morning of November 22,1930, between 10 and 12 o’clock, the three defendants, named in the title, together with Arthur Williams and Joe Anderson, met at the home of Mose Conner, one of these defendants, and there entered into a conspiracy to rob a lottery shop, located in a colored district of the city of New Orleans, conducted by Mrs. Martha Kent, a white woman, living on Washington avenue, where the lottery was- conducted. It is the position of the state that the three defendants brought to trial agreed, at the confection of the conspiracy, that Mose Conner should go to the place where the lottery was kept, and that the two remaining defendants should follow a few minutes later, with Williams and Anderson, who were not on trial. Conner, according to the state’s theory, was to enter the room where the lottery was conducted, and, when the others arrived, Conner was to notify them if there were too many present to make it feasible to undertake the robbery, and, if there were not too many present, he was to remain in the room. It is the state’s position that, a few minutes after the arrival of Conner, Conner not having appeared for the purpose of giving notice, the two remaining defendants on trial, together with Anderson, entered the room, where the lottery was conducted (Williams remaining outside of the room), and ordered, under the protection of a drawn pistol or pistols, those present to throw up their hands, while one of the defendants grabbed the money on the table. It is the state’s theory that immediately following the robbery, with the money in the possession of one of the five, who took part in the conspiracy to rob, probably in the possession of Anderson, the five left the scene; that Franklin and Terrell, two of the defendants on trial, boarded a street ear; that, after having ridden a few blocks, two police officers drove up in an automobile, when Franklin and Terrell concluded to leave *765 the car; that, as the car stopped, one of the police officers left the automobile to enter the street car from the rear, while the other moved forward to the front of the car; and that, when William Blumstein, the officer who was approaching the rear of the car, was about to enter it, he was shot to death by Terrell. It is the position of the state that this homicide was committed within the scope, and in furtherance, of the conspiracy to rob, which contemplated a division of the loot gained by the robbery. It is also the position of the state that the spoils were divided at the home of Mosg Conner on the night of the robbery. The theory of the state is supported by evidence, including the confessions of the defendants.

The record presents a number of bills of exception, eighteen of which are presented by Mose Conner, thirteen by Eranklin, and three by Terrell. While all of the bills are signed by the judge presiding, yet none of them contains a per curiam, for the judge died while the bills were in his hands for his comments, but all of the evidence, as well as the objections and rulings upon which the bills rest, is in the record, including, of course, the signed bills themselves.

The entire evidence introduced on the trial is in the transcript. This has caused the defendant Eranklin to file a motion in this court to expunge from the record the evidence of all witnesses heard on the trial, save such evidence as may pertain to the several bills of exception taken. While the evidence, not relevant to the bills of exception taken, is of no service on appeal, nevertheless Act No. 333 of 1926 requires the official stenographers of the criminal district court for the parish of Orleans to report the proceedings in all capital cakes in full, and to furnish the clerk of the criminal district court three certified copies of the testimony, taken in all cases appealed to this court, to be incorporated by the clerk in the transcript's of appeal. In view of this act, the court will not allow the motion to expunge. State v. Buckner, 167 La. 330, 119 So. 67.

The defendant Franklin on May 27, 1932, filed an assignment of errors in this court, assigning eleven errors committed on the trial of this case. The transcript of appeal was lodged here on March 29, 1932, or nearly sixty days before the filing of the assignment. An assignment of errors should be filed within ten days after the transcript is brought to this court, which was not done here. This failure to file timely the assignment is of no particular moment, however, since, when the certificate of the officer, preparing the transcript, which is the case here, is complete, the defendant may call the court’s attention orally or in brief, at any time, to any error patent on.the face of the record, without making any formal assignment. However, an assignment cannot be based upon an error disclosed by the aid of evidence taken in the case. Code of Crim. Proc! art. 560. None of the errors assigned is based upon an error patent on the face of the record — a condition necessary to an assignment. Nine of the errors assigned relate exclusively to errors concerning the admissibility of evidence, and the remaining two to the refusal of the trial judge to give a special charge with reference to the law of accessory and an alleged error in the court’s charge on the law of conspiracy, both of which errors must be taken advantage of by bills of exception, reserved at the time the special charge is *767 refused or the general charge given. However, the defendant Franklin will not suffer by this ruling, for every assignment of error has been presented also by a bill of exception duly taken and presented. The assignment is therefore surplusage.

The first bill of exception was reserved by the defendants Franklin and Conner. The bill shows that, while the witness Kate Brown Jones was on the stand, the state propounded several questions to her, looking towards establishing a conspiracy to commit robbery. These defendants objected to this line of inquiry on the ground that they were charged with murder and not with a conspiracy to rob or murder. This objection was overruled. The ruling was correct. It is true that the indictment contains no express charge of conspiracy, but it does charge all three of the defendants brought to trial with murder. Where an indictment charges two or more jointly with murder, the charge involves a conspiracy, and proof of the conspiracy may be received without its being formally charged. State v. Ford, 87 La. Ann. 443, 459; State v. Gebbia, 121 La. 1083, 1104, 47 So. 32; State v. Robichaux, 165 La. 497, 115 So. 728.

The second bill of exception was taken by Mose Conner alone. It relates to circumstances surrounding the confession of the defendant Eli Terrell. The ground for it arose while Capt. Burns, of the police force, was on the witness stand.

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Bluebook (online)
144 So. 488, 175 La. 758, 1932 La. LEXIS 1899, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-terrell-la-1932.