Strahan v. State

1955 OK CR 71, 284 P.2d 744, 1955 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 219
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma
DecidedJune 1, 1955
DocketA-12150
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 1955 OK CR 71 (Strahan 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
Strahan v. State, 1955 OK CR 71, 284 P.2d 744, 1955 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 219 (Okla. Ct. App. 1955).

Opinion

POWELL, Judge.

Richard Strahan, plaintiff in error, hereinafter . referred to as defendant, was charged by information filed in the district court of Major County with the crime of assault with a dangerous weapon, a felony, carrying punishment on conviction of not exceeding five years imprisonment in the State Penitentiary, or imprisonment in the county jail not exceeding one year. Tit. 21 O.S.1951 § 645. He was tried before a jury and found guilty of the included offense of assault and battery, and his punishment fixed at thirty days in the county jail, and a fine of $75. Tit. 21 O.S.1951 § 644. Appeal has been perfected to this court.

For reversal two specifications of error are presented, and being that:

“1. The Court erred as a matter of law in permitting the automobile window crank to be introduced in evidence, as a dangerous weapon, and erred as a matter of law in submitting the- charge of assault with a dangerous weapon to the jury.
“2. The punishment imposed is excessive.”

A summary of the pertinent evidence is necessary for solution of the issues. Important undisputed evidence has been summarized by counsel for the defendant as follows:

“That the defendant at the time in question was a boy 17 yea.rs of age, residing at Canton in Blaine County,. Oklahoma; that on or about the 13th day of June, 1954, at the conclusion of a day’s work, the defendant in company with several other boys somewhat younger that he, drove in a Mercury automobile to the city of Fairview with the intention of going swimming at the municipal swimming pool there; that after the boys had gone swimming and before starting back to Canton, Oklahoma, they went to a place’where icé-cream was sold in Fairview, and there each purchased what must have been an extremely large portion of ice cream; that while engaged in consuming this ice cream, the defendant and his companions dróve'along the streets of Fairview; that while so driving along the streets of Fairview, one of the boys in the car driven by the defendant, and sitting in the back seat, finding himself in possession of more ice cream than he could consume, tossed the unused portion of his ice cream out of the car; that the ice cream tossed out of the car struck the automobile, of -Ray Allen Woods, the. prosecuting witness, who was. then on the streets of Fairview; that the prose--cuting witness lives at Fairview and was at that 'time 19 years of age, and was on this occasion being accompanied by several other -boys all of about the same general age as the prosecuting witness.” -

The record further shows that the Strahan car seconds later was driven back by the point where Ray Allen Woods was standing by his car, then parked in front of Smith’s Drug Store, Fairview, being the *746 same place where it was when the ice cream cone was tossed against the car, and Ray Allen Woods picked up the remains of the ice cream cone and threw it back at the Strahan car. Soon thereafter Woods and his. friends commenced driving around in the Woods car, and thereafter at a time when the Woods car was going north and the Strahan car was going south, the cars passed at an intersection where there was a stop sign, and as they passed, words were exchanged between Woods and Strahan. There was evidence on the part of the State that Strahan asked Woods if he wanted to fight, and that Woods answered “Yeah” in a joking manner.

The defendant’s version is that at the stop sign or light, he said: “Woods are you looking for trouble?”-and that Woods answered “Yes”, and defendant then said, “Well, if you are, why don’t you follow us out of town here?” That defendant proceeded on slowly and Woods drove around the block and followed him a few blocks and then turned off, and defendant then turned to look for Woods, and finally located his car parked on the south side of the DeLuxe Cafe, about four or five cars from the corner; that the Woods car was parked at an angle and that Strahan parked parallel to the curb, and behind the Woods car. What followed thereafter determines the disposition of the issues raised.

Ray Allen Woods’ version was that Strahan “hollared” at him and called him a dirty name, and Woods then said to Strahan, “You are the same”, after which defendant got out of his car and came around the front of it and on around- to the Woods car, and asked Woods what he called him, and Woods said, “You are the same”, and Strahan said, “Same what?” Whereupon-Woods repeated the name that Strahan called him, Strahan then hit him on the jaw. Said Woods:

“Well then he hit me with his fist and some object in his hand.
“Q. Were you able, in that brief moment,, to tell what material that object was made of? A. Well, it was something hard — metal.
“Q. Then could you tell the.jury any result on your face? A. Well, it cut my face up, and broke my jaw.
“Q. Now tell the jury what happened at the time he struck you, as you have described? A. Well, he hit me, and it knocked me clear down on my knees, — well, it just practically knocked me out — I don’t hardly recall anything else too clearly until Lou Conley [town officer] come up there. I do remember him coming up, and I know it knocked my bridges loose and I had them in my hand and I think I handed them to somebody in the car or something. ¡
“Q. Then what happened? A. Lou finally come up and I didn’t know, I think I said, — I told him to arrest Richard, and — I don’t know,— he said ‘break it up boys’, or something, and anyway, he took us in his car.”

Witness Woods further stated that his face was bleeding and he asked the officer to put him out at a doctor’s office and he let him out at the local hospital; that they X-rayed his jaw, sewed up some cuts on his eyes, gave him some shots to ease the pain and took him to the hospital at Enid, where he remained for 16 days. That he' had to go through surgery two or three times. They wired his jaw, but it slipped out two times, and finally had to make an incision. Witness denied ever striking Strahan, and stated that he kept trying to protect his face from the blows from Strahan, and he did not know how many times Strahan hit him.

Max Jordan testified that he lived in Fairview and had lived in the county all his life. He testified substantially as had Ray Allen Woods; said that he was with Woods during the ice cream cone throwing; said that the defendant Strahan eventually parked his car back of the Woods car so Woods could not back out. That he stood in the Woods car, which was a convertible with the top down and saw everything that happened; that Strahan got out of his car, went around the front and approached Woods, called Woods a vile name, (which *747 the court does not care to print); that there were further words and that defendant hit Woods with his right fist and witness could see that defendant had an object in his right hand, which object was a sort of window handle off the car, and that this metal object was in the defendant’s hand he used in hitting Woods, which was the defendant’s right hand.

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Bluebook (online)
1955 OK CR 71, 284 P.2d 744, 1955 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 219, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/strahan-v-state-oklacrimapp-1955.