Strange v. State

197 So. 2d 437, 43 Ala. App. 599, 1966 Ala. App. LEXIS 590
CourtAlabama Court of Appeals
DecidedAugust 23, 1966
StatusPublished
Cited by36 cases

This text of 197 So. 2d 437 (Strange v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alabama Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Strange v. State, 197 So. 2d 437, 43 Ala. App. 599, 1966 Ala. App. LEXIS 590 (Ala. Ct. App. 1966).

Opinion

CATES, Judge.

This appeal was submitted on oral argument May 26, 1966.

The grand jury of Calhoun County returned an indictment filed August 27, 1965, against Strange for the first degree murder 'of Willie Brewster.

Strange was arraigned on the indictment October 25, 1965, and his trial was had to a petit jury on December 2, 1965.

The jury found Strange guilty of murder in the second degree and fixed his punishment at the minimum for said offense, i. e., ten years imprisonment in the penitentiary. Code 1940, T. 14, § 318. The court, after adjudging him guilty and after allocutus, proceeded to sentence him in accordance with the verdict.

Thereafter, probation having been denied, Strange filed a motion for new trial which, in due course, was overruled.

I.

The tendency of the State’s evidence was:

On the night of Thursday, July 15, 1965, about 10:30 P.M. the State’s witness, Jimmy Glen Knight accompanied by his wife and the appellant left a rally in front of the Calhoun County Courthouse in Anniston. They went thence to the home of Bill Rozier.

About ten minutes later appellant left Rozier’s house with two other men, Lewis *601 Blevins and Johnny DeFries. They came hack at about 11:30 P.M.

The three drove up in a light colored 1955 Chevrolet from which the front bumper had been removed. DeFries was the driver.

Knight was in the yard with Rozier. The transcript at this point in the examination in chief of Knight is set out in Appendix A.

The gist of this evidence was that Rozier and Knight had been on the point of departure to buy beer when DeFries, Blevins and Strange drove up.

Rozier, Blevins and appellant went in Knight’s car to DeFries’s house, thence out State Highway 202 going West.

After the District Attorney laid predicates to show voluntary admissions against interest without inducement from any one present, Knight testified that:

First, Blevins stated that appellant put a “pumpkin ball” in a Negro; and

Second, appellant said, “I got one I am pretty sure because the car was swerving off the road. I had to lean out the window to get a shot off.”

On this quest for beer, the four rode past a car with its rear window shattered. Knight saw a man “from the knee down lying in front of the car.” This the State submitted was the deceased.

After Knight had testified before the grand jury, he encountered the appellant and his brother, Robert Strange, at Bill Sparks’s Restaurant. Robert and appellant both beat on Knight’s head.

The appellant handed his brother a gun which Robert pointed at Knight. At one point, according to his testimony, “They said they were going to kill me * *

To Knight’s demand for a reason, the appellant told him, “You know why, Jimmy.” The testimony continued:

“By then I had been knocked to the floor and Damon had the pistol, his .22 pistol, I assume it is his, the one he was carrying, cocked and had pointed it toward me and I come up from the floor with my pistol and grabbed his pistol and his pistol went off and nicked me in the hand. And his brother, Robert, beat me to the ground along with Damon, I carried Damon down with me and when I got Damon to the floor I shot him and wrestled his pistol out of his hand and threw it in a corner and after that Robert wrestled my pistol out of my hand and held it on me and I asked what was going on here with you people, I said, ‘You are crazy’. And I jumped the counter and out the backdoor I went.
“Q You ran and left them there ?
“A Yes, sir.”

The State also adduced proof of the deceased, Willie Brewster, being in the company of three other foundry workers who lived in an adjoining county and rode to and from work together.

This group, all Negroes, worked on the early night shift, and on the night in question were at a filling station on West Tenth Street in Anniston getting gasoline and transmission fluid. While there three white men drove up in a 1955 Chevrolet without the front bumper and of a light yellow color.

As the Negroes left the filling station, the 1955 Chevrolet left, too, going in the same direction.

One of the passengers in the first car testified that no other car came along during the remainder of the journey, and that the lights of the following car carried right along until at some point on State Highway 202 beyond or near John Hardy Hill shots were fired, one of which went into the back of the Negroes’ car and hit Brewster in the back of his upper chest region, causing the car to go into a swerve due to loss of control.

Apparently two or three shots were fired from the vehicle which was following before it turned off to the right at Forsythe’s store.

*602 On Brewster’s being hit, the others in the car finally stopped it, got out and summoned help. Within a short time, city police, sheriff’s deputies and State troopers were on the scene as well as a civilian War Department employee who attempted to save Brewster’s life with first aid.

Evidence does not show clearly how long Brewster lived, but there was competent opinion evidence that his death was caused by a rifled slug (a pumpkin ball) fired from a 12-gauge shotgun.

The defense at the trial adduced evidence going to show an alibi, to the effect that Strange, during the critical portion of the evening in question, was at all times in the kitchen of his brother-in-law, Rozier.

There was also evidence that the prosecution’s main witness, Knight, bore a bad reputation for truth and veracity in his home community.

Cross-examination also brought out that Knight was first willing to talk when he became a prisoner in the county jail on two charges of burglary and grand larceny; also that he had applied for a $20,000 reward which a number of citizens of the city of Anniston had offered for the apprehension and conviction of the persons who killed Brewster.

II.

The first proposition of law arises from the trial judge’s refusing to order the State to turn over to defense counsel a statement of Knight reduced to writing given to an agent of the Federal Bureau of Investigation.

“Q And when you finally decided to reveal it to a law enforcement officer, which law enforcement officer or officers did you reveal that to?
“A To Mr. Harry Sims and Joe Landers.
“Q Who is Joe Landers?
“A He is an agent for the F. B. I.
“Q And where were you when you gave him that information?
“A In this jail, Calhoun County Jail.
“Q Did you go there and meet them or were you a prisoner in the jail at the-time ?
“A At the time I was being held as a. prisoner.

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Bluebook (online)
197 So. 2d 437, 43 Ala. App. 599, 1966 Ala. App. LEXIS 590, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/strange-v-state-alactapp-1966.