Tait v. State

65 So. 2d 208, 37 Ala. App. 130, 1953 Ala. App. LEXIS 354
CourtAlabama Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 17, 1953
Docket1 Div. 651
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 65 So. 2d 208 (Tait 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
Tait v. State, 65 So. 2d 208, 37 Ala. App. 130, 1953 Ala. App. LEXIS 354 (Ala. Ct. App. 1953).

Opinion

HARWOOD, Judge.

The appellant was indicted for conspiring with Harold R. McMichael and three other named men to assault and beat Dean Durham.

His jury trial resulted in a verdict of guilty, and judgment and sentence was entered pursuant to the verdict.

The evidence below shows that during the early part of January 1950 a strike was in progress at radio station WABB in Mobile. The assaulted party Dean Durham had been employed by the radio station to work during the strike as a technician at its transmission station located several miles out from Mobile.

The principal witness for the State in the trial below was Harold McMichael, usually called “Mike.”

McMichael is a steel worker, but was unemployed in January 1950. He filled in this period of unemployment by serving spasmodically as a bar tender, and as a handy man at some bars and taverns in Mobile.

McMichael testified that on the night of January 3, 1950 the defendant came to his rooming house in Mobile and introduced himself as Ernest Johnson. The defendant told McMichael that he wanted him to take care of “or to beat up some boys at WABB.” McMichael told defendant his charge would be “a flat one hundred dollars.” The defendant told him he would let him know in a day or two.

Two days later, on a Wednesday, McMichael and the defendant met at the [132]*132Central Cafe in Mobile. On this occasion the defendant gave McMichael a piece of paper with the names of the men at the radio station, their automobile tag numbers, and a sketch showing the location of the transmission station written thereon. The defendant also paid McMichael $5 at this time. The two then rode out to the transmission station in defendant’s automobile, looked at it, and returned to the Central Cafe, where they parted.

On Friday night McMichael again met the defendant. The defendant gave McMichael 'three twenty dollar bills and instructed him to rent a U-Drive-It car to get out to the transmission station. McMichael told him he could not rent such a car, he had tried before. The defendant then told him to drive out in his (McMichael’s) car, and this McMichael refused to do. The defendant then again insisted that McMichael obtain a U-Drive-It car, and left for his place of employment at Fort Whiting. McMichael did not attempt to rent a car, but instead got a cab and went to defendant’s place of work. This second meeting resulted in the defendant driving McMichael to the transmission station in the defendant’s automobile.

On a side road approaching the transmission station from the rear the defendant’s car became stuck in the mud and it was necessary to get a wrecker to pull it out.

At this point the defendant and McMichael were observed by Mr. William Hearin and Chief McFayden of the Mobile Police Department who approached in Hearin’s car. Being unable to pass Hearin backed his car with the wrecker towing the defendant’s car, his headlights being on defendant’s car during this operation.

At this point, according to McMichael the defendant said he thought they ought to call the deal off, and McMichael told him he was satisfied with what money he had, and was not going to return it.

At any rate, the defendant did drive McMichael to the transmission station. McMichael said it was agreed that “after he had done the job” the defendant was to pick him up on a bridge nearby.

As to what happened when McMichael went to the transmission station we quote the following excerpt from his testimony:

“Q. Was the place locked up or was it open, how did you get to- talk to Mr. Durham? A. Why I knocked on the screen and he didn’t come to the door, he was fooling with something, kind of trinkets in there about radio stations, and I pulled the door open and shook it—
“Q. Shook it? A. And he come to the door and I asked him if his name was Durham—
“Q. What did he say to you? A. And he said yes.
“Q. Huh? A. I told you yes, when he said yes that meant his name ■ was Durham.
“Q. What did you do or say then? A. I told him you are the fellow I am looking for and I hit him two or three times and he ran outdoors—
“Q. Where did you hit him? A. ■ Oh! he jerked loose and I tore his shirt loose, buttons off.
“Q. He run out, did he? A. Yes sir, he did, and run around the place three or four times.
“Q. Did you catch him? A. Yes, sir, I caught him.
“Q. How did you catch him, Mike ? A. I tackled him.”

When McMichael returned to the highway after the assault the defendant drove away when McMichael was yet 100 feet away from defendant’s automobile. McMichael was shortly thereafter apprehended by officers as he was running down the road.

When arrested McMichael turned over to the officers the paper containing the names, etc., and the money that the defendant had given him.

[133]*133Partly on direct examination and partly on cross examination McMichael further testified that he did not intend to hurt the men at the transmission station, and that he had talked to a member of the sheriff’s force after the defendant had contacted him, but had been told that “there was nothing to it,” but to go along with the man. McMichael further testified that if he were shadowed by officers during this time he did not know it.

Dean Durham, Chief McFayden, Deputy Sheriff Herman Blake and Mr. Hearin, before mentioned, also testified as witnesses for the State. Their testimony tends to corroborate in many phases the testimony given by McMichael, and no useful purpose would be served delineating in detail this portion of the State’s evidence.

The defendant was arrested at his place of employment when he returned there from the transmission station.

Upon being taken to the sheriff’s office he made a statement which was typed by one of the officers. The statement was read back to the defendant, who followed the reading on a copy given him. He then signed the statement.

After proper predicate was laid as to its voluntary character this statement was received in evidence over appellant’s objection.

The statement is entirely confessory and is substantially in accord with the version of the affair as testified to by McMichael.

In his own behalf the appellant testified that when he first contacted McMichael he did so for the purpose of getting McMichael merely to talk to the two men working at the transmission station; that he believed McMichael’s appearance was such that the men would quit their jobs after he had interviewed them. At no time did he intend to have McMichael beat the men up, nor did he instruct him to do so.

The defendant testified that he did go to McMichael’s rooming house when he first contacted him, and that he did give Mc,Michael a slip of paper with the names of ithe men working at the transmission station and a sketch of its location on it. He denied however that he had introduced himself to McMichael under any name other than his own.

The defendant also contended that that part of the written statement he signed wherein it said that he had been given the name of a man who would take care of the job of beating up the engineers at WABB was untrue.

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Tait v. State
65 So. 2d 212 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1953)

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Bluebook (online)
65 So. 2d 208, 37 Ala. App. 130, 1953 Ala. App. LEXIS 354, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tait-v-state-alactapp-1953.