Townley v. State

355 P.2d 420, 1960 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 169
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma
DecidedSeptember 14, 1960
DocketA-12665
StatusPublished
Cited by38 cases

This text of 355 P.2d 420 (Townley 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
Townley v. State, 355 P.2d 420, 1960 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 169 (Okla. Ct. App. 1960).

Opinions

NIX, Judge.

The plaintiff in error, Sam Townley, who shall hereinafter be referred to as the defendant, was convicted in the District Court of Oklahoma County upon an information charging the defendant with the crime of assault with a dangerous weapon. He was tried before a jury who found the defendant guilty, but could not agree upon the punishment and left the same to be fixed by the trial judge, who sentenced defendant to the state penitentiary for a term of eighteen (18) months.

The defendant properly lodged his appeal in this court seeking reversal upon nine assignments of error, innumerated and stated as follows:

“1. The verdict is contrary to law and evidence adduced during the trial and the court committed error in overruling defendant’s demurrer to the evidence.
“2. Several members of the jury were subjected, in the course of the trial, to influences of a prejudiced and biased person, to-wit: one Howard K. Berry, attorney at law, and counsel for prosecuting witness in the civil damage suit, who is also the brother of the prosecuting official.
“3. The court committed error in ruling upon evidence during the course of the trial.
“4. The county attorney made improper, inflammatory, and grossly prejudicial remarks during the course of oral argument.
“5. The proceedings were interrupted by improper, prejudicial, inflammatory, and biased exclamations of a spectator.
“6. The court committed error in denying defendant’s Motion and Affidavit for Continuance, forcing him to trial in the absence of a material eye-witness.
“7. During the progress of the trial, and on at least one occasion, prisoners clad in jail garb were paraded in the court room under heavy escort of armed guards in the presence and in plain view of the jury.
“8. The court failed to admonish the jurors not to read the newspaper accounts of the proceedings. That, in the course of the trial, and upon submission of this cause, several of the jurors read imperfect, inaccurate, and incorrect newspaper reports of the trial, appealing to the passion and prejudice of readers, and containing adverse comments on the probable guilt of the accused; said jurors were improperly and erroneously permitted to bring-said newspapers into the jury room during their deliberation upon the verdict.
[426]*426“9. Defendant was deprived of the .right to have the trial court consider and determine his application for suspended sentence in the exercise of sound, lawful, and legal discretion, unimpaired by and free from injection of considerations not sanctioned by law, and that said deprivation constituted denial of due process and equal protections of the laws under the State and Federal constitutions.”

Though some of the contentions of error are without merit and do not justify discussion herein, there are some assertions that have given the court much concern. Before engaging discussion as to these advancements, it will require a brief recital of the facts from which the case arose. .Counsel for defendant is to be commended upon the presentation of a good brief and therein contained is an accurate summary of the testimony. The state has not filed a brief in this case, thus the summary is not questioned. It adheres closely to the transcript of the testimony and is worthy of recital:

“In its evidence in chief, the state produced the following witnesses: Bill Bill-ingsley, the victim of the alleged assault; Geneva Montgomery Billingsley, the then girl friend of said victim, and later his wife; and Sherman Brown, a deputy sheriff of Oklahoma county.

Bill Billingsley testified, in substance, on direct examination, as follows:

A slight disagreement developed between him and his girl friend on the night of this alleged crime; while having this discord, Billingsley- drove east on Reno Street, in Oklahoma City, turning right into South Eckroat, and then drove about twenty yards south to a point where he parked his car. Approximately fifteen minutes later, an automobile came from the west, heading east, “got right behind us,” then slowed down to about four or five' miles an hour. When the other car was positioned directly parallel to that of Billingsley, a firecracker, or cherry bomb, was'thrown out of it, which exploded, making “a bit of. noise.”

Billingsley further testified that he continued at the same position for another ten minutes, when he saw lights of a car coming from behind and from the same direction as before. It looked like the same car that had passed him previously. Seeing this car, Billingsley turned the ignition switch and then did start his automobile. The other car came by at a slow speed and another firecracker or cherry bomb was thrown therefrom. The witness (Billings-ley), set his automobile in motion, in pursuit of the other car, overtook it, and then positioned his automobile directly in front of the other to block and prevent its forward passage. Putting his gear in reverse, witness alighted from his car, and walked back to the other automobile, to the driver’s side thereof:

“And I walked back to the car and I opened the door and as I opened it, I got about a few words, 'what are you doing’, or ‘what are you doing that for’, something like that, just a few words, when I saw the fellow in the front seat sort of swing towards me just a little bit and his body kinder twisted towards the door with a gun in his hand. Had it down about his mid-section and just about then the gun was discharged and it struck me in the abdomen, and I called back to Geneva and told her that I had been shot, and then I tried to walk back to the car and I fell on my knees and from then on I was pretty hazy — I don’t know much about what happened — I didn’t know what went on. * * ⅜
“Q. (By county attorney) What is the next independent recollection you have while you were on the ground? A. (By Billingsley) Well — Geneva and Sam Townley had me up to this house and were trying to get me in the door and a fellow came to the door — I believe his name was Turley — and they got me in the house, and I am not sure, but I believe they put me on the divan 'and geneva tried to'call in but, for-some reason, she couldn’t get ahold of the ambulance and she said then she, [427]*427would just take me in my car and I believe that then she and Sam Townley both helped me out of the house and she got me on the car and I was in the back seat and she took me on to Mercy Hospital in my car.”

In his further testimony Billingsley related that he did not know the defendant at the time of the incident, but recognized him now as being the defendant, Sam Townley.

On cross-examination the same witness (Billingsley) testified in substance, as follows:

He did not see any firecracker and did not know where it was thrown; all he knew about it is that he heard the explosion sound. Neither he nor his girl friend were hit by the firecracker. He further stated that at the time of the incident he was dressed in a pair of slacks and without any upper apparel, and that the lights of his parked automobile were not on.

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Bluebook (online)
355 P.2d 420, 1960 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 169, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/townley-v-state-oklacrimapp-1960.