Washington v. State

473 S.W.2d 157, 251 Ark. 487, 1971 Ark. LEXIS 1166
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedNovember 29, 1971
Docket5637
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 473 S.W.2d 157 (Washington v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Washington v. State, 473 S.W.2d 157, 251 Ark. 487, 1971 Ark. LEXIS 1166 (Ark. 1971).

Opinion

Carleton Harris, Chief Justice.

Appellants, Linza Cowans and Darnley Washington, were convicted óf burglary and grand larceny by the Pulaski County Circuit Court (First Division) sitting as a jury, and each was sentenced to two years imprisonment on each count. From the judgment so entered, appellants appeal. The two were accused, along with several other defendants1, of breaking into Laing’s Service Company, and stealing five television sets, a stereo, a tape player, a. .transistor radio, and an air conditioner. Officer Seats, of the Little Rock Police Department, testified that a call came over the radio that the burglar alarm had gone off at La'ings, and he made an investigation. A window on the south side of the building had been broken.' Seats then looked over the general area, together with other officers who had come to the neighborhood. Some three or four blocks from the. store, the officers noticed an old Pontiac automobile with the left side doors open, the engine warm, and they observed the lights on and heard people talking, in an apartment about 75 feet from where this car was parked. This of course was unusual, since. it was between 3:00 and 4:00 a.m. Between the Pontiac and the apartment, five or six feet from the vehicle, the officers found á red merchandise tag which evidently had been attached to an electrical appliance. One of the officers took this tag back to the store, and Laing identified it as coming from his place of business. The officers then returned to the apartment, knocked several times, identified themselves, and the door was opened by an .occupant of the apartment. Seats said' that, on entering; he “observed several tv’s, stereos, and air conditioners”, and other electrical appliances sitting on the floor in plain view. There were five people present ih the room, including the' regular occupants of the premises, Charles Scott, his wife, and Cowans. In a bedroom at the rear, appellant Washington was found in bed with a woman named' Charlotte Shackleford. Washington had on his pants and undershirt. The woman had on a slip or nightgown. All were taken to headquarters, and the articles, previously mentioned, were likewise taken, to headquarters and were subsequently tagged.

We first discuss the evidence against Cowans. Here, two points are asserted for reversal,, viz, that the. court erred in allowing the state to impeach the testimony of its witness, Charlotte Shackleford, and erred in allowing the testimony of Mr. Laing concerning the identity of certain appliances “due to the fact that the property was not in court during trial and there was no testimony to identify the property' belonging to Mr. Laing as being the property taken from the apartment”.

Jess Hale, Sergeant at the Little Rock Police Department; testified that he interrogated Cowans, first advising him of his rights, likewise having a form'setting out-these rights (according to Miranda v. Arizona, 384 U. S. 436) executed by Cowans. The officer testified that this waiver form was read to Cowans, and that the latter stated he understood what he was signing. In the státement, Cowans related that he, with others, including Damley Washington, had been drinking all evening. He said that while they were riding around, he went to sleep; but awakened when someone told him that the' window was broken out of the “T. V. place at Roosevelt and Louisiana”. He said they all walked up to the front and he followed someone through the broken window and picked up a television, taking it back to the car and putting it in the front seat. They then went to the home of Scott, “took some stuff into the house” and he then went to sleep on the couch, awákening when the' police knocked on the door. He related that Scott asked who was there, received the answer “Policé” and1 that Scott then opened the door and several officers came into the room. In his statement, Cowans never did identify who . was present at the time Laing’s store was énteréd. In testifying before the court, this appellant'stated that he passed out during the time the occupants óf the' car were driving around, and when he awakened, he was on a couch in the front room of Scott’s apartment. He said that “they”' brought in “some tv’s” and that he went to a back room and laid down. When the others returned “■they had some more , stuff”. “They” apparently meant Scott and a man named Carter since Cowans testified that Washington did not carry any of the merchandise into the room; in fact, he said he saw Washington in one of the bedrooms. Cowans, in testifying, denied that he went to Laingis Store, and said that he signed the statement because he was threatened by the officers, be-' ing told “I’ll make it hard for you; I’ll, keep you here so you’ll never get out”. He stated that he- signed the statement but didn’t read it, and it wa-sn’t read to him. However,, there is no contention here that Cowans was threatened or that the statement was not voluntarily signed; nor is it argued that he signed the statement unaware of its content.

Charlotte Shackleford was . in the Scott apartment when the. officers, arrived, and she was taken to heacb quarters where a statement was taken by Officers Baer and Harris. The officers testified that they advised her of her constitutional rights, and read the “rights” form to her; that she also read it and said that she understood it.2 The officers said they advised Miss Shackleford how to commence the statement and then left the room and she knocked on the door when she finished writing it. In pertinent parts of the statement, i. e., that portion affecting appellants, she said that she was in bed, heard loud talking, ran to the window and looked out and saw all kinds of appliances; that Scott, Cowans, Carter and Damley Washington came into the apartment with two television sets; that some twenty minutes later the officers arrived. When she testified in court, she said that about 7:00 p.m., Irma Scott, wife of Charles Scott, called her and asked her if she (Charlotte) would stay all night with Irma. She said she arrived at the apartment at about 9:30 p.m.; that they sat around until about midnight, went out and bought ice cream, came back and talked until about 1:30 p.m., at which time she went to bed. She then stated that between 3:00 and 4:00 a.m. Charles Scott, James Carter and appellant Cowans' came in the door. Her testimony was somewhat different from the statement given although the difference principally related to the appellant Washington. The state then questioned Miss Shackleford about the differences in the statement and her testimony. It is urged that the prosecutor should not have been permitted to impeach his own witness. There is really no need to discuss this contention since her testimony was of no value to Cowans. The court announced that it was considering neither her statement nor her testimony, and the court’s ruling can be easily understood because, even in her testimony, she made conflicting statements, depending upon whether she was being questioned by the prosecution or the defense. She clearly stated at the outset of her testimony that Cowans was one of three men who came in the door, and this testimony was reiterated. Subsequently, on cross-examination by Cowans’ attorney, she said she didn’t see Cowans come in. There is no merit in this point.

As to the second point, we do not agree that there was an insufficient identification of the property taken. This property had been taken from the apartment to the police station and tagged.

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Bluebook (online)
473 S.W.2d 157, 251 Ark. 487, 1971 Ark. LEXIS 1166, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/washington-v-state-ark-1971.