Willingham v. State

183 So. 887, 28 Ala. App. 261, 1938 Ala. App. LEXIS 170
CourtAlabama Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 24, 1938
Docket6 Div. 180.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 183 So. 887 (Willingham 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
Willingham v. State, 183 So. 887, 28 Ala. App. 261, 1938 Ala. App. LEXIS 170 (Ala. Ct. App. 1938).

Opinion

SAMFORD, Judge.

The indictment in this case was found by the Grand Jury of Pickens County at the Spring Term of Court, 1935, and charged the defendant with the'first degree murder of Thomas L. Dowdell. On October 28, 1935, the defendant was tried upon this indictment and found guilty of murder in the second degree, from which he appealed to this court, and on January 12, 1937, the judgment of conviction was reversed ’and the cause remanded. Willingham v. State, 27 Ala.App. 363, 172 So. 471.

On June 25, 1932, Thomas L. Dowdell, whose home was in Columbus, Miss., was seen leaving Columbus, Miss., in the direction of Aliceville, Ala., in a Chevrolet car *263 about 10:30 in the morning, with him in the car was another person, who was a stranger to all of the witnesses who testified for the State. The identity of Dowdell’s companion, being a crucial question in this case, will be adverted to further on in this opinion.

Somebody, but who it was does not appear from this record, called attention to the fact that Dowdell was missing, and a searching party headed by E. S. Jones was organized, and on the next Thursday, after Dowdell was missed on Saturday, his body was found two or three miles west of Alice-ville, Ala., about seventy yards off the road leading to Memphis Ferry in Pickens County. The body was lying on its stomach, the head turned to the right, his forearm extended, and he had all of his.clothes torn off of him except his trousers and shoes; the back of his skull was crushed in, and there was a hole in the right side of his head, about an inch above his ear, that looked like, a .38 pistol ball hole. The witness Jones testified that they found near the body: A door key, one pocketknife, and two "little pocketbooks; that he was sure he had seen the deceased with one of the pocketbooks, that he knew Dowdell’s shoes and th.at he recognized the shoes as the shoes of Thomas L. Dowdell. The witness Jones positively identified the body as that of Thomas L. Dowdell, the deceased.

This evidence was sufficient to identify the deceased, and furnish facts from which the jury could legally draw the inference that Dowdell had been killed by some person, who shot him with a .38-caliber pistol, or crushed his skull with some blunt instrument. The evidence surrounding the body rebutted any inference of suicide or self-destruction.

As to when the homicide occurred: There is no evidence other than the fact that Dowdell was last seen on Saturday, June 25, 1932, in his own Chevrolet automobile in company with some other man going in the direction of Aliceville, Ala., and that Dow-dell’s automobile was seen in Aliceville at a garage being driven by a man, now claimed to be this defendant, without Dowdell in the car. This would seem to warrant the jury in finding that Dowdell was murdered somewhere between Columbus, Miss., and Aliceville, Ala., on Saturday, June 25, 1932.

There is no evidence in this case tending to prove what became of the Chevrolet car, and there is no evidence of any motive on the part of this defendant to take the life of Dowdell; nor is there any evidence which tends to show that this defendant ever knew Dowdell or that he ever had any contact with him. The whole contention of the State is that this defendant left Columbus, Miss., with Dowdell in his Chevrolet car headed towards Aliceville, Ala., that the defendant arrived in Aliceville in Dow-dell’s car without Dowdell, and therefore was the last man seen with Dowdell while he was alive.

The case therefore presented, is one entirely of circumstantial evidence, and while a conviction may rest on circumstantial evidence, if sufficiently strong and cogent, such convictions should be carefully scrutinized by the judiciary. As was said by this court in Dutton v. State, 25 Ala.App. 472, 148 So. 876, 879: “Our law recognizes, and rightfully so, that convictions may rest alone upon circumstantial evidence. But our experience has taught us to know that such ■ convictions should be carefully scrutinized by the judiciary, lest the lay mind which make up our juries may be led into deductions and inferences from proven facts, which may be grounds for suspicion, but which do not rise to that force which impels the mind to a conclusion of guilt beyond a reasonable doubt. In our fallible administration of the criminal law, it is to be regretted that some time and all too frequently the guilty escape punishment, but the conviction of an innocent man [however humble his station in life], is awful to contemplate, and therefore we must preserve every safeguard to persons charged with crime, among which is the oft repeated and emphasized maxim that no conviction must be had except upon evidence which convinces the jury beyond a reasonable doubt. No chain of circumstances which falls below this standard in any of its links will suffice to deprive a defendant of his life or liberty.” The foregoing statement of the law on this subject is borne out by the opinions in the following cases: Ex parte Acree, 63 Ala. 234; Pickens v. State, 115 Ala. 42, 22 So. 551; Cannon v. State, 17 Ala.App. 82, 81 So. 860.

It has many times been held that circumstantial evidence is not sufficient to sustain a conviction, unless to a moral certainty it excludes every other hypothesis than that of the guilt of the accused. This rule has in no place been better stated than in the opinion written by Stone, Judge, in Ex parte Aeree, supra; Cannon v. State, 17 *264 Ala.App. 82, 81 So. 860; Jones v. State, 18 Ala.App. 116. 90 So. 135.

The only evidence tending to prove that' Dowdell was murdered by the party who was with him or was seen with him in the Chevrolet automobile leaving Columbus, Miss., on June 25, 1932, is that the two men started out together on that fateful Saturday morning going towards Aliceville, Ala.; that the party now claimed to be the defendant .arrived at Aliceville without Dow-dell, and that some three miles from Alice-ville, and on the road between Columbus and Aliceville, the dead body of Dowdell was found on the following Thursday in a woods some seventy yards from the road; that when the parties left Columbus, Dow-dell had four one dollar bills, that when the party arrived at Aliceville he had four one dollar bills, that when Dowdell’s body was found no money was found on it.

Assuming that the foregoing is sufficient .evidence upon which a jury might find that Dowdell came to his death at the hands of the man who was in the automobile with him, under the rule as stated in 16 C.J. p. 542 (1028) : “The proximity of accused to the place of the crime about the time of its commission, in connection with other circumstances, may establish, by a necessary or reasonable inference, the presumption of his participation in the crime,” the questjon then arises, on the evidence, as to whether or not this defendant has been identified by the evidence beyond a reasonable doubt as the party with Dow-dell on June 25, 1932. This being a material fact, it must be proven beyond a reasonable doubt, in such manner as to overcome the presumption, of innocence attending the defendant during his trial.

-On the question of identity, the State introduced several witnesses. The first of whom was O. P. Morgan, who testified that between 9 and 10 o’clock in the morning on June 25, 1932, he saw Dowdell and one more person in a Chevrolet car, which passed him on the road.

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Bluebook (online)
183 So. 887, 28 Ala. App. 261, 1938 Ala. App. LEXIS 170, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/willingham-v-state-alactapp-1938.