Willoughby v. State

122 So. 757, 154 Miss. 653, 63 A.L.R. 1319, 1929 Miss. LEXIS 169
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedJune 10, 1929
DocketNo. 27811.
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 122 So. 757 (Willoughby v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Willoughby v. State, 122 So. 757, 154 Miss. 653, 63 A.L.R. 1319, 1929 Miss. LEXIS 169 (Mich. 1929).

Opinion

McGowen, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The appellant, W. Y. Willoughby, was convicted of the crime of robbery by putting J. W. O'ox in fear and stealing from the Bank of Madison the sum of one thousand four hundred sixty-nine dollars and thirty-five cents, on a change of venue from Madison to Hinds county, and was sentenced to serve a term of ten years in the state penitentiary, from which sentence this appeal is prosecuted.

*656 The record is lengthy, and no practical good would come of incumbering this opinion with a detailed statement of the facts contained in the record.

On the morning of April 20, 1928, the Bank of Madison was robbed, and the amount mentioned above was stolen from it and carried away by the robber. The cashier of the bank, Mr. Cox, was forced, at the point of a pistol, to hold up his hands and submit to the robbery of the coffers of the bank. The defendant, the appellant, Willoughby, was positively identified as the person committing the robbery by Messrs. Cox, Mixon, and Edmund Taylor. There were also witnesses in the vil-, lage of Madison on this occasion who were positive that Willoughby was not the man who was seen to enter the bank and leave the town driving a blue Hudson coach.

The appellant offered evidence that on this particular morning he was in the office of his father, having driven with his father and mother to the office of his father in the Merchants’ Bank & Trust Company building-, where he remained until about eleven o’clock, going from there in the company of a friend to the Crescent pool room, where he played pool until twelve o’clock, and that his first knowledge of the robbery of this bank was when he, with his friend, read the account thereof in the Jackson Daily News.

It appears from this record that on the night of Tuesday, May 29, 1928, some one knocked on the door of the home of J. W. Cox, cashier of the bank. Upon opening the door, Cox was confronted by two men with drawn pistols, one of whom he identified as Willoughby, and the same man, according* to his statement, who had robbed the bank theretofore. Willoughby secured from Cox the combination of the safe, leaving him and Mrs. Cox under the guard of his associate. He returned to the home of Cox after having been gone for some time and stated that he could not open the safe, and, with his *657 gun drawn forced Cox to go to the hank and open the safe, whereupon the hank was again robbed of a considerable sum. Cox kept in the closet of his home a bottle containing some wine, and another containing some whis-ky. Mrs. Cox fainted upon the entrance of these two men into her home, and when Mr. Cox started toward the closet to get some wine to revive and stimulate her, the appellant, Willoughby, ordered him to stay away from the closet,, reaching for it himself instead, and in doing so ,placed his hands upon the whisky bottle as well as the wine bottle in order to administer a stimulant to Mrs. Cox. The identification of Willoughby as one of the men present was positive and complete according- to the evidence of Mr. and Mrs. Cox.

The two bottles were turned over to the representative of a detective agency and the impression of the finger prints on both the wine and whisky bottles was developed therefrom. A photograph of the impression of the finger prints on the neck of the wine bottle was undertaken to be offered in evidence by the appellant, together with the impression of Willoughby’s finger prints, which had been taken by the detective agency, for comparison, and the appellant offered to show that the impression of the- finger prints on the neck of the bottle was not that of any one of his ten finger prints. It was further shown that there were other fing’er prints on this particular bottle capable of being developed which were not developed.

Mr. Cox testified that the particular finger prints on the wine bottle were not his or Mrs. Cox’s and so far as he knew no one had touched the bottles except the appellant in this case. He stated, however, that his daughter might have handled the bottles, and, on occasions, a servant. It is not explained in this record what became of the whisky bottle, or the finger prints developed from the impressions thereon, nor of the developments of *658 the other impressions of finger prints taken from the wine bottle.

The chief of the finger print burean of the city of New Orleans testified that the finger prints on the neck of the bottle were not those of the appellant.

The. court heard all of this evidence out of the presence of the jury, and sustained the state’s objection. The appellant offered evidence to show, which, if believed, would be a complete alibi on the night of this second robbery. To all practical intents and purposes, the details of both crimes of robbery were g’one into by the state and the appellant.

During the course of the trial, the court, over the objection of the appellant, permitted the state to introduce a certain twenty-dollar bill, which had written on the white part of the face of the bill the figures “ three hundred and sixty,” not originally stamped there, the figures, according to the witness, having been apparently written with a blunt lead pencil. The number of the bill, as stamped by the government, was F-14791291 A. The witness, Cox, was not positive that this was the bill which was in the bank before the second robbery.

The chief of police of the city of Jackson testified that upon a second search of the appellant’s dwelling place, which was occupied by the appellant, his wife, his father-in-law, and others, he found a roll of money, in bills, with a string tied around it, underneath the bathtub in the bathroom. The appellant said, when arrested at his home, where he was hiding under the doorstep, that he left five hundred dollars in the drawer of the chifforobe in his room, but that he knew nothing of any money being in the bathroom.

There are many assignments of error, but we shall only notice those which apparently should evoke an expression of opinion from this court.

1. It is urged that the court erred in permitting the state to introduce proof of the robbery of the bank on *659 the night of May 29, 1928, thereby placing’ an undue burden upon the appellant, in that he was required to defend himself on two separate, independent, and disconnected charges of robbery. An all-sufficient answer appears from a critical examination of this record, in that the appellant not only did not interpose an objection but assisted the district attorney in bringing out the facts in detail of the second robbery except in one par-, ticular, to which we shall hereafter refer.

We desire to emphasize again that it'is necessary to make specific objection and present the point to the lower court in order to take advantage of it here on appeal.

2. It is insisted that the court erred in not permitting the evidence which we have detailed, as to the impression of the finger prints on the neck of the wine bottle in comparison with the impression of the appellant’s finger prints, to be admitted in evidence, in order to show that the finger prints on the bottle were not those of the appellant.

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Bluebook (online)
122 So. 757, 154 Miss. 653, 63 A.L.R. 1319, 1929 Miss. LEXIS 169, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/willoughby-v-state-miss-1929.