Womack v. State

205 So. 2d 579, 281 Ala. 499, 1967 Ala. LEXIS 995
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedDecember 21, 1967
Docket7 Div. 768
StatusPublished
Cited by58 cases

This text of 205 So. 2d 579 (Womack v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Womack v. State, 205 So. 2d 579, 281 Ala. 499, 1967 Ala. LEXIS 995 (Ala. 1967).

Opinion

COLEMAN, Justice.

Defendant appeals from a judgment of conviction for first degree murder and life imprisonment.

Defendant, with two companions, drove an automobile to the home of deceased in a rural area. One of defendant’s companions shot deceased with his own shotgun and all three then proceeded to ransack the premises. The body of deceased was found several days later on the ground near a pile of slabs. Some of the facts are set out in more detail in opinions affirming the convictions of defendant’s companions in Beverly v. State, 281 Ala. 325, 202 So.2d 534, and Elrod v. State, 281 Ala. 331, 202 So.2d 539.

Defendant assigns for error the action of the court in admitting into evidence over defendant’s objection a gruesome, grisly photograph of the body of deceased lying on the ground where it was found. Defendant says that the picture shows nothing which was in dispute or material to any issue in the case and “that the only possible reason for introducing this picture into evidence is to inflame the minds of the jury to the extent that they will blindly find the defendant guilty of murder.”

Whether defendant’s argument have merit or not, this court, in the two has cases last cited, held that a substantially identical photograph was admitted without error and we are not disposed to change that ruling in the instant case.

*502 Defendant contends that the court erred in admitting into evidence State’s Exhibits 4 and 6 which are search warrants ordering the Sheriff of Etowah County to search the premises of defendant for articles described in the warrants.

Defendant contends that the court erred in admitting the warrants into evidence over defendant’s objection because the warrants are “invalid” for two reasons.

First, defendant says the warrants are invalid because the officers who applied for the warrants testified that they obtained the warrants from the Clerk of the Circuit Court of Etowah County. Defendant says that the Clerk of the Circuit Court is not authorized by law to issue search warrants.

It is true that the officers did testify that they obtained the warrants from “Howard Kirby, Circuit Clerk of Etowah County.” .The warrants, however, are not signed by Howard Kirby as Clerk of the Circuit Court. Underneath his signature appear the following printed words:

“CLERK, ETOWAH COUNTY COURT.”

The Etowah County Court was created by Act No. 91, Acts of 1963, Vol. 1, page 475, which recites in part:

“Section 4. The circuit clerk of Etowah County, Alabama, shall be ex officio clerk of the Etowah County Court, and all duties performed by or required of the said clerk shall be by virtue of his being clerk of the circuit court. The clerk shall issue processes of the court, keep a docket of the proceedings of the court, both civil and criminal, certify all appeals and certioraries. He shall have the power and authority to take affidavits and issue search warrants and warrants of arrest thereon, making same returnable to the court hereby established . . . .”

It thus appears that, although the person who issued the warrants was clerk of the circuit court, he did not issue them in that capacity but issued them as Clerk of the Etowah County Court who is expressly authorized by law to issue search warrants. Defendant’s first objection to the validity of the warrants is not well taken. We do not undertake to decide whether a clerk of the circuit court has authority to issue a search warrant.

Second, defendant argues that the warrants are invalid because the jurisdiction of the Etowah County Court “ . . . .is limited to felonies committed within the county and that in order to secure a search warrant in this case, resort should have been had to a court of general jurisdiction and not to one purely local in nature.”

Section 1 of Act No. 91, supra, confers jurisdiction on the Etowah County Court as follows:

“Section 1. There is hereby created and established in Etowah County a court with county-wide jurisdiction as hereinafter provided. The court shall be known as the Etowah County Court. It shall have original jurisdiction of misdemeanors committed in the county, of bastardy and peace proceedings arising in the county and preliminary jurisdiction of all felonies committed in the county. . . . . The Etowah County Court is vested with the same powers, authority and jurisdiction now held or exercised under general or local law by the county court of Etowah County, the juvenile court, justices of the peace or courts created in lieu thereof, or the circuit court in those matters in which jurisdiction has been hereinabove conferred on the Etowah County Court.”

Defendant’s argument seems to be that, because the jurisdiction of the Etowah County Court does not include crimes committed outside the county, Act No. 91 ought not to be construed to confer on an officer of that court authority to issue a search warrant in connection with a crime which was not committed in the county.

*503 The following has been written concerning search warrants:

“Search warrants are criminal processes, issued under the police power of the state, to aid in the detection or suppression of crime, and have no relation to civil process or trials. Den ex dem. Murray v. Hoboken Land and Imp. Company, 18 How. 272, 15 L.Ed. 372; State v. Derry, 171 Ind. 18, 85 N.E. 765, 131 Am.St.Rep. 237. They are, therefore, collateral to criminal prosecutions, although no direct criminal charge may ever in fact be brought against the party in whose possession the personal property may be found. The primary purpose of the search is to obtain evidence to be used in a criminal prosecution to maintain the peace and dignity of the state. Chipman v. Bates, 15 Vt. 51, 14 Am.Dec. 663.” Sugar Valley Land Co. v. Johnson, 17 Ala.App. 409, 412, 85 So. 871.

Because the issuance of a search warrant is not in itself the commencement of a criminal action and may or may not be followed by a criminal action, we do not think that the authority to issue the warrant is limited to officers of those courts which have original or preliminary jurisdiction of criminal actions which may arise out of or in connection with the execution of the warrant.

So far as we are advised, this court has not determined or considered the limits of the territory within which an officer issuing a search warrant may authorize a search. General statutes regulating issue of search warrants appear in Title 15, §§ 99-118. In § 104, it is provided that the magistrate, on proper showing, must issue a search warrant “ . . . . directed to the sheriff, or to any constable of the county . ” Statutes prescribe forms for search warrants. In § 105 of Title 15, the warrant is directed: “To the sheriff or any constable of_county.” In § 496, Title 13, Form 19, the warrant is directed: “To any lawful officer of said county.”

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Bluebook (online)
205 So. 2d 579, 281 Ala. 499, 1967 Ala. LEXIS 995, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/womack-v-state-ala-1967.