Woods v. State

333 So. 2d 178, 1976 Ala. Crim. App. LEXIS 1878
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Alabama
DecidedJune 1, 1976
Docket7 Div. 386
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 333 So. 2d 178 (Woods v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Criminal Appeals of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Woods v. State, 333 So. 2d 178, 1976 Ala. Crim. App. LEXIS 1878 (Ala. Ct. App. 1976).

Opinion

LEIGH M. CLARK, Supernumerary Circuit Judge.

This appeal is from a judgment of conviction of murder in the first degree and a sentence to imprisonment for life. The alleged victim was Herbert Harding Duvall of Childersburg, the operator of a store in that city.

According to the evidence for the prosecution, the victim left his home about 7:45 A.M. on Friday, March 29, 1974. He had a billfold full of money, according to his wife. Mrs. Duvall went to the store about 10:50 the same morning. She left in about twenty minutes. While there she noticed a boy wearing an unusual kind of a hat, one “without much of a brim and with little button like things scattered around on it”; he had a goatee. Mrs. Duvall identified him as John Henry Lee. While at the store, Mrs. Duvall talked with her husband and telephoned her daughter; it was understood that her daughter would come to work at the store for a while about 12:00 noon. Mrs. Vincent, the daughter, arrived at the store at about 11:2S; she noted scattered merchandise including shoes and shoe boxes and started picking them up. A boy came in to pay on someone else s bill. Mrs. Vincent went to the cash register, noticed it was open and that all the currency was gone, though coins were still in the register. She became concerned and went to the back of the store looking for her father. She found him in the' bathroom but didn’t go in because he had his trousers down. She went to the phone and called her mother but did not get her. She called the police department; she then called her mother again and told her to come to the store. Soon thereafter, Officer Shell and Mrs. Duvall arrived at the store. According to the testimony of the three, Mr. Duvall had been injured. He had a cut on the right side of his head, at his ear, and his temple had some blood on it. He was “addled.” He fought with Officer Shell and attempted to escort Officer Shell out of the front of the store. Mr. Duvall’s spectacles were found in some shoes on the “left side behind” Mr. Du-vall’s “desk.” A battery, a part of Mr. Du-vall’s hearing aid, was found about twelve feet from the front of his desk. There was a claw hammer, which belonged to Mr. Duvall, out of its customary place and lying on the floor behind Mr. Duvall’s desk. Mr. Duvall was taken by ambulance to a hospital about ten minutes before twelve o’clock. His physicians found that he had a fractured skull, and an injury to his brain, from which he never recovered. Surgery was performed, and the physicians removed a blood clot and a necrotic portion of the brain. He contracted pneumonia and died on August 29, 1974. He had been hospitalized or in a nursing home continuously from the date of his injury to the date of his death, having been in four hospitals and one nursing home. At one time he was in intensive care for approximately three weeks. In answer to a question as to what caused his death, a physician answered: “Well, his cause of death was directly due to the pneumonia. The fact that he had sustained major head trauma and was bed-confined from that, results in an increase incidents of pulmonary problems.” [180]*180Upon being questioned whether the injury to the head was the “approximate” cause of bringing on the bilateral pneumonia of which he died, his answer was, “Yes sir.” According to the doctor, Mr. Duvall never spoke coherently. He was seventy-seven years of age. The physician who first examined Mr. Duvall in emergency said: “My first impression when I saw it (referring to the injury to his head), but before anybody said anything about what it was, or anything, the injury had the appearance of an imprint about the size of a hammer.”

William Pope, a witness for the State, said that on the morning of March 29, he, John Henry Lee and defendant went in defendant’s Ford automobile to several places, including Talladega, that after they returned toward Childersburg, he heard Shelley and John Henry “talking about that they needed to rob somebody or hit somebody for some money or something.” They did not name any place at that time. Thereafter “Shelley Woods kept on talking about it and I said, ‘Well, I have been in trouble one time and I’m not getting in no more trouble’ ... so Shelley just kept on talking about Mr. Duvall and A & P kept a right smart of money and that we needed to hit one of them.” The witness said he again stated to the other two that he wasn’t getting in any more trouble and thereafter Shelley said that he was just teasing. They returned to the business part of Childersburg, where Mr. Duvall’s store was located. He stayed in the car, which John Henry and defendant left. While he was there he looked toward Mr. Duvall’s store and saw Shelley Woods come out of the store. Woods came “down the street back towards J & J and cut through the alley.” Thereafter John Henry joined the witness, getting in the front seat and Woods came to the car “out of this alley.”

Robert Green, the owner of Campbell Auto Parts in Childersburg located a hundred and seventy-two feet from Mr. Du-vall’s store, testified that Woods and about four or five other black boys came into his store between eleven and eleven thirty A. M. March 29. He said Woods wanted to buy some Ford brake shoes, but he told Woods he didn’t have them.

After Officer Shell and the victim’s wife and daughter arrived at the store, and after Officer Shell had enlisted the aid of other officers and members of the Child-ersburg Fire Department, a diligent search was made in the store and in the vicinity outside the store for Mr. Duvall’s billfold or pocketbook, and it was never found. There was about a hundred dollars in Mr. Duvall’s shirt pocket.

About 4:00 P.M. March 29, defendant was arrested. He made a statement in which he said that on March 29 he was not in the vicinity of that part of the business section of Childersburg where Mr. Duvall’s store was located. He made another statement about an hour thereafter, in which he admitted that he was close to Mr. Duvall’s store, that he went into a liquor store there located to pick up a pint of gin. He said he did not take his automobile, but walked.

Several witnesses testified for defendant as to an alibi at about ten, eleven and twelve o’clock on the morning of March 29. Their testimony was far from conclusive.

Defendant testified and positively denied that he was in Mr. Duvall’s store on March 29. He said he was at the liquor store close to Duvall’s store between 9:30 and 10:00. He denied that he had been with William Pope and John Henry Lee on March 29. He said he had been with them on March 28. He said he went into Campbell’s Auto Parts on March 28 and asked Mr. Green for Ford brake shoes but that he did not go in the store on March 29.

Only a fractional part of the evidence is narrated above, but it is sufficient to show that a jury issue as to defendant’s [181]*181guilt of murder in the first degree was presented. Circumstantial though it is, there is substantial evidence that Mr. Du-vall was hit on the head “with a hammer or some other blunt object” as charged in the indictment; that a felonious attack was made upon him in an effort to rob him; that defendant was a participant in the attack upon Mr. Duvall. The evidence is also sufficient to furnish a basis for the finding that Mr. Duvall’s death was proximately caused by the blow to his head. To accept defendant’s testimony would require us to disregard the testimony of one witness that defendant planned to rob Mr. Duvall and the testimony of another witness that defendant was seen leaving Mr. Duvall’s store about the time Mr. Duvall was injured.

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Related

Carpenter v. State
404 So. 2d 89 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Alabama, 1980)
Scaloni v. State
383 So. 2d 586 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Alabama, 1980)

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Bluebook (online)
333 So. 2d 178, 1976 Ala. Crim. App. LEXIS 1878, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/woods-v-state-alacrimapp-1976.