McGhee v. State
McGhee v. State
Opinion
Second degree murder; sentence: ten years. *Page 867
On Christmas Eve 1974, the appellant's car collided with a car driven by James Alvin Nix. The collision took place on Highway 143 in Montgomery County near the Tyler-Goodwyn Bridge. As a direct result of the collision, William Thomas Nix, a six-year-old child, was killed. William Thomas Nix was a passenger in the car driven by James Alvin Nix, his father.
The overwhelming weight of the evidence presented showed that the appellant was at fault in the collision and that the appellant was driving while intoxicated. The State presented numerous witnesses on the issues of fault and intoxication including occupants of the car hit by the appellant, law enforcement officers and other citizens who arrived on the scene immediately after the collision. The State also introduced the result of the appellant's P.E.I. (Photo-Electric Intoximeter) test which read .17. It is a rebuttable presumption that a reading of .10 or above establishes that one is under the influence of alcohol to the extent one cannot safely operate a motor vehicle.
The State indicted and tried the appellant under the fourth class of first degree murder found in Title 14, § 314, Code of Alabama 1940, which reads in pertinent part as follows:
Mitchell v. State,". . . or perpetrated by any act greatly dangerous to the lives of others, and evidencing a depraved mind regardless of human life, although without any preconceived purpose to deprive any particular person of life, is murder in the first degree; . . ."
Mitchell also defines universal malice as follows:". . . `Neither shall he be guilty of a less crime, who kills another in consequence of such a willful act as shows him to be an enemy to all mankind in general; as going deliberately, and with an intention to do mischief, upon a horse used to strike or coolly discharging a gun among a multitude of people. So, if a man resolves to kill the next man he meets, and does kill him, it is murder, although he knew him not; for this is universal malice.' And we may mention the intentional wrecking of a passenger train on a railroad, by which a life or many lives are destroyed, as another instance of universal malice. . . ."
". . . that depravity of the human heart, which determines to take life upon slight or insufficient provocation, without knowing or caring who may be the victim. The supreme depravity shown in this so-called universal malice, is considered as the equivalent of the strong adjectives, willful, deliberate, malicious, and premeditated, which characterize the first class of murder in the first degree."
The State's theory in the present case is that the appellant's act of driving while intoxicated evidenced the requisite "depraved mind."
"February 26th, 1957, convicted of speeding; December the 30th, 1961, convicted of reckless driving.
* * * * * *
*Page 868"October 13th, 1962, improper brakes; October 27th, 1962, failed to stop at a stop sign; December 1st, 1962, speeding; June 29th, 1963, improper brakes; November 16th, 1963, driving while license revoked; October 16th, 1965, driving while intoxicated; March 3rd, 1970 driving while license revoked; February 4th, 1972, reckless driving."
The appellant made a timely objection to the introduction and admission of the above record. If the basis for admissions of this record of convictions was to impeach the credibility of the appellant's testimony, then the admission would have been error as the above crimes do not involve "moral turpitude."Sims v. Callahan,
The State contends that the record of convictions was introduced and is admissible solely for the purpose of demonstrating the appellant's repeated, prolonged, and conscious indifference to the consequences of his improper driving. Such habitual indifference, the State contends, would be evidence of the appellant having had a depraved mind on Christmas Eve 1974.
The issue of whether prior traffic convictions may be introduced to show a depraved mind at the time of the homicide by reason of the defendant's driving a vehicle while intoxicated appears to be a question of first impression in Alabama. However, several cases have indicated in dicta that evidence of prior offenses may be admissible to show the element of malice. McMurtrey v. State,
The appellant objected to the driving record being admitted on the ground that such record was not relevant and was too remote in time from the alleged murder. We agree.
The prior convictions took place, on the average, approximately ten years before the fatal wreck in question. From the record, it is impossible to conclude that any of the convictions other than the October 16, 1965, D.W.I. conviction, had anything at all to do with intoxication.
Ordinarily, remoteness of time affects the weight and probative value rather than the admissibility of evidence and admission of such evidence rests largely in the trial court's enlightened discretion. Smitherman v. State,
In a similar case, Waters v. State,
While it is true that a trial judge has wide discretion in determining remoteness and relevance, we conclude that such discretion was abused in the present case. Prior convictions for driving while his license was revoked, running stop signs, reckless driving, speeding, and improper brakes, between October 1957 and February 1972, have no bearing on the issue of the appellant's state of mind on December 24, 1974.
The cumulative effect of allowing the Deputy Custodian of Records for the Department of Public Safety to read a list of the appellant's prior traffic convictions which were either remote or not relevant violated the substantial rights of the appellant.
The Deputy Custodian of Records for the Department of Public Safety was allowed to testify as to the appellant's prior traffic convictions by reading a compilation of the appellant's driving record which was on file with that Department. The cases are in agreement that the proper method of proving a prior conviction is by a judgment entry in the court records or a certified copy of the court record showing a judgment entry of the prior conviction. Highsmith v. State,
A record of prior convictions which is offered to prove a material element in a charge of first degree murder must be submitted by way of a judgment entry in the court records, a certified copy of the judgment entry in the court record, or by the oral testimony of the defendant. The aforementioned procedure was not used in the present case, therefore, the records from the Public Safety Department were legally inadequate and inadmissible.
Pursuant to Title 36, § 68, Code of Alabama 1940, the various municipal and county courts send a record of conviction of certain driving offenses to the Department of Public Safety. Such records are used to determine whether an offender's driver's license should be administratively suspended or revoked. The director of that Department may rely upon those records of convictions in taking such administratrive action. But here we are asked to go a step further and say that a compilation or list of those records is admissible as proof of the conviction. As stated in Lowery v. State,
"Hearsay in documents does not become admissible by merely having a custodian certify a copy to be the same as the original document. . . ."
The list itself was not in fact introduced into evidence, but the deputy custodian was allowed to verbally testify as to its contents in the instant case. This is also impermissible.Childers v. Holmes,
This Court reversed the same trial judge in 1970 on substantially the same point of law. In Goodwin v. State,
"Proof of conviction comes from the original court record or a certified copy thereof. No proper predicate was laid for oral proof of a secondary nature.
"We judicially know of no Alabama statute making a report from the Federal Bureau of Investigation of the Department of Justice evidence of a conviction in any jurisdiction.
Hence, the rulings cited above were erroneous under established rules enunciated in this State at least as early as 1846 and repeated without deviation. . . ."
We see no material difference in attempting to prove prior convictions by reading an F.B.I. "rap sheet" and in reading from a compilation of reports from the files of the Public Safety Department.
In the instant case, the trial judge, in ruling on the objection, stated:
". . . This Court realizes that this is a departure from existing practices, but the facts of this case, and most especially, the problems of protecting the motoring public from this type of driving abuse justifies. I believe it is a proper statement to state that what the law is is not necessarily what the last appellate court said it was, but rather what can reasonably be assumed what the next court will say the law is under the existing circumstances. And I could not conceive in my wildest sense of right and wrong that a jury trying this case should not be allowed the opportunity to hear this type of testimony. (Emphasis supplied.)
Contrary to the assertions of the trial judge, the doctrine of stare decisis is well founded in the law of Alabama. As stated by the Court of Appeals in Atkins v. State,
"Inferior courts are bound by the decisions of the appellate courts of this state and should keep informed as to these decisions. Had this been done in the case at bar the labor expense and time involved would have been avoided."
See also: Mitchell v. City of Dothan,
The approach used in the present case seems preferable to theHyde approach. However, this appears to be an area which is ripe for legislative action. A statute which speaks specifically to the elements of vehicular homicide while intoxicated, along with an appropriate penalty section, would be an immense improvement over the present attempts to prosecute for such conduct under our traditional murder statutes. *Page 871
For the foregoing reasons, it is necessary that the appellant be given a new trial.
REVERSED AND REMANDED.
All the Judges concur.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Willie James McGhee, Jr. v. State.
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- 41 cases
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- Published