Cook v. State
Cook v. State
Opinion
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *Page 1245
The appellant was indicted under the Alabama Death Penalty Act for robbery when the victim is intentionally killed and convicted as charged. Code of Alabama 1975, Section 13-11-2 (Code of Alabama 1940, Recompiled 1958, T. 15, § 342 (4), 1975 Interim Supplement). Punishment was fixed at death.
On Friday, August 26, 1976, at approximately 6:45 A.M., the appellant was seen pacing back and forth, as if waiting for someone, immediately across the street and in front of the gate to the Sherman Concrete Products Company in Birmingham, Alabama. The deceased, Lewis Webb, always parked his automobile in this area and customarily carried large sums of money to work every Friday so he could cash the plant employees' payroll checks. When Webb arrived at his place of employment, he parked his car and walked across the street to where several of his friends met every morning beside the gate to discuss sports. The appellant, pulling a stocking mask over his head, came up behind Webb as he was crossing the street, whirled him around and demanded his money. Webb raised his hands and denied having any money. The appellant then reached under Webb's shirt, pulled out the money bag containing $3,000.00 and shot Webb once through the heart. The appellant then ran from the scene of the crime.
Walter Lee Hill and James Earl Jones were sitting outside the plant that morning talking with Webb when the robbery-murder occurred. Both men separately identified the appellant in a pre-trial lineup and testified that they observed the appellant in the area that morning. Hill testified that the appellant walked up one side of the street, crossed and then walked down the plant side of the street right in front of them. Jones stated that the appellant remained on the other side of the street pacing back and forth. Joe Goldson, Webb's brother-in-law, saw the appellant running from the scene as he came to work at Sherman Concrete that morning. When Goldson arrived at the plant gate, Hill told him that Webb had been shot and robbed and pointed in the direction the appellant had escaped and that Goldson had just come from. Goldson went back and saw the appellant in a Thunderbird driven by a woman pulling out of a "Mexican food place". He wrote down the license number of the escaping Thunderbird and returned to the plant.
The Thunderbird was registered to the appellant's sister who testified that the car was purchased in her name for the appellant. *Page 1246
The defense was alibi. Janet Jackson testified that she was living with the appellant at the time of the crime. On that particular morning they both went to her mother's house arriving about 6:50-6:55 A.M. They left about 7:06 A.M. She drove her mother's car and the appellant drove his Thunderbird and arrived at the Southside Citgo Service Station at 7:15-7:16 A.M. where the appellant left his car to have some work done on it. Ms. Jackson's mother verified this as did Curtis Pickens, the owner of the service station. The appellant took the stand, denied the killing and testified to his alibi.
In reviewing this conviction we are guided by the principle that an accused is entitled to a fair and impartial trial.
"(T)he law should prevail, without any reference to the magnitude or brutality of the offense charged. No matter how revolting the accusation, how clear the proof, or how degraded, or even brutal, the offender, the Constitution, the law, the very genius of Anglo-American liberty, demand a fair and impartial trial. If guilty, let him suffer such penalty as an impartial jury, unawed by outside pressure, may under the law inflict upon him. He is a human being and is entitled to this. Let not an outraged public, or one which deems itself outraged stain its own hands — stamp on its soul the sin of a great crime — on the false plea that it is but the avenger of the innocent." Seay v. State,
207 Ala. 453 ,455 ,93 So. 403 ,405 (1922).
With these comments as the framework and basis for our review we now proceed to examine the merits of this cause.
Before an objection because of false grammar, incorrect spelling, or mere clerical errors is entertained, the court should be satisfied of the tendency of the error to mislead, or to leave in doubt the meaning of the charge to a person of common understanding, reading, not for the purpose of finding defects, but to ascertain what is intended to be charged. Grantv. State,
"MR. JOHNSON: Don't you know that right now out there on every corner, in every little store, in every little Quick Mart, in every little 7-11 Store they are out there, the owners, the proprietors, and they are considering the odds. They are wondering which way you're going to stack them. Don't you know that the Recardo Cook's and the would be Recardo Cook's of this world are out there and they are considering the odds too. Don't you know they are wondering if you're going to say to them, `We're going to give you a license. We're going to give you a license to kill'.
"MR. WILKINSON: We object to any argument that suggests the jury giving other people license to kill. We object to that.
"THE COURT: Well, that wouldn't be — I sustain.
"MR. WILKINSON: Did you sustain?
"THE COURT: Yes, sir.
"MR. WILKINSON: Would you instruct the jury to disregard his last argument?
"THE COURT: I sustained. Go ahead."
The appellant merely asserts that it was error for the trial judge to refuse to instruct the jury to disregard the prosecutor's argument.
The objected to portion of the argument is similar to that made by the prosecutor in Blalock v. State,
The record reflects that there was no objection to the prosecutor's reference to "Quick Mart" and "7-11" stores although the appellant argues the prejudicial content of the argument on appeal. Even in a prosecution where the punishment is death, improper argument of counsel is not the subject of review on appeal unless there is due objection by counsel, or a motion to exclude, a ruling by the court and an objection to that ruling or a refusal of the court to make a ruling. Embreyv. State,
"This is the first case that the death penalty was reinstated. Don't you think the people who represent the people of Alabama have something in mind when they restored the death penalty. Don't you think that they had in mind people like the Mr. Tortorici's of the world out in their grocery stores.
"MR. WILKINSON (Defense Counsel): We object to all this referring to other specific incidents and things of that sort, that type of argument, and we object to it.
"THE COURT: Overrule.
"MR. WILKINSON: We except."
Initially we note that we are unable to intelligently review the prejudicial character of the argument, because the comment is fragmentary and the record so incomplete. Pate v. State,
While technically the comment may be said to be improper in that it refers to a matter outside the record, the appellant has in no manner demonstrated that it substantially and prejudicially affected his legal rights. In closing argument a prosecutor should not be permitted to state as facts what he alleged had occurred in the perpetration of another crime having some alleged features analogous to those developed at trial. Cross v. State,
The comment of the prosecutor does not refer to the specific facts of another case and nowhere approaches those comments condemned in Cross, supra; Roy v. State,
"We sum up, lest we be misunderstood. There must be objection in the court below, the objection overruled, and an exception reserved. The statement must be made as of fact; the fact stated must be unsupported by any evidence, must be pertinent to the issue, or its natural tendency must be to influence the finding of the jury; or the case is not brought within the influence of this rule. To come within the last clause above, namely, where the natural tendency is to influence the finding of the jury, the case must be clear and strong. We would not embarrass free discussion, or regard the many hasty or exaggerated statements counsel often make in the heat of debate, which can not, and are not expected to become, factors in the formation of the verdict. Such statements are usually valued at their true worth, and have no tendency to mislead. It is only when the statement is of a substantive, outside fact — stated as fact — and which manifestly bears on a material inquiry before the jury, that the court can interfere, and arrest discussion."
The mere mention of the name of Mr. Tortorici by the prosecutor in closing argument, even if improper, was not so prejudicial as to have deprived the appellant of a fair trial absent any showing that the name itself would have some sinister effect upon the jury or a juror.
*Page 1250"MR. JOHNSON: Does anybody doubt that that car, the 1 C-23670, was not at Sherman Concrete Products that morning? Do y'all think that Joe Golson made that up? On the one hand they say —
"MR. WILKINSON: We object to that. Joe Golson never said any 1 C-23670.
"THE COURT: Mr. Wilkinson, this is argument. The jury heard the evidence.
"MR. WILKINSON: I understand that, and we object to that statement being outside the evidence and we object to it.
"THE COURT: Overrule.
"MR. WILKINSON: Exception."
The prosecutor's remarks were a misstatement of the evidence. Witness Goldson testified that he saw a man run from the scene of the murder and drive away in a Thunderbird automobile with license number "1-23670". Through the principal accountant for the Jefferson County Department of Revenue, the state proved that the only Thunderbird with those numerical digits (1-23670) belonged to the appellant and had a license number of "1 C-23670".
The correct rule of law in this regard is that
"Generally, it is improper for counsel in argument to the jury to misquote or misstate the testimony, . . . However, the fact that the prosecuting attorney states some portion of the evidence erroneously, or makes exaggerated statements as to its strength, is not error, unless it is clear to the court that accused has been prejudiced thereby." 23A C.J.S. Criminal Law p. 145, § 1093.
It is our conclusion from a review of the evidence that this comment by the prosecutor did not harm the appellant. Rule 45, Alabama Rules of Appellate Procedure.
While we feel that the Harmless Error Rule, A.R.A.P., Rule 45, is to be applied with great caution in capital cases, there is "no reason why it should not be applied in a capital case where it is obvious that a defendant could not have probably been injured in a substantial right by a ruling". Seibold v.State,
In determining that no substantial prejudice to the appellant has resulted from the prosecutorial summation we have taken into account the facts that the remarks were single or isolated and not repeated, that the trial was relatively short and the jurors would not have been misled over the precise import of any testimony, and that the cumulative effect of the errors is not sufficient to require reversal. From the record the atmosphere of the courtroom throughout the trial convinces us that the appellant received a fair and just determination of his guilt. And finally we have considered the overwhelming evidence of the appellant's guilt. While it is not an appellate court's function to determine guilt or innocence or to speculate upon probable reconviction and decide according to how the speculation comes out, to weigh the error's effect against the entire setting of the record without relation to the verdict would almost be to work in a vacuum. Kotteakos, supra, at
Finding direction in the opinion of Justice Livingston inStain v. State,
In the words of Judge Harris in Jacobs v. State,
The judgment of conviction is affirmed. We will not fix the date of execution until the appellant has been afforded the opportunity for further appellate review.
AFFIRMED.
All Judges concur. *Page 1251
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Recardo Cook v. State.
- Cited By
- 23 cases
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- Published