Hall v. State
Hall v. State
Opinion
Assault with intent to murder; sentence: eight years imprisonment.
Appellant was charged in a two count indictment with (1) assault with intent to murder David Havard and (2) assault with intent to maim David Havard. The jury found appellant guilty on count one only, and the State nol-prossed count two.
This case arose from a barroom brawl between two off-duty undercover policemen and certain customers of the 1890 Lounge in Dothan, Alabama. Agent David Havard, a Mobile police officer, was on loan to the Dothan Police Department Narcotics Squad as an undercover agent. On the evening of June 3, 1976, appellant was arrested for selling marijuana, based on the undercover work of agent Havard. Appellant was *Page 872 booked around 9:00 or 9:30 P.M. at the Dothan Jail in Havard's presence. After going off duty around 10:30 P.M., Havard and Dothan police officer Wendell White went to Havard's motel with two other officers and discussed the marijuana case until around midnight. Havard and White then went to the Flamingo Club and had one drink. After the Flamingo closed, the two officers went to the 1890 Lounge.
Appellant had made bond earlier that evening on the marijuana charge and had been released. The State's evidence showed that the appellant and a co-defendant, David Robinette, entered the 1890 Lounge, and as Robinette passed the table where Havard and White were sitting, he cursed Officer White. Robinette rounded a partition into a game room, and White and Havard followed him. Havard testified that Robinette grabbed White as they rounded the partition and at about the same time, he was grabbed from behind by the appellant. A brawl ensued among the four men. Havard testified concerning the assault by appellant as follows:
". . . We hit the floor, and when we hit the floor, the subject started kicking me about the head and ribs. Jimmy Earl said that he was going to kill me, that I would never testify against him in Court; that he was going to blind me. He kept trying to dig my eyes out, and hitting me. . . ." (Emphasis supplied.)
Agent Havard, unable to see the assailant because of blood running from his eyes, was struck twice upon the head with a pool cue. The attack upon the officers was so severe that they were forced to roll under a pool table and fire Havard's pistol into the ceiling to stop the brawl and cause the appellant and his companions to leave the club.
Officer White's testimony was essentially the same as Havard's, except for its corroboration of Robinette's assertion that White grabbed Robinette as he "wheeled" toward White, rather than Robinette grabbing White first. White testified that he also was hit with a pool cue by someone and had his eyes gouged by the appellant before he dove under the pool table with Havard.
Officer Havard was hospitalized for four or five days, and received twenty stitches in his head, twenty stitches in his left eyeball, and seventeen stitches in his right eyeball. Photographs of his battered face were put into evidence to show the severity of the attack.
Robinette testified that he neither spoke to White nor saw him in the lounge until he wheeled around and White grabbed him and the brawl ensued. Robinette stated that White grabbed him, knocked him down, and bit a hole in his ear. He said that he got up, took White's gun and threw it over a partition away from the brawl. A picture depicting a serious bite in Robinette's ear was put into evidence. Robinette testified that he never used a pool cue against anyone in the brawl and that he never saw appellant do so.
Appellant testified that just as the disturbance began, he turned and was hit in the mouth with a pool cue by agent Havard. He testified that Havard pushed and tackled him and that he fell on top of Havard. Appellant stated that he hit Havard four or five times with his fist only. He said that he never spoke to Agent Havard during the affray.
In an assault with intent to murder, punishable under Title 14, § 38, Code of Alabama 1940, the word "murder" is read to mean as it did at common law, the killing of a rational human being with malice aforethought. Both malice and intent must be proved to the satisfaction of the jury. Jackson v. State,
The State's evidence was sufficient here to raise a question for the jury as to existence of an intent on the part of appellant to take agent Havard's life. The evidence of the ferocity and of the brutal nature of the attack; the nature and severity of the injuries suffered by Havard; and the surrounding circumstances of the brawl, were sufficient facts from which the jury could infer malice and an intent to take life. Likewise, the jury had every right to believe the assault was committed by the appellant with the intent to kill Agent Havard, from Havard's testimony that "Jimmy Earl said that he was going to kill me. . . ."
The evidence raised an inference of a concert of action on the part of appellant and Robinette. Although it is unclear whether blows struck with pool cues were inflicted by appellant or Robinette, or by both, the jury could have reasonably inferred from the evidence that, "by prearrangement, or on the spur of the moment," the appellant and Robinette entered into a common enterprise or adventure, the purpose of which was to assault the two officers and kill them if they could. Morris v.State,
If a deadly weapon is used, and a conspiracy is found by the jury, it makes no difference in law which assailant wielded the weapon because both are principals. Howell and Walton, supra. The law infers an intent to kill or do grievous bodily harm from the use of a deadly weapon. Williams v. State,
At common law, one could be guilty of assault with intent to murder *Page 874
where no deadly weapon was used. Bowen, supra. Our cases state that our statute is a codification of the common law. The statute does not create the offense or the constituents of the offense, it merely elevates the crime from a misdemeanor to a felony. Smith v. State,
The reconciliation of conflicting testimony is a jury function. Roberts v. State,
When the jury was qualified at the beginning of the trial, juror Walter H. Hamrick did not respond to the question as to whether any jurors knew the appellant. At the hearing on the motion for a new trial, Steve Hamrick, the juror's son, testified that he talked with his father at a Zippy Mart on the afternoon of September 20, 1976, and that his father said he would find the appellant guilty because the appellant's father owed him money on a bill. The son then corrected his testimony, stating that he had the conversation with his father at the Zippy Mart on September 25, 1976, and not on the date of the trial, September 20, 1976. He also testified that one James Ray Snow overheard the conversation with his father. Snow testified that while he was in the company of Steve Hamrick he overheard the conversation at the Zippy Mart between Steve Hamrick and his father, Walter Hamrick, on or about September 20, 1976. He testified that Walter Hamrick told Steve that he did not like the appellant at all; that he was on the jury at the time; that appellant's father, whom he knew well, owed him money; and that he was going to find appellant guilty because he did not like him as a person.
Juror Walter Hamrick testified in rebuttal that the conversation with his son at the Zippy Mart occurred a week and a half or two weeks prior to the trial of the appellant. He testified that he never knew the appellant beforehand. On cross-examination he denied saying that the appellant's father owed him a bill, or that he was going to find the appellant guilty.
Mullins v. State,
". . . nothing more is presented for review here than a discretionary action in passing on this ground of the motion for a new trial. The trial court heard the evidence pro and con, and, indulging the presumption in favor of the court's decision, *Page 875 we must hold that there was no error in overruling the motion for a new trial on this ground."
The evidence pertaining to the misconduct of the juror Hamrick, submitted at the hearing on the motion for a new trial, was in conflict. It was the duty of the trial judge to exercise his reasonable discretion in weighing the evidence presented and to reach a decision thereon. His ruling will not be disturbed in the absence of a showing of abuse of discretion, and this Court will indulge in every presumption in favor of the correctness of the ruling of the trial judge.Williams v. State [1977] Ala.Cr.App.,
In an effort to impeach the jury verdict, the appellant's attorney twice took the witness stand and attempted to testify as to a conversation between himself and a juror. The trial court sustained the State's objections to that testimony.
Affidavits or testimony of third persons concerning statements made to them by jurors, which tend to impeach the jury's verdict, are inadmissible, not only because they are hearsay evidence, but because they invade the protective privilege of secrecy attached to jury deliberations. Harrisonv. Baker,
AFFIRMED.
All the Judges concur.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Jimmy Earl Hall v. State.
- Cited By
- 28 cases
- Status
- Published