Moseley v. State
Moseley v. State
Opinion
Appellant, an indigent, was convicted of a violation of § 13-6-152, Code of Alabama 1975, and sentenced to five years imprisonment. The grand jury of Tuscaloosa County charged in the indictment that appellant "did own a pistol or did have a pistol in his possession or under his control after February 9, 1972, theretofore having been convicted in the State of Alabama of committing a crime of violence, to-wit: Burglary. . . ."
At trial, the prosecution introduced a statement made by appellant to Special Agent George Barrows, in which appellant admitted not only that he owned the pistol in question, but also that he had been previously convicted of burglary in 1963. The State also introduced a certified copy of a trial docket sheet from Jefferson County, Alabama, showing that on February 9, 1972, appellant had entered a plea of guilty to burglary. The docket sheet indicated that on February 8, 1972, an attorney was appointed to represent appellant. The "bench notes," however, did not show whether appellant was attended by counsel on the following day when he pleaded guilty.
The admissibility of appellant's confession was a matter addressed to the sound discretion of the trial judge, and we do not believe that his decision was palpably contrary to the weight of the evidence. White v. State, Ala.Cr.App.,
The introduction of appellant's confession was proper. Therefore, the admission of a 1963 burglary conviction, contained in that confession, supplied an element of the offense and removed the State's burden of proving a prior conviction of a crime of violence. See Donahay v. State,
As the Alabama Supreme Court observed in Donahay, supra:
"[b]y his act of admitting the prior conviction, we think the defendant relieved the State from the burden of proving any of the matters that ordinarily would attend establishing the prior conviction."
Appellant cites McCarty v. State,
In the case before us, appellant admitted to a burglary conviction, and burglary is a crime of violence under § 13-6-150, Code of Alabama, supra. Thus, in the instant case, appellant's admission furnished an element of the offense (conviction of a crime of violence) which was lacking inMcCarty, supra.
Furthermore, unlike the indictment in McCarty, the indictment under which appellant was charged did not allege that appellant had been convicted on a particular date. It charged only that appellant possessed a pistol "after February 9, 1972,theretofore having been convicted of. . . . Burglary." [Emphasis added.] Appellant's acknowledgement of a 1963 burglary conviction is therefore consistent with the wording of the indictment.
We have searched the record and find no error prejudicial to the appellant; therefore, the judgment of conviction by the Tuscaloosa Circuit Court is affirmed.
AFFIRMED.
All the Judges concur.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Charles Moseley, Alias v. State.
- Cited By
- 4 cases
- Status
- Published