Owen v. State
Owen v. State
Opinion
The appellant, Donald Lewis Owen, was convicted of capital murder of a police officer while the officer was in the line of duty. He was sentenced to imprisonment for life without the possibility of parole.
This appeal is from a conviction in the appellant's third trial for this capital murder. The appellant was originally tried and convicted in 1981. This court affirmed that judgment.Owen v. State,
The state's evidence tended to show that around midnight on April 8, 1980, the appellant, Donald Lewis Owen, left work at Scott Paper Company in Mobile and stopped at a local bar. While at the bar he talked with his supervisor, danced with a lady friend, and drank four to eight beers. He left the bar and shortly before 2:00 a.m. was pulled over for speeding by Officer John Dotson of the Chickasaw Police Department. The summary of the events which followed is based on the appellant's testimony to mental health professionals. The evidence tended to show that the appellant shot Officer Dotson twice with a 12-gauge shotgun and then fled the scene. At approximately 2:30 a.m., other officers arrived on the scene and found Dotson on the ground with shotgun wounds to the right eye and abdomen. His weapon had been drawn and cocked, but not fired. Dotson *Page 1128 died shortly thereafter as a result of the shotgun wounds.
The defense relied on evidence that the appellant was suffering from a mental disease or defect and as a result that he lacked "substantial capacity to appreciate the criminality of his conduct or to conform his conduct to the requirements of the law." Section
In his dissent from this court's affirmance of the appellant's conviction after his second trial, Judge Bowen stated:
Owen,"[T]here was evidence that the defendant was intoxicated. The evidence of the degree of the defendant's intoxication was conflicting. Therefore, the defendant was entitled to a jury charge on intoxication. McNeil v. State,
496 So.2d 108 ,109 (Ala.Cr.App. 1986). In relying on one officer's testimony that the defendant did not appear to be intoxicated, the majority has made a credibility choice and has invaded the exclusive province of the jury."
Judge Bowen's reasoning and conclusion are right. When there is evidence of intoxication and the crime charged requires a specific intent, an instruction on the effects of intoxication and how it relates to any lesser included offense should be given. McNeil v. State,
There was evidence presented in this case that the appellant had consumed as many as eight beers within a two-hour period. There was a rational basis to support an instruction that intoxication could negate the specific intent and lower the charge to manslaughter. The degree of intoxication necessary to reduce a charge from murder to manslaughter when the intoxication is voluntary must be so great as to "amount to insanity." Ex parte Bankhead,
In McNeil, supra, this court, in an opinion written by Judge Bowen, stated:
"The failure of the trial court to give the requested instruction on manslaughter was error. 'When the crime charged involves a specific intent, such as murder, and there is evidence of intoxication, the trial judge should instruct the jury on the lesser included offense of manslaughter.' Gray v. State,
482 So.2d 1318 ,1319 (Ala.Cr.App. 1985). 'No matter how strongly the facts may suggest that appellant was not so intoxicated at the time he committed the offense that he was incapable of forming the necessary specific intent, the jury should have been instructed on manslaughter as a lesser included offense since there was a "reasonable theory from the evidence which would support the position." ' "
The trial court's failure to instruct the jury on the effect of intoxication was reversible error. We are compelled, therefore, to reverse the appellant's conviction and remand this cause to the Circuit Court for Mobile County for proceedings consistent with this opinion.
REVERSED AND REMANDED.
All the Judges concur except MONTIEL, J., who dissents without opinion.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Donald Lewis Owen v. State.
- Cited By
- 21 cases
- Status
- Published