Bazzell v. State, 3 Div. 180
Decision Date | 20 February 1973 |
Docket Number | 3 Div. 180 |
Citation | 273 So.2d 484,49 Ala.App. 508 |
Parties | David BAZZELL, alias v. STATE. |
Court | Alabama Court of Criminal Appeals |
C. Lanier Branch, Montgomery, for appellant.
William J. Baxley, Atty. Gen., and David Lee Weathers, Asst. Atty. Gen., for the State.
Appellant was put to trial in the Circuit Court of Montgomery County, Alabama, on a two-count indictment charging burglary and grand larceny. The jury returned a general verdict of guilty and he was sentenced to a term of five (5) years in the penitentiary.
Omitting the formal parts the indictment reads as follows:
The evidence is undisputed that the warehouse of Lee Appliance Company, Inc., a corporation, located at 1223 Bell Street, Montgomery, Alabama, was broken into shortly after midnight on June 26, 1971, and two Freidrich air conditioners were removed from the building. Entrance was gained through a broken glass door. Mr. Lee, the owner of Lee Appliance Company, testified that two such air conditioners were delivered to his warehouse shortly before the burglary and they were placed inside the warehouse in their original crates. When the plate glass door was broken, the burglar alarm was sounded and he was summoned to his warehouse and observed the broken glass door and upon entering, he immediately saw the two air conditioners, in their original crates, were missing. He saw one of them at the Montgomery Police Department around two-thirty or three o'clock A.M. on the day of the burglary. The crate had a tag attached to it giving the model number and the serial number of the unit and it was addressed to the Lee Appliance Company, Montgomery, Alabama, and showed the name of the shipper as Freidrich, Incorporated, San Antonio, Texas. He testified that the Lee Appliance Company was the only Lee company in Montgomery and he had the exclusive dealership for Freidrich air conditioners in this County. The shipping tag bore the Model Number SP85--11, the same number set forth in the indictment.
A few minutes before the burglar alarm sounded, a Mr. Thomas Jefferson Burnett, who lives at Number 7 Crenshaw Street, and from whose back door one has a clear view of the warehouse in question, testified that he observed two or three young white men pass in front of his house. These men had on black gloves and short shirts and their furtive looks and actions aroused his suspicions and he called and reported this to the police. A few minutes after making this call, he heard glass being broken and again called the Police Department. Detectives from the Department responded and saw the broken glass door and in surveying the immediate neighborhood, they discovered a large crate in the grass near the corner of a house. They set up a 'stake out'. In a few minutes they saw two individuals pick up the crate and start down Herron Street. The officers gave chase and the two men dropped the crate and fled the scene, but not before one of the detectives recognized appellant. The officers made a house to house search for appellant and his companion after obtaining permission of the occupants of said houses. There were some vacant houses, and the officers searched these houses also. The officer who knew and recognized appellant also knew that he had a room in the house which belonged to Mary Blow and was then and there occupied by her son, Homer Blow. Homer Blow gave the officers permission to thoroughly search the entire house pointing out to them the room in which appellant slept. Appellant could not be found. About an hour later the officers returned to the Blow house for another search and found appellant...
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