Biggs v. State
Decision Date | 31 May 1983 |
Docket Number | 1 Div. 325 |
Citation | 441 So.2d 989 |
Parties | George Michael BIGGS v. STATE. |
Court | Alabama Court of Criminal Appeals |
James E. Atchison of Hess, Atchison & Horne, Mobile, for appellant.
Charles A. Graddick, Atty. Gen., and Jane LeCroy Brannan, Asst. Atty. Gen., for appellee.
The appellant was convicted of murder and sentenced to twenty-five years' imprisonment for the killing of his wife. The State's evidence established that on August 21, 1980, Patricia Lynn Biggs died of three .38 caliber gunshot wounds inflicted by her husband.
Appellant testified that he and the deceased were married in 1965, divorced in the summer of 1969, and remarried to each other in the fall of 1969. Since then, they had separated and reconciled on many occasions. Each separation was at his wife's insistence. In April 1980, appellant's wife informed him that she wanted a divorce and asked him to move out. Appellant left, but shortly thereafter the parties reconciled when appellant's wife asked him to come home.
On August 18, 1980, the deceased once more told her husband that she had decided on a divorce, but the parties did not discuss the matter. Appellant testified that he searched for his wife for two days in an attempt to talk with her about their marital difficulties, but he was unable to find her. Then, on the afternoon of August 21, after Mrs. Biggs had come home from work, appellant walked into the bedroom where his wife was lying face down on the bed. He began to caress her by playing with her earrings and rubbing her legs. She turned over and asked him if he had thought any more about leaving. As she flipped over, her earring caught on appellant's finger. She then threw the other earring at her husband, told him she had made a mistake in asking him to come home and stated that she did not love him and admitted that she had had an affair with another man and had lied about other affairs in the past.
Appellant said that his wife began to kick, scratch, and swing her fists at him. He attempted to hold her away but she kept moving toward him. In the scuffle, a pistol kept in the chest of drawers toppled onto a pile of clothes. Appellant testified that the next thing he remembered was firing three shots in rapid succession at his wife. He then called the police department.
The trial judge charged the jury on the elements of self-defense, and on the lesser-included offense of manslaughter, defined in § 13A-6-3, Code of Alabama 1975, as follows:
Appellant excepted to those portions of the court's oral charge explaining "provocation recognized by law." He claims that his wife's confession of adultery, taken together with her statements that she no longer loved him and wanted him to move out, were sufficient to engender in him a sudden heat of passion which reduced the killing from murder to manslaughter.
Appellant contends that the following parts of the court's charge erroneously instructed the jury that they could not consider the content of the deceased's statements to her husband just prior to the shooting in order to determine whether appellant was provoked to a heat of passion killing:
After the jury had deliberated nearly two hours, they knocked and, in open court with all parties present, the foreman asked the following question:
The trial court then re-instructed the jury, in substantially the same words it used during the main charge, on the elements of manslaughter. Appellant again excepted to the court's explanation of legal provocation.
This case presents us with the question, never squarely answered in this state, whether a wife's confession of unfaithfulness (as opposed to her husband's actually finding her in the act of adultery) constitutes legally adequate provocation so as to reduce her killing by the husband from murder to manslaughter.
Although it is firmly established in Alabama that if one party finds his or her spouse in the act of adultery, the subsequent killing of either the offending spouse or the paramour is deemed, as a matter of law, to be caused by sufficient provocation. Hooks v. State, 99 Ala. 166, 13 So. 767 (1893). No reported Alabama case has been decided on the basis that a spouse's admission of infidelity may also constitute adequate provocation for a "heat of passion" killing. See Farr v. State, 54 Ala.App. 80, 304 So.2d 898, McNeill v. State, 102 Ala. 121, 15 So. 352.
To constitute adequate legal provocation, it must be of a nature calculated to influence the passions of the ordinary, reasonable man. Other than discovered adultery, courts have reached different conclusions as to what factual situations are embraced within this doctrine. See Commentary, § 13A-6-3, Code of Alabama 1975. See also Annot., 93 A.L.R.3d 920 (1979).
The well established rule in Alabama is that mere words, no matter how insulting or abusive, cannot reduce a killing to manslaughter. Watson v. State, 82 Ala. 10, 2 So. 455 (1886). Appellant argues, however, that his wife's admission of past adulterous affairs, along with other degrading statements, constituted sufficient provocation to support a manslaughter verdict. Some other jurisdictions which follow the traditional rule that offensive statements are insufficient as a matter of law to support a finding of manslaughter do recognize that words conveying information may be sufficient provocation. People v. Rice, 351 Ill. 604, 184 N.E. 894 (1933); ...
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