Mankin v. State, 42382
Decision Date | 21 January 1970 |
Docket Number | No. 42382,42382 |
Citation | 451 S.W.2d 236 |
Parties | Victor Birch MANKIN, Jr., Appellant, v. The STATE of Texas, Appellee. |
Court | Texas Court of Criminal Appeals |
Paul Donald, Bowie, Sewell & Forbis, Decatur, for appellant.
Marvin, F. London, County Atty., Montague, and Jim D. Vollers, State's Atty. Austin, for the State.
The offense is robbery with firearms; the punishment, 25 years.
Trial was before a jury on a plea of not guilty. The state did not seek the death penalty. Upon election of the defendant, the jury assessed the punishment.
Eight grounds of error are set forth in appellant's brief, one of which (Ground No. 7) complains that the evidence is insufficient to sustain the conviction.
The record reflects that James Hudson was night operator of the Handy Grocery in Bowie, Montague County. About 10 P.M. on the night of December 4, 1968, Ronnie Hogue and appellant entered the store. After standing over by the rack on which record albums were displayed talking among themselves, appellant came to the counter where Hudson was waiting on customers and said he wanted a transistor battery for his radio. Hudson asked him what size and appellant said he would have to go to the car and see, and he went outside. He came back into the store and returned to the record rack where Ronnie Hogue was, and 'they went back to talking.'
As the customers Hudson had been talking to were going out the front door, Hudson was 'jabbed in the back' by an army .45 pistol in the hand of Ronnie Hogue who said: 'This is a stick-up, and we would just as soon to kill you as to look at you.' Appellant, who was standing next to Hogue, said
The complainant Hudson told them they could have the money, got the money sack and took the money out of both cash registers and put the money and 'a bunch of those album records that we sell at the store,' which they had brought from the record rack to the counter, in the money sack for them.
Hudson was then required to go in the back room and to lie down on the floor on his stomach and put his hands behind him. His hands and feet were wrapped with adhesive tape and tape was put across his mouth and he was beaten about the head and seriously injured.
He testified that after the first lick he did not remember anything for ten days and when he regained consciousness he was in a hospital in Wichita Falls, where he remained nearly three weeks. He was then returned to the hospital in Bowie where he remained nearly four weeks.
About 9 o'clock on the morning after the robbery, officers in Joplin, Missouri, stopped appellant's 1957 Chevrolet Sedan being driven by appellant, in which Ronnie Hogue was one of the occupants.
Officer Bob Clifton stopped the car. Officer Paul Bowlby was in his vehicle directly behind Officer Clifton when the stop was made.
Officer Bowlby testified that he was at all times within hearing distance and clear vision of Officer Clifton and the occupants of the car; that he saw Officer Clifton walk up to the left front of the car and talk to appellant who was driving. Officer Clifton had appellant get out and Bowlby heard them talking about 'the registration to the car, the title, and the driver's license.' He further testified that later all of the occupants of the car were placed under arrest and
'MR. SEWELL: You know that man's name, don't you?
'A. .45 automatic.
Appellant was positively identified and Hogue was identified by photographs as the robbers and as the driver and occupants of appellant's automobile stopped the next morning in Joplin, Missouri. The wristwatch Hogue was wearing and which was taken from his wrist after his death, was identified as belonging to the complainant and taken from him in the robbery.
A search of appellant's automobile made after Officer Clifton was shot and killed by Hogue, revealed money scattered over the floor and record albums such as were placed in the money sack by the complainant. The total amount of money found in the possession of the occupants and in appellant's car approached the total amount missing from the cash registers after the robbery.
We find the evidence sufficient to sustain the conviction of appellant as a principal in the robbery.
Ground of error No. 1 complains that the court erred in admitting the testimony of Officer Bowlby as to the killing of Police Officer Clifton, in Joplin, Missouri, by Ronnie Hogue the day after the robbery.
Evidence of flight and resistance to arrest of the co-actors in the robbery res gestae of the arrest in Joplin, Missouri, was admissible. Johnson v. State, 156 Tex.Cr.R. 534, 244 S.W.2d 235. Appellant knew that Hogue was armed with a pistol and gave no warning to the officer. Had he done so, the killing of both Officer Clifton and his co-principal Hogue could have been avoided. Had Hogue succeeded in slaying both of the Joplin Police Officers, the flight of the two robbers would not have ended when it did.
Ground of error No. 2 complains that the court erred in admitting, over appellant's objection, the fruits of the search of appellant and of his automobile, which evidence should have been excluded because produced by an illegal search.
The record reflects that neither appellant nor the automobile was...
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