Nichols v. State

Decision Date13 November 1968
Docket NumberNo. 29,29
Citation247 A.2d 722,5 Md.App. 340
PartiesRobert William NICHOLS v. STATE of Maryland.
CourtCourt of Special Appeals of Maryland

[247 A.2d 724] Sidney Blum, and Eugene A. Alexander, III, Baltimore, for appellant.

William E. Brannan, Asst. Atty. Gen., with whom were Francis B. Burch, Atty. Gen., Baltimore, Samuel A. Green, Jr. and Clewell Howell, State's Atty. and Asst. State's Atty., Towson, for Baltimore County, respectively, on brief, for appellee.

Before MURPHY, C. J. and ANDERSON, MORTON, ORTH and THOMPSON, JJ.

ORTH, Judge.

This case comes to us on appeal from judgments entered by the Circuit Court for Baltimore County upon the convictions of Robert William Nichols by the court without a jury of assault upon Seymour Robert Goldstein (2nd count of indictment 32224), upon his wife, Ann Goldstein (2nd count of indictment 32226) and upon his children, Marc Goldstein (2nd count of indictment 32225) and Sheril Goldstein (2nd count of indictment 32227) and of the unlawful use of a telephone proscribed by Md.Code, (1967 Repl.Vol.), Art. 27, § 555A (4th count of indictment 32224). The appellant was sentenced to imprisonment for a term of 5 years on the conviction under the 2nd count of indictment 32224 and sentence on each of the

other convictions was suspended generally. The sole contention on appeal goes to the sufficiency of the evidence to sustain the convictions. 1 The appellant claims that the evidence was circumstantial and, therefore, in order to justify the verdicts of guilty it must not only meet the ordinary test of sufficiency but also the circumstances, taken together, must be inconsistent with, or such as to exclude, every reasonable hypothesis or theory of innocence. He asserts that the evidence, so tested, was insufficient
THE ASSAULT CONVICTIONS

The evidence adduced at the trial clearly proved the corpus delicti of each of the assault offenses. It showed that the Goldstein residence, occupied at the time by Mr. and Mrs. Goldstein and their two children, was fired upon about 4:00 A.M. on 30 October 1966. Goldstein testified:

'My home was shot up by a rifle, the bullet entering my child, Mark's room right above his bed; another bullet entering the side wall of the house above my baby's crib, Sheril, my daughter, and another bullet entered our bedroom wall, side wall, and lodged into the dresser right next to our bed.'

Photographs showing the rooms and the damage were received in evidence. Goldstein heard three shots. No one was seriously injured 'except for the plaster that fell on my daughter, and some of the glass was on my son, because the glass window came in all over him.' The trial judge said: 'There is one piece of incontrovertible evidence in this case, and that is at some time around 4:00 A.M. on the morning of October 30th, 1966, someone fired three bullets from some weapon into the home of Goldstein.' He also found as a fact, from the evidence, that Mr. and Mrs. Goldstein and their two children, as named in the indictment, were in the home at the time.

The question is, therefore, whether the evidence was sufficient to show the criminal agency of the appellant. The testimony of Goldstein was that he was an attorney and had represented the appellant's wife, Yvonne Nichols, at the time employed by him as a secretary, in a domestic relations matter 'for child support and divorce,' in 1965 and 1966. Around the end of August 1966 or the first part of September the appellant drove to Goldstein's office on a motorcycle, and told Goldstein that he should fire Mrs. Nichols, 'that I should tell her to run and take the children out of town because he was going to take the children from her, and that he was tired of fooling around with this, and he wasn't going to pay any more money for his children's support, that he was going to handle this matter himself if it didn't get rectified. He told me that if I didn't get out of this case and I didn't fire her, throw her out in the street, that he was going to get me, that he would pick me off with a rifle.' About 3:00 A.M. on 30 October 1966 a phone call was received in the Goldstein residence. Mrs. Goldstein answered the phone and referred the call to her husband. Goldstein recounted the conversation:

'As I took the phone, he said, 'This is sweet Bobby,' and I recognized his voice immediately, and I said, 'I don't know any sweet Bobby. Who do you mean sweet Bobby?' He said, 'You know who I mean. This is sweet Bobby.' I said, 'I don't know who you are.' He said, 'This is Vonnie's husband, Robert Nichols and I am going to tell you something. You either fire her and get out of this case or I am going to get you. I am getting tired of fooling around with this thing in court. I am going to pick you off with a high-powered rifle. I haven't had an opportunity because I work on the state roads on the Eastern Shore and during the summer I am down there. I can't get up here much but during the winter I can get up here, and it's going to be a long winter.' And I told him, 'Look, you have an attorney, you discuss these things with him. I don't want to hear this at my home at 3:00 o'clock in the morning,' and then he got abusive and he hung up.'

He identified the appellant as the caller. 'I have heard his voice numerous times in court. He has called my office and I have spoken to him on the phone there.' See McGuire v. State, 200 Md. 601, 92 A.2d 582; Lenoir v. State, 197 Md. 495, 80 A.2d 3. Goldstein called the police, Officer C. Mathis responded to the call, and Goldstein reported the incident to him. About one hour later the home was fired upon. Goldstein heard 'a roar of a motor which was very similar to either a soupedup automobile or a motorcycle, but a very loud muffler outside pulling away, very similar to a cut-out muffler or sports car type of an automobile.' This incident was reported to the police and officer Mathis returned about 4:40 A.M. to investigate the shooting.

The appellant's wife testified that in June or July 1966 about 2:00 or 3:00 o'clock in the morning she received a phone call from her husband. She was separated from him at the time and in the process of obtaining a divorce. 'When Bobby called me, he told me that-at first there was idle conversation, and he told me later that to tell Mr. Goldstein to fire me, and I asked him why he said that, and he just said, 'Just tell him to fire you.' He said that he knew where he lived, and I said, 'Well, what does that have to do with it?' and he said, 'I can sit on any hill out there and pick him off with a rifle any time I want to."

Mrs. Alma T. Lane, the mother-in-law of the appellant, testified that 'a couple of weeks' after the shooting she was in a cocktail lounge at which she was to meet her husband when the appellant came in. She told him she was surprised that he was out of jail and he laughed and said, 'Well can't keep me in jail long.' They 'got to talking about my daughter and the children.' 'I said I was worried about my daughter and grandchildren, their safety, and he said, 'You never have to worry about Bobby and the children, I wouldn't hurt them, but that bastard, Goldstein, I am not finished with him yet. I am still going to get him.' I said, 'Bobby, why don't you leave the man alone, he has never hurt you?' He said, 'Well, you just don't worry about it. You leave it to me.' So we discussed a few more things, and that was it.'

Evidence was offered by the appellant. His father testified that the appellant had come home from the Eastern Shore about 10:00 or 11:00 P.M. on 29 October and left about 11:30 P.M. He did not see him again until the next evening. His son owned a motorcycle but did not take it out that night. The motorcycle was kept in a garage under the house and was still there the following day. He did not like motorcycles, was very conscious of the noise they make and he would have known had his son taken it out. He did not know of any rifle owned by his son although he had 'a single bolt shotgun.' Gloria Lenick testified that she was a barmaid at 'Denny's' on Eastern Avenue and saw the appellant about midnight on 29 October. He met a girl named Kitty and drank with her until closing time at 2:00 A.M. 'He was plastered, he was actually stupid drunk. * * * he wasn't able to walk.' A cab was called-'at 2:00 o'clock, we usually try to get them out as fast as we can, and if they are not able to drive, if we see they are not able to drive, we call a cab, and somebody else in the bar called a cab, and we waited for the cab to come.' Kitty and some other person helped him out to the cab. On question by the court it appeared that she was not sure that she had seen the appellant on a Friday or Saturday night but it was 'on the weekend.'

Kitty, Patricia Ann Lyons, testified that she had known the appellant 'around two years.' She met him at Denny's about midnight on 29 October. 'We stayed there and danced, and drank, and we talked to a few people, and when they closed we got a cab and went home. * * * when we left there, he was pretty drunk.' It was a new Eastern cab. They went to her apartment arriving 'around 2:30, quarter to 3:00. I am not too sure.' She put him on a couch and he went to sleep. She fixed herself some breakfast, read the paper and went to bed about 4:00 A.M. The next morning the appellant was still on the couch when she woke him up about 11:00 A.M. He did not use the phone during the time he was there and if he had left the apartment she would have known it because her dog would have barked. It was later brought out that she was pregnant at the time and that she could not say for sure that the appellant was the father of the child but he could have been.

An automobile mechanic testified that an automobile belonging to the appellant was in his garage in October 1966 and that the appellant had not gotten it until after noon on 30 October. The car did not have any unusual mufflers.

The...

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