State v. Roby

Decision Date10 March 1971
Docket NumberNo. 39434,39434
Citation246 So.2d 566
PartiesSTATE of Florida, Petitioner, v. Arthur Lee ROBY, Respondent.
CourtFlorida Supreme Court

Robert L. Shevin, Atty. Gen., and Michael n. Kavouklis, Asst. Atty. Gen., for petitioner.

John W. Boult, of Fowler, White, Gillen, Hunkey & Kinney, Tampa, for respondent.

HODGES, Circuit Judge.

The decision in the case of Roby v. State of Florida, 229 So.2d, 604, is reviewed here on certiorari to the Second District Court of Appeal, pursuant to Article V, Section 4, of the Florida Constitution, F.S.A., and Rule 4.5(c) of the Florida Appellate Rules, 32 F.S.A.

The respondent, Arthur Lee Roby, and two other defendants, William Henry Johnson, Jr., and Ernest Williams, were jointly charged with the substantive crime of 1st degree murder of one Frank Cutler, deceased, the indictment alleging in the usual language that the three defendants unlawfully effected the death of the victim by shooting him with a pistol.

At the conclusion of a trial lasting five days, the jury acquitted the defendant Johnson, but returned verdicts of guilty of murder in the 2nd degree against the defendant, Ernest Williams, and the respondent, Arthur Lee Roby. After entry of judgment of conviction, both defendants were sentenced by the trial court to be confined at hard labor for twenty years.

The trial court's judgment of conviction of the respondent Roby was reversed on appeal by the District Court's cited opinion, which certiorari lays open to legal scrutiny to determine whether or not it conflicts with decisive law as enunciated in reported opinions of the Supreme Court or other District Courts of Appeal.

From the Court's review of the entire record in the case, permitted in such proceedings, James v. Keene, Fla., 133 So.2d 297, we believe that the facts, as stated in the decision which is the subject of our judicial inquiry, perhaps sufficiently present the legal issues upon which our conclusions hinge. However, for reference accommodation and immediate perspective relief of the legal questions presented, we shall briefly restate the pertinent facts as we have gleaned them from the extremely lengthy transcript of evidence, much of which was understandably befuddled and confused because of the nature of the melee out of which the killing took place and which was made more nebulous because the actions of those involved in the tumult were so rash, precipitative and intermingled and their sequence of such rapidity that it is impossible to completely separate and narrate them as to exact time or location in the barroom.

The evidence does reveal that in Tampa, Florida, at 1024 Central Avenue, there was located a drinking establishment known as the Pyramid Lounge, comprised of a rectangular room running east and west of about 20 75 and divided into an east side area, containing about nine tables with chairs, known as the 'Ace Lounge', and a west side portion, where a semi-circular bar and stools were situate, called the 'Pyramid Bar'. Back to back open booths ran the entire length of the room on the north side.

On the evening of February 4, 1968, somewhere near 11:30 P.M., the three named defendants and one Robbie Marva Robinson, who had entered the spot with them at about 9:30 P.M., were in the 'Pyramid Bar' area of the establishment seated at a booth.

The place was crowded with patrons and noisy.

One James L. Hogan, 19, came into the room with one Margaret Hunt and a person named Romae Lee Rucker, and this trio had gone to the 'Ace Lounge' portion of the premises near the bar. An argument ensued between Hogan and the said Robbie Robinson, who had come over to the vicinity of Hogan and his companions and accused Hogan of referring to her as a member of the demimonde, but not in those exact words. The defendant, William Henry Johnson, Jr., following Robinson, loudly reaffirmed the accusation against Hogan and attempted to hit Hogan but the blow was deflected by Rucker. At this point the decedent, Frank Cutler, interjected himself into the argument and for a fleeting moment, at least, restrained Johnson and Hogan from becoming unalterably involved in that altercation by taking Hogan with him toward the eastern portion of the 'Pyramid Bar'.

The smoldering residuals of this noisy wrangle swiftly drifted to that part of the establishment now occupied by Hogan and Cutler and broke out into a new fiery fracas between Johnson and Hogan, as the former angrily and persistently voiced his resentment to the alleged slur on Robbie Robinson, whom he claimed to be his sister. This confrontation became the incipient cause of the tragedy in this case as the respondent Roby and the doomed Cutler, again interceding for his close friend Hogan, almost immediately became antagonistic participants in a violent dispute which deteriorated at once into physical combat, it not being clear who struck the first blow.

The final struggle carried the combatants a short distance toward the rear of the barroom to a point a few feet farther east of the bar. The defendant Williams followed in close pursuit and William Henry Johnson, Jr., also maneuvered in toward the center of the fury.

After stating at one point to Cutler that he would kill him, the respondent Roby began firing his .25 caliber pistol at Cutler at the same time that codefendant Williams was shooting at the victim with his .22 caliber pistol. There was testimony that the defendant Johnson also discharged his .22 caliber pistol in the direction at Cutler.

Cutler slumped and fell mortally wounded with two slugs in his abdomen, after stating, according to witnesses, 'It doesn't make sense', his terminal utterance on earth. Some witnesses, including Roby, stated that Cutler held a chair raised over his head in a threatening manner when, or shortly before, the pistols began to bark, and testimony was also admitted that he was a mean and dangerous man, having once broken a man's back by kicking him in a fight in front of the Pyramid Lounge.

A rather enthusiastic general exodus from the building followed the shooting. Near the lead of the evacuation was a group composed of the three armed defendants and the one whose remonstrance at indignity had lighted the explosion fuse to begin with, Robbie Robinson. She had been in the rest room at the time of the actual shooting, but said at the trial in describing her withdrawal with the defendants: 'We all run automatically together.' She further testified at the trial as follows:

'Well, Roby wanted to keep saying that he had shot the boy, and they wanted to keep telling him not to say that until he found out what was going on, and they say with all that shooting in there any one of them could have done it.'

And she reiterated later, upon questioning, that both Johnson and Williams had said that any one of the three defendants could have shot Cutler.

When cross-examined at the trial, respondent Roby said:

'I told Robbie Robinson I thought I had shot at him. I shot a boy in the bar.'

Immediately thereafter and at all times since, he has been emphatic in stating that he shot 'at' the deceased rather than that he shot him in fact. No witness testified that a projectile from Royby's weapon hit Cutler.

The autopsy report revealed that two slugs were found in the victim's body and a pathologist testified that the cause of death was the combined effect of two gunshot wounds in the abdomen.

Only one .22 caliber slug was placed in evidence. Another slug of disputed caliber was allegedly taken from Cutler's body but this slug and testimony relating to it were not admitted.

At the conclusion of the testimony, the trial court refused to submit to the jury, orally or in written form, the following instruction requested by the State and to which the respondent objected:

'When two or more persons combine together to commit an unlawful act, each is criminally responsible for the acts of his associates committed in furtherance or prosecution of the common design; and if two or more persons combine to do an unlawful act, and in the prosecution of the common object; an unlawful homicide results, all are alike criminally responsible for the probable consequences that may arise from the perpetration of the unlawful act they set out to accomplish; the immediate injury from which death ensues is considered as proceeding from all who are present aiding and abetting the injury done, and the actual perpetrator is considered as the agent of his associates. His act is theirs as well as his own and all are equally guilty.'

The trial court, counsel for the State and defense counsel had engaged in some discussion relative to a 'conspiracy charge', but obviously the Court was referring to the quoted aiding and abetting charge which was declined.

The District Court of Appeal concluded, in a divisive opinion of two to one, that the evidence was inadequate to support a valid finding on the substantive charge that the respondent Roby caused the death of the deceased. It also held that the failure of the trial court to instruct the jury as to provisions of Section 776.011, Florida Statutes, F.S.A., which makes a person a principal in the first degree whether he actually...

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