Wilkinson v. State
Decision Date | 20 June 1978 |
Docket Number | 6 Div. 681 |
Citation | 361 So.2d 400 |
Parties | Clois J. WILKINSON, alias v. STATE. |
Court | Alabama Court of Criminal Appeals |
Ralph C. Burroughs, Public Defender, Tuscaloosa, for appellant.
William J. Baxley, Atty. Gen., and James F. Hampton, Asst. Atty. Gen., for the State, appellee.
This is an appeal from a conviction of murder in the first degree and a sentence to imprisonment for life.
There is no disagreement between the parties on appeal as to the facts. Appellant's short statement of the facts is adopted by appellee. We deem it sufficient basis for our summary of the facts material to the issues on appeal.
Witnesses for the State, Mr. and Mrs. Roger Whatley, stepson and daughter-in-law of appellant, testified that they were in the Wilkinson Trading Post in Bucksville, Tuscaloosa County, Alabama, on the afternoon of January 26, 1977, when they heard a loud noise that they presumed to be a Coca Cola bottle exploding. Shortly thereafter, they saw Mrs. Wilkinson, the alleged victim of the homicide, at the door separating the store from the living quarters, and saw appellant, the alleged victim's husband, step to the door and shoot Mrs. Wilkinson. They said that when Roger Whatley first came to the trading post that day, he went straight to the back of the store into the living quarters. Roger testified that Mrs. Wilkinson told him he should not be there.
According to the testimony of appellant, Roger Whatley came to the trading post on the afternoon of January 26, 1977, and came back to the living quarters where appellant was seated and started complaining about appellant's not working and about his drinking. Appellant then asked Roger to leave and Roger said that he "would get a gun and see who would leave the premises." Mrs. Wilkinson also asked Roger to leave, stating that "he didn't have any business there and knew better than to be back there arguing." Mrs. Wilkinson then followed Roger into the store part of the premises. Appellant heard Roger threatening to kill him and shortly thereafter he heard his wife yell, "No, Roger," and then heard a shot come through the closed door into the living quarters. At that point, appellant fired back with a pistol he had in the living quarters, following which the door came partially open and he saw an outline of a person at the door. Appellant fired several shots and then immediately left because he feared that Roger had a loaded gun outside the door. According to testimony of witnesses for the State and appellant, appellant left the scene after the shooting in a green 1968 Buick LaSabre. He had a wreck in the LaSabre near the Green Pond-Woodstock area where some construction was being done on the road. He then hitchhiked back to the trading post where police had arrived and was there arrested.
The evidence shows conclusively that two bullets from the pistol fired by defendant penetrated vital regions of Mrs. Wilkinson's body and that one penetrated her heart and caused her death.
The major issue on appeal is as to the action of the trial court with reference to questions asked defendant on cross-examination as to what he had told prior to taking the stand as a witness. State's counsel had already conducted a lengthy cross-examination of defendant, in which defendant's testimony on direct examination had been substantially covered, when the following occurred:
Appellant relies largely upon the recent case of Houston v. State, Ala.Cr.App., 354 So.2d 825 (Ala.Cr.App.1977), cert. denied, 354 So.2d 825 (Ala.Cr.App.1977), in which it was held that the post-arrest silence of an accused could not be used to support an inference that his testimony on the trial is a later fabrication. In an exemplary opinion by Judge Bowen in Houston, it is stated:
Appellee expressly recognizes the soundness of the proposition clearly set forth in Houston but replies to appellant's argument for a reversal chiefly upon the following grounds:
We have some doubt whether the proposition so strongly advanced on appeal was sufficiently raised on the trial as to furnish a basis for reversible error, but as no such contention is made on appeal, we think that in the light of the overriding importance of the constitutional principle involved we should resolve that doubt in favor of the one whose constitutional right has been allegedly violated.
Houston v. State, supra, p. 828.
Not only do we feel that it cannot be declared beyond a reasonable doubt that the quoted cross-examination of defendant, with the approval of the court, was harmless, but we cannot say that we are reasonably satisfied that it was harmless. It seems to us that it was highly prejudicial for defendant to have been subjected to an open disclosure to the jury that he had theretofore relied upon his constitutional right to remain silent. Irrespective of the purpose of the State in evoking that disclosure, the only value to the State of the disclosure was in its supporting "an inference that his (defendant's) trial testimony is a later fabrication." Just as it was of value to the State it was correspondingly a detriment to defendant.
We appreciate the occasion for harmless error on the subject when "the exculpatory story is transparently...
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Richter v. State
...it is self-defeating to refuse to recognize error as harmless when it is. argument and not ruled it out of hand: Wilkinson v. State, Ala.Crim.App., 361 So.2d 400 (1978); State v. Davis, 119 Ariz. 529, 582 P.2d 175 (1978); People v. Schindler, 114 Cal.App.3d 178, 170 Cal.Rptr. 461 (1980); Pe......
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Williams v. State, 6 Div. 48
...issue has recently been treated in Wilkinson v. State, 374 So.2d 396 (Ala.Cr.App.), cert. denied, 374 So.2d 400 (1979); Wilkinson v. State, 361 So.2d 400 (Ala.Cr.App.), cert. denied, 361 So.2d 405 (1978); Usrey v. State, 54 Ala.App. 448, 309 So.2d 485, cert. denied, 293 Ala. 776, 309 So.2d ......
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Sims v. State, 7 Div. 712
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Wilkinson v. State
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