Wood v. State
Decision Date | 29 June 1982 |
Docket Number | 8 Div. 619 |
Citation | 416 So.2d 794 |
Parties | Terry Evans WOOD, alias v. STATE. |
Court | Alabama Court of Criminal Appeals |
Macon L. Weaver, Huntsville, for appellant.
Charles A. Graddick, Atty. Gen., and J. Anthony McLain and James F. Hampton, Sp. Asst. Attys. Gen., for appellee.
The appellant was indicted for the capital offense of robbery when the victim is intentionally killed in violation of Ala.Code § 13-11-2(a)(2) (1975). In accordance with the principles stated in Beck v. State, 396 So.2d 645 (Ala.1980), the jury found him guilty of first degree murder and fixed his punishment at life imprisonment in the state penitentiary.
The state's evidence revealed that the deceased, James Crawford Delones, a deputy sheriff with the Dickson County Sheriff's Department in Tennessee, left Dickson on July 10, 1979, headed for Decatur, Alabama, in his father's 1977 Plymouth Volare automobile. His father had also given him approximately forty or fifty dollars to take with him. The purpose of the trip to Decatur was to collect on a bad check. The deceased was off duty at the time and was not in uniform, but he did have two weapons with him, a nickel-plated .38 Colt Special and a nickel-plated .38 Derringer Special.
Steve Sanderson, while spraying a cotton field in the Harvest community in Madison County on July 14, discovered the deceased's body tied to a tree with a shoestring and a jumper cable. The tree was approximately one hundred yards off a dirt road leading into the cotton field.
The deceased's wallet was found in his pants pocket, complete with his I.D. and his deputy sheriff's badge, but the wallet contained no money. No weapons were discovered on the deceased or in the general vicinity. An autopsy revealed that the deceased's cause of death was a gunshot wound to the back of his head.
William H. Lee testified that at approximately 8:00 p. m. on July 10, while he was working at the Main Street Liquor Store in Nashville, Tennessee, he saw an automobile drive through the liquor store parking lot at a high rate of speed. The automobile "almost hit two people on the way driving in." The automobile matched the description of the Plymouth Volare the deceased had been driving, including a partial Tennessee license plate number Lee remembered. The driver of the car was a white male.
A few minutes later the same automobile came back through the parking lot, parked in front of the store and the white male came inside the store for a few minutes. Lee described the white male as having a small build, around five feet six inches tall, with brownish long hair. "He wore a thin mustache and was wearing a T-shirt, a tank top, some jeans and had some type of tattoo on his right shoulder." Lee further testified that the driver of the automobile who came inside the liquor store looked like the appellant. "I am positive enough that I think that's the same person."
Patrolman Charles Edwin Smith, Jr. of the Nashville Police Department testified that about 8:10 p. m. on July 10, he and his partner, James Powell Griffin, observed the Plymouth Volare which the deceased had been driving to Decatur, travel through a traffic light at a high rate of speed. Patrolman Smith stopped the vehicle near the police department.
"I was watching the driver of the vehicle and he was looking in his rearview mirror back at me, as I was watching him and my partner got out and came between the two cars to issue a citation for the offense and the subject driving the car saw him and took off and left us more or less standing flat-footed."
Smith described the driver of the automobile as "a slim male, white, in his twenties, shoulder length brown hair, and a thin mustache."
A high speed chase ensued through downtown Nashville until the driver of the Volare lost control of the automobile and hit a fence. Smith testified that when he and his partner reached the vehicle the driver ran into the bushes and woods next to the railroad tracks. "He never did slow down." Smith and his partner "never could turn him up anywhere." Smith later discovered the deceased's .38 Derringer under the seat of the Volare along with a denim jacket and other items.
Roger Morrison of the Department of Forensic Sciences made a laboratory comparison of certain blood stains found on the denim jacket with a known sample of appellant's blood. Morrison determined that the appellant's blood type was consistent with blood found on the jacket.
Ms. Sandy Proffitt of Tompkinsville, Kentucky, testified that she had a conversation with appellant in Kentucky in July of 1979. Karen Jones was also present during the conversation. Appellant told Ms. Proffitt and Ms. Jones that he had killed a deputy sheriff from Alabama. According to Ms. Proffitt:
"He said that he killed him in Tennessee and he brought him all the way to Alabama when he was dead and then he tied him to a tree and then he said he shot him behind the ear and in the leg again.
....
Richard Roscoe Ledford, III of Gallatin, Tennessee, testified that in July of 1979 he was employed with the Sumner County Rabies Control Center as a truckdriver for the dog pound, and that he also had a night job as an assistant manager at the Sonic Drive-in Restaurant in Gallatin. Ledford stated that he first met the appellant on July 11, 1979, around 8:00 p. m. at the Sonic Restaurant. Mary Shaddix, a waitress at the restaurant, was appellant's girlfriend. Ledford recalled that appellant had scratches "all over" his arms and "some on his chest." Appellant also had a tatoo with the name "Debbie" on his right arm.
Appellant remained at the restaurant until closing time, around eleven o'clock. At that time Ledford drove appellant and Ms. Shaddix to Ms. Shaddix's trailer at the Cozy Living Trailer Park in Gallatin. Inside the trailer, while everyone was "getting acquainted" over a six pack of beer, appellant exhibited the deceased's nickel-plated .38 caliber pistol to Ledford. Appellant had the pistol tied to his ankle with a shoelace. Ledford stated that he talked with appellant about the gun. "I asked him if he would like to sell it ... and he told me that he would just give it to me ... [because] it was hot ...." Appellant first explained to Ledford that "a friend of his" had held up a store with the pistol. Appellant later told another story that he and "his friend" robbed a store and in the process "his friend shot a guy in the back." Ledford offered to pay for the gun at a later time and took the gun home with him that night.
Before Ledford left the trailer that night, appellant asked Ms. Shaddix to wipe the scratches on his arms with alcohol. Appellant told Ledford the following regarding the scratches:
"[H]e told me that he had stolen a car and had a car wreck [in Nashville] when the police chased him through three red lights and that he hit a fence row and the fence got him tied up where the car couldn't move and so he got out and started running through the bushes and that scratched him all up."
Ledford saw appellant the next afternoon at the Sonic Restaurant. Appellant expressed his desire to obtain a job and Ledford offered to take appellant with him the next day on his truck route for the Rabies Control Center to "see if he would like a job like that."
Ledford picked appellant up the next morning, July 13, at the Cozy Living Trailer Park and took him to breakfast before beginning the truck route. The following exchange then occurred during breakfast:
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