Woods v. State, 1 Div. 16
Citation | 485 So.2d 1243 |
Decision Date | 25 February 1986 |
Docket Number | 1 Div. 16 |
Parties | George WOODS v. STATE. |
Court | Alabama Court of Criminal Appeals |
Paul D. Brown, Mobile, for appellant.
Charles A. Graddick, Atty. Gen. and M. Beth Slate, Asst. Atty. Gen., for appellee.
George Woods was indicted for murder in violation of § 13A-6-2, Code of Alabama 1975. The jury found the appellant guilty of the lesser included offense of manslaughter. He received a ten-year sentence, split to time served and the balance suspended.
Around noon on August 19, 1984, Larry Walker was sitting in his car which was parked in front of his house on Magee Street in Prichard. Walker noticed the appellant and Samuel Green, the victim in this case, sitting on the porch of the house across the street. Walker heard the two men arguing about the last drink from a bottle of liquor.
The bottle of liquor was next to the victim and the appellant grabbed it and the two men began fighting in the yard. At some point, the appellant opened a pocket knife and then closed it. The appellant then began hitting the victim in the face and beating him. After the victim had been knocked to the ground, the appellant began kicking and stomping the victim in the chest. Then the appellant kicked the victim in the head several times.
Walker got out of his car at this point and told the appellant to leave the victim alone, which he did. Walker went over to the victim and found him unconscious. He moved the victim to a shaded area and wiped the blood off the victim's face.
Josephine Hines testified that she, the appellant, the victim and Eddie Lee Jones were sitting on Jones' porch drinking on the morning in question. At one point, the appellant and the victim began arguing over some whiskey. The appellant tried to take the whiskey from the victim and the two began scuffling.
Hines went inside at this time and looked out the window. She saw the appellant hit the victim twice and saw the victim fall backwards to the ground. After the paramedics arrived, Hines saw blood on the victim. However, she was not outside prior to their arrival.
Soon after the police were called, the appellant gave Hines his knife. Hines gave the knife to the police.
George Griggs was also at Jones' house on the morning of August 19. He saw some grabbing between the two men but couldn't see much else because he is almost blind. Griggs testified that the victim wasn't bleeding until the paramedics dropped an oxygen tank on his head.
Eddie Lee Jones also testified that the victim was not bleeding until the paramedics arrived.
Willie Pearl Pritchett testified that she saw the paramedics drop an oxygen tank on the victim's head while they were attending him.
Officer Willie Flott, of the Prichard Police Department, stated that he arrived at the scene at the same time as the paramedics. The victim was lying on the ground. He was breathing hard and bleeding from the right side of the head. Flott did not see the oxygen tank fall.
Norman Raley, a firefighter, arrived with the paramedics. He said that an oxygen tank, which was sitting next to the victim, fell over onto the sidewalk at some point. He did not know if the oxygen tank hit the victim. Raley did notice some bleeding from the victim before the tank fell over.
Ronald Joseph Newman, Sr., the paramedic, basically testified as to the same facts as did Raley.
Dr. Johnathan Bard Millman performed the autopsy on the victim. The victim suffered a subdural hematoma which was the result of blunt force injury to the head. The victim survived six days on a respirator following this incident before he was declared brain dead.
Dr. Leroy Riddick reviewed the autopsy performed by Millman. He stated that an alcoholic would be more prone to suffer a subdural hematoma than would the average person. He stated less trauma would be required to induce a subdural hematoma in an alcoholic person.
The appellant stated that he and the victim began tussling over some whiskey on the morning in question. At some point, the victim hit him. The appellant "slapped" the victim and he fell to the ground. The appellant then sat down on the porch. He denied stomping or kicking the victim. Although the appellant stated he intended to hit the victim, he testified that he did not intend to hurt him.
I
The only issue raised on appeal concerns the trial court's failure to charge the jury on criminally negligent homicide.
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...acts with criminal negligence when he fails to perceive a substantial and unjustifiable risk that the result will occur. Woods v. State, 485 So.2d 1243 (Ala.Cr.App.1986); §§ 13A-2-2(4) and -6-4(a). There is obviously no evidence to support a reasonable theory of criminally negligent homicid......
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