DocketNumber: No. A-12326
Judges: Powell, Jones, Brett
Filed Date: 9/26/1956
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/13/2024
Herein the appellant, Roy Everette Barlow, was convicted in the county court of Osage county of the offense" of operating a motor vehicle upon a public highway while under the influence of intoxicating liquor, was by the jury found guilty and his punishment fixed at ten days confinement in the county jail, and a fine of $10, with his license revoked for twelve months. One juror refused to sign the verdict.
From the history recited it is apparent that the jury experienced great difficuity in arriving at a verdict. ■ The arrest was made outside the city limits of Barnsdall, by a city policeman, who had followed a Ford pickup out of town by reason of the racing of the motor. He apparently ar
. The- accused testified, denied having drunk any. beer or liquor, denied being intoxicated,. said .that he did have trouble with his pickup on account of. loose and worn spindle bolts, which he subsequently had to have replaced. He had‘been working in the oil fields many years as a pumper, and had worked at two leases near Barnsdall for four years and had earlier visited the leases, oiled the equipment and had started back home when arrested. He produced as á witness the automobile mechanic, Sam J, Lewis, the man whom the officer had gotten to drive his pickup back to town the night of the arrest.
Mr. Lewis denied volunteering to drive the car in, but said that the town policeman ordered him to do so. He denied that he sat in the back seat of the car, but said that he hung on to the outside of the officer’s car. He denied smelling alcohol on defendant, and said that he did not think defendant was intoxicated. His answers to this part of the questioning were more or less hesitatingly 'given, however.
Two other witnesses testified for the defendant, but they did . not -know much about the facts in the case.. One Notley testified to having driven defendant’s pickup near the time of. his arrest, and stated that the spindle bolts were defective. Also Mr. Lewis said that he had difficulty driving the pickup back to Barnsdall the night of defendant’s arrest, bn account of the worn spindles, although officer Mehagan did not observe it, and did not hear the engine race as Lewis started it.
The deciding factor in this case, it would occur to us, and a matter assigned as error, was the persistent cross-examination of the defendant by' the county attorney, but we do not'find the cross-examination to have constituted error. Defendant had said that he had no prior convictions. He was positive in his answer; there was no equivocation. However, the county attorney asked him on cross-examination if he had “plead, guilty” to a charge like the present one,, and defendant .hesitatingly admitted that years ago he had, but he could not remember about it. Seemingly defendant thought there was - á material difference between “pleading gpilty,” and being - found guilty by a 'court or jury.- Defendant was fur
From the above, while we find a sharp conflict in the evidence, there was competent evidence that defendant was to some degree under the influence of intoxicating liquor at the time of his arrest. There was also evidence that he was not intoxicated. Apparently the defendant’s credibility in the eyes of the jury was weakened in view • of the developments on cross-examination. His counsel had done a good job trying the case, but further results would be in the realm of a miracle. Bohot v. State, 89 Okl.Cr. 238, 206 P.2d 585; Pebworth v. State, 88 Okl. Cr. 97, 199 P.2d 621. See Tom v. State, 95 Okl.Cr. 60, 64, 239 P.2d 812, for a dissertation on “Chemical tests for alcoholic intoxication.”
Complaint is made as to instruction No. 7 given by the court. However, no objection or exception was made or reserved to any of the instructions at the time they were given. Chapman v. State, 84 Okl.Cr. 41, 178 P.2d 638. It was too late, after motion for new trial which contained no reference to instruction No. 7, to interpose the objection at that late time and now urged. We have further noted that instruction No. 7, criticized in this case by counsel for the defendant, is the instruction approved by this court in Luellen v. State, 64 Okl.Cr. 382, 81 P.2d 323, and appearing as paragraph 3 of the syllabus by the court.
For the reasons given, the judgment appealed from must, be and is affirmed.