Abby v. State

114 P.2d 499, 72 Okla. Crim. 208
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma
DecidedJune 11, 1941
DocketNo. A-9817.
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 114 P.2d 499 (Abby v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Abby v. State, 114 P.2d 499, 72 Okla. Crim. 208 (Okla. Ct. App. 1941).

Opinions

BAREFOOT, P. J.

Defendant Warren Abby was charged in the district court of Custer county with the icrime of murder, was tried, convicted and sentenced to be executed, and has appealed.

For reversal of this case it is contended:

First. The court erred in denying the application for a change of venue.

Second. The court erred in overruling plaintiff in error’s motion for a continuance.

Third. The court erred in permitting the introduction of incompetent evidence by the state.

Fourth. The court erred in the instructions to the jury in failing to state the law on the defense interposed and on which evidence was offered.

Fifth. The county attorney was guilty of misconduct in the introduction of incompetent evidence on cross-examination and in his argument to the jury.

*211 Sixth. The verdict of the jury was the result of ■passion and prejudice.

Before reviewing the alleged errors we deem it advisable to give a short, concise statement of the facts as they appear from the 817-page record.

Defendant, Warren Abby, was charged with murdering his wife, Julia Abby, in Custer county, Okla., on the 6th day of October, 1939. A preliminary complaint was filed in the county court of Custer county on the 7th day of October, 1939. An information was filed in the district court on the 11th day of October, 1939, and the defendant was arraigned on the 17th day of October, 1939, and the plea of not guilty entered and the issues settled at that time. The trial was commenced on the 11th day of December, 1939.

The defendant and deceased were residents of the State of Louisiana and were traveling by automobile through Oklahoma to California. The record reveals that defendant was 56 years of age and the deceased, his wife Julia Abby, was 78 years of age. They were secretly married on the 26th day of January, 1936, but did not live together or reveal the same for a period of three years. The defendant remained on his farm in Louisiana and deceased ran her drugstore in Arkansas. They corresponded during this time, and deceased had gone to Louisiana to visit defendant upon several occasions. She had sent him some money from time to time, being the proceeds of the! sale of certain property owned by her in Arkansas. The) defendant was engaged in a co-operative farming scheme in which he was very much interested and was trying to promote, and there could be little doubt that defendant at the time he married deceased thought she owned considerably more property and of greater value than she did.

*212 In September, 1939, she sold her drugstore in Arkansas for the sum of $1,500, $1,000 in cash and a note for $500, and a part of this money, $533.86, was used to pay off a mortgage on the farm of defendant; $260 was paid in the purchase of an automobile in which a car owned by defendant was used in the exchange. This was the automobile they were driving to California at the time of the killing; $180 was used in purchasing travelers checks in defendant’s name to make the trip to California.

Soon after arriving in Louisiana the deceased made a will leaving the balance of her property to the defendant. The defendant at the same time executed a will leaving his property to the deceased. The wills were executed just about a. week prior to her death. Defendant and deceased left Louisiana, traveling to Arkansas to see if they could dispose of other property owned by deceased, a part of which has been known as zinc land and which had been discusteed as having a value of around $10;000, but when they arrived there they found that it was of little value. They also attempted to cash the $500 note, but did not do- sol They proceeded on their way to California, where defendant had formerly lived, and on the evening of October 5th arrived at a tourist camp at Bridgeport, Okla. On the morning of the 6th of October, 1939, they started before daylight toward Clinton on highway No: 66, and the deceased was murdered by defendant by the side of the road about 6 o’clock by striking her on the head and body with an iron rod that had been picked up and placed in the car during the trip. Her body was taken from the automobile and a pool of blood was found! near the car where defendant had struck her with the iron bar after being removed therefrom. An examination revealed that she had been struck at least eight different 'times with the iron bar. After killing deceased, defend *213 ant attempted to remove a tire from Ms car with the thought in mind of making up a story, which he after-wards told the officers and others of Custer county, that she had been killed by a hit-and-run truck driver. He immediately placed her body in the car and drove into’ a filling station a,t Clinton, Okla., and asked the attendant for a doctor, telling him that his wife had been struck by a hit-and-run truck driver. He was directed to the hospital, where he took the deceased. His story that she was struck by a hit-and-run truck driver was made to several officers of Custer county.

The officers, upon examination of the car and the location of the blood stains thereon, immediately began an investigation. They proceeded to the place where defendant had told them the accident occurred, and they found there a pool of blood by the side of the road, and about 40 feet northwest from where the car had stopped they found the iron bar with traces of blood and hair thereon. Defendant finally confessed to the officers that his statement was false with reference to her being hit by a hit-and-run truck driver, but that he had struck deceased with the iron bar when she said, “I am going to shoot you.” A pistol was afterwards found in the back part of the car, but defendant admitted that it was his and that she did not have it in her possession at the time that the above statement was made. The pistol was found by the officers under some clothing in the back of the car. She was dead before she reached the hospital.

His defense was self-defense and temporary insanity, claiming that after he struck deceased the first blow everything went black and he did not know what he did during the time she was being struck with the iron bar.

The first assignment of error is that the court erred in denying the application for a change of venue. This *214 was based upon the affidavits of three citizens of Custer county. An elaborate hearing was had by the trial court on this motion, and many affidavits and much evidence was taken at the hearing. The defendant attached three affidavits of citizens of Clinton, Custer county, to his motion, and they were afterwards examined in the presence of the court. The county attorney filed 304 counter affidavits. There were also introduced the clippings of a number of newspapers of Custer county. These newspapers carried stories at the time of the killing. After both sides had introduced much evidence, the court, at the suggestion of the attorney for defendant, on his own responsibility, selected four prominent citizens from different sections of Custer county and had them brought before the court and explained to- them that they had been brought in by the court and not as witnesses for either side. They were questioned by the court and also by each of the attorneys'.

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Bluebook (online)
114 P.2d 499, 72 Okla. Crim. 208, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/abby-v-state-oklacrimapp-1941.