Allergezza v. State

120 So. 2d 780, 240 Miss. 382, 1960 Miss. LEXIS 487
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedMay 30, 1960
DocketNo. 41478
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 120 So. 2d 780 (Allergezza v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Allergezza v. State, 120 So. 2d 780, 240 Miss. 382, 1960 Miss. LEXIS 487 (Mich. 1960).

Opinion

Gillespie, J.

Appellant was tried on a murder indictment and convicted of manslaughter. The court peremptorily instructed the jury for the appellant on the murder charge but permitted the case to go to the jury on a charge of manslaughter.

The deceased and two other young men made the rounds of beer joints, in one of which they were joined by two other young men. They all wound up at about 1:30 A.M. at the El Patio, a dance hall owned and operated by appellant where beer and liquor was sold. The bar and the dance hall are separate parts of the building with a connecting door, the dance hall being in the rear. Deceased and his companions had been drinking beer at the various places they had visited before arriving at the El Patio. Sometime after the deceased and his companions arrived at the El Patio, someone went [387]*387from the dance floor to the bar where appellant was sitting and told appellant about the disturbance. Appellant, who was carrying a 38-ealibre revolver on his person, went to the dance floor and shortly thereafter shot and killed the deceased. Deceased was shot on his left side, more to the front than to the back, about the lower ribs and the bullet came out on the right side of his back. Appellant claimed that he shot the deceased in self-defense.

It was appellant’s contention, and that of his witnesses, that after he parted the persons who were fighting in the dance hall, some unidentified person hit him; that then deceased came out with a knife and started toward appellant; that he asked deceased to stop and drop the knife and fired one shot over his head; that deceased then cursed and said: “If you don’t kill me, I am going to kill you, ’ ’ and kept coming at appellant with the knife in his hand; that he asked deceased to drop it again and shot deceased as the latter was advancing on him with the knife. Appellant said that he intended to shoot him in the leg. Appellant said that deceased was one of the boys who were fighting.

It is undisputed that an open pocket knife was lying on the floor about 18 inches from the left side of the deceased sometime later when the undertaker came to pick up the deceased, who died about the time he reached the hospital. Among the arguments made by the appellant are the following: (1) That he was entitled to a directed verdict; (2) there was no testimony on which to submit to the jury the charge of manslaughter, and (3) there is no testimony that appellant did not act in necessary self-defense. He also contends that there is no evidence that he shot in the heat of passion. All of these arguments are grounded on the contention that appellant’s testimony and that of his witnesses that he shot in self-defense is uncontradicted.

[388]*388There was testimony that appellant had been drinking and had been in an argument with his brother prior to the occurrence resulting in the death of the deceased. One witness testified that as appellant went from the bar toward the persons who were arguing or fighting, that appellant said, “I will kill you, you s.o.b.”

There was conflict as to whether deceased was involved in the fighting and the weight of the evidence is that the deceased was not bothering anyone when appellant went into the dance hall to quell the disturbance.

There is conflict in the testimony as to how close the deceased was to appellant when the fatal shot was fired. Witness Terry stated that the distance was about five steps; witness Brown stated they were about ten feet apart; witness Roncoli testified that deceased never got any closer than six feet to appellant; defense witness Crowe testified that they were about six feet apart when deceased was shot.

There was conflict as to who was the aggressor in the trouble between appellant and the deceased. A number of witnesses testified that the deceased was not bothering anyone when appellant went into the dance hall to quell the disturbance. Witness Roncoli, a part-time employee of appellant, said that appellant shoved deceased at a time when the deceased “wasn’t doing nothing.” Then they began fighting. Witness Thompson said that deceased hit appellant after appellant had pushed the deceased. Witness Hiler stated that after the disturbance was broken up, appellant walked toward the deceased with his hand in his pocket or down by his side, shortly after which he heard a shot.

There is direct conflict in the testimony as to whether or not appellant shot a warning shot over the deceased’s head, as testified by appellant. Witness Terry said that the second shot was fired after the deceased ‘ ‘was crunched over on the floor. ’ ’ Witness Brown testified that he looked around as appellant staggered back and shot, and [389]*389that he, Brown, then ran over and knocked appellant down and appellant fired the second shot at him, or Ms gnn went off. Witness Hiler said the second shot went wild.

There was dispute in nearly every aspect of the facts in reference to the kMfe found by the undertaker at the side of deceased when the ambulance came, and whether deceased was advancing on appellant with the knife, and how the knife got on the floor by the deceased after the shooting. Witness Terry looked around just as the shooting took place and deceased was falling, and he saw nothing on the floor. He said deceased was not carrying a knife and he knew this because deceased had tried to borrow a knife from him earlier in the Mght to fix his automobile. He said if there had been a kMfe lying on the floor besides the deceased immediately after the shooting, he would have seen it. Witness Brown, who saw appellant just as he shot, stated that after the shooting appellant handed Roncoli a kMfe and said, “Keep this knife, that is the one he was trying to use on me”; that when witness requested Roncoli to let him examine the knife, appellant threatened him with the gun and would not let Roncoli permit Brown to examine the kMfe. TMs witness stated that he did not pay any attention to what was on the floor, but he saw no knife. Roncoli testified that just before appellant shot deceased, appellant had knocked deceased down with the gun, and deceased was shot just as he straightened up with Ms fist doubled. He was asked if he saw anything in deceased’s hands and he answered, “No, sir, I didn’t see notMng.” Sometime after the shooting, tMs witness saw a kMfe lying beside the deceased’s left side. TMs witness testified that appellant handed Mm a knife after the shooting and wanted him to keep it, wMch witness refused to do. This happened toward the front and the witness testified that appellant later went back where deceased was after Roncoli had returned the knife to appellant, and stated that [390]*390appellant went alone to where the deceased was lying. Witness Hiler stated that he did not know whether deceased had a knife when he was shot. This witness testified that after the shooting was over he went to see if the boy was alive and all he saw around the deceased was a spot of blood, and that there was nothing else on the floor near the deceased.

The testimony was in hopeless conflict in respect to the matters just mentioned and a careful reading of the entire record clearly indicates that it was a question for the jury to decide whether appellant shot deceased in necessary self-defense, and that there was ample evidence to go to the jury on the manslaughter charge.

The homicide took place in Bolivar County. A change of venue was granted appellant and the case was transferred to Coahoma County for trial.

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Related

Goldsby v. State
123 So. 2d 429 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1960)

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Bluebook (online)
120 So. 2d 780, 240 Miss. 382, 1960 Miss. LEXIS 487, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/allergezza-v-state-miss-1960.