Ammons v. State

102 So. 642, 88 Fla. 444
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedDecember 16, 1924
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 102 So. 642 (Ammons v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ammons v. State, 102 So. 642, 88 Fla. 444 (Fla. 1924).

Opinion

Ellis, J.

The plaintiff in error, Tom Ammons, to to whom reference will hereinafter be made as the defendant, was indicted for the murder, on December 30, 1923, of W. T. Williams and on March 20, 1924, convicted of murder in the second degree. He seeks reversal of the judgment on Writ of Error.

The facts in the case, which the evidence tends to prove, may be briefly stated. The deceased, who operated a small farm, had employed the defendant to manage it or work upon it upon terms. A disagreement had arisen between them out of which litigation had grown resulting in ill feeling between the parties.

The defendant claimed that the deceased owed him money on account of their transactions and the deceased had refused to come to a settlement.

The latter had on several occasions previous to the day of the homicide made disparaging remarks about the defendant; had threatened to kill him or run him out of the community or ruin him financially. These boastful, ill-advised, scandalous remarks were promptly carried to the defendant by mutual friends. Three or four days before the homicide the wife of the defendant, according to her testimony, met, on the street, the deceased, whom she had known for several years and who had always spoken to her, “raised his hat” respectfully, and with whom she had never had any “unpleasant relations.” Upon meeting him on this occasion, however, when she spoke to him in passing, as she usually did, he met her pleasant sidewalk salutation with the request that she [447]*447“kiss Ms ass,” which seems to have been interpreted to mean that part of his anatomy designated by a different word, called her a “damn whore,” requested her not to speak to him and informed her that he was going to get that husband of hers if “I have to kill him or run him out of the country. ’ ’ This insult to her and threat against her husband she did not promptly relate to him but kept back the information for several days. While she testified to this state of facts she also told the sheriff and a deputy soon after the homicide that she had not seen Mr. Williams in a week or ten days and had not been “down the street in three or foiir days.”

Upon the day of the homicide Mrs. Ammons told her husband, so she testified, of her meeting the deceased and his language to her. The information was imparted to defendant that night at home in, or near, Fort Lauder-dale. He came home after dark, between which time and the homicide she imparted to him the information.

The defendant being “short of cigarettes” went down town to get some. He went in an automobile. Passing near the Gilbert Hotel he saw a Mr. Padgett and stopped the car to speak to him. But he also saw the deceased on the sidewalk in front of the hotel and deferring his conversation with Mr. Padgett in order to speak to Mr. Williams, the defendant, who was armed with a pistol which he usually carried in his car, got out of his car, passed Mr. Padgett with a friendly salutation and going up to Mr. Williams, said: “Poker Bill” or “Billie Williams, you want to see me. I am right here,” and repeating that statement applied to the deceased a vile epithet and shot him. The deceased backing away from the defendant got behind a barber pole as if he was trying to “catch something” or “grasp the pole.” The defendant fired five shots; the first two or three made a smoke in front of the [448]*448defendant, and stepping forward out of the smoke he fired again. Then going up to the deceased, who was behind the barber pole, struck him over the head with the pistol. The deceased was not armed but had in his pocket two pocket knives.

The defendant’s account of the shooting is slightly different. lie said that Williams had threatened, at least three times, to kill him but had never made any attempt to do so; that they had talked on other occasions and nothing happened. That bad relations, had existed between them for about a year. The day of the shooting the defendant’s wife told him of Mr.. Williams’ threat to run defendant out of town and of Mr. Williams’ offensive language to the defendant’s wife. That seeing Mr. Williams on the street that night defendant got out of his automobile and walking up to Mr. Williams said: “Mr. Williams, my wife tells me you want to see me, and you want to get me, is that right? I want to know why you called her a damn wliore and told her to kiss your ass. ’ ’ That deceased then “turned around to me,” he said, “You damned son of a bitch, and he ran his hand under his coat to his hip pocket and he turned around.” “I thought he was going to shoot me and I pulled my pistol and commenced shooting.” The defendant said, because “Mr. Williams had made threats against my life on about three or four occasions before this and that was the reason I thought he was going to shoot me.”

The defendant did not go down town that night for the purpose of meeting the deceased. The deceased had said that he carried a pistol “all the time.” The defendant knew that the “first three shots” he fired had struck Mr. Williams. The defendant “pulled his gun” before he thought he “saw one on” Williams. He thought he saw one in the right hand of deceased after the defendant “had [449]*449shot three times.” The defendant believed he was “normal” when he approached Mr. Williams that night. His reason for shooting Williams was when the latter put his hand to his pocket defendant “thought (Williams) was going to shoot.” Defendant said he had not planned to kill Williams, that he was not “mad” and did not feel like killing him when he spoke to him. Soon after the shooting, however, the defendant told a deputy sheriff, Mr. Hicks, that “I put five bullets into the son of a bitch and I would put five more if I had him, any man that would try to get away with what he got away with” and then repeated the alleged insult to his wife, and said that was the reason he shot the deceased.

Counsel for the defendant say in their brief: “If the defendant’s account of the killing is not supported by evidence; if the defendant’s defense of self-defense is not supported by evidence it leaves the defendant nothing to stand on and it was cold-blooded, deliberate, premeditated murder and he should have been convicted of murder in the first degree.”

Our examination of the evidence forces the conclusion upon us that both accounts of the killing of Williams by the defendant, taken separately or collectively, showed the transaction to have been murder.

The defendant’s account of the killing is in no particular similar to the facts in the case of Holton v. State, 87 Fla. 65, 99 South. Rep. 244. In that ease the deceased, who had threatened Holton’s life, came to the latter’s house the morning of the shooting armed with a pistol, waited for the defendant to return from hunting, accused him of stealing a whiskey still, called the defendant a liar when the latter denied the charge and fired at him with the pistol. The defendant replied with a shot from his shotgun. The Court said: “We cannot say that there [450]*450exists in this ease any fact or circumstance which can be said to refute the statement of the defendant as to the details of the affair.” If such statement “was a true account of the transaction, we do not agree with the conclusion of the jury that it was murder in the second degree. We think the evidence as a whole fails to support the verdict.”

The evidence for the State in the case at bar, as well as the defendant’s confession to Mr. Hicks, is ample to sustain a verdict of murder in the first degree.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
102 So. 642, 88 Fla. 444, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ammons-v-state-fla-1924.