Anderson v. State

25 So. 2d 474, 199 Miss. 885, 1946 Miss. LEXIS 258
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedApril 8, 1946
DocketNo. 36055.
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 25 So. 2d 474 (Anderson 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
Anderson v. State, 25 So. 2d 474, 199 Miss. 885, 1946 Miss. LEXIS 258 (Mich. 1946).

Opinion

Roberds, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

Anderson was indicted for and convicted of the murder of Vera Evans, and sentenced to the state penitentiary for life, the jury disagreeing as to the punishment.

He assigns a number of errors, but the conclusion we have reached makes it necessary that we pass upon only three of them.

The principal witness for the state was Bessie May Evans, a negro girl, eleven years of age, the daughter of Clyde Evans, and step-daughter of Vera Evans, the second wife of Clyde Evans. Appellant contends that Bessie May Evans was not qualified to be a witness, and that without her testimony there was no evidence to convict appellant of any crime under the indictment. He says she did not have the capacity to understand questions and frame and express intelligent answers, nor *890 did she possess a sense of moral responsibility to sppak the truth. [Peters v. State, 106 Miss. 333, 63 So. 666; Jackson v. State, 158 Miss. 524, 130 So. 729. On her preliminary examination in the absence of the jury, when asked by the district attorney what happens to little girls who tell stories, she replied “They gets a switching.” Again “Do you know where bad little children go when they die?” and she replied “To the devil.” On cross-examination, she said she did everything her father told her to do and she would tell whatever her father told her to say; that her father had told her what to say in this case and she would tell that and stick to it, and that, if she said w;hat her father told her to say she thought she would be doing no wrong. The district attorney then examined her in detail as to the events of the homicide and she gave clear and intelligent answers.; she explained where she went to school; said she could read and write; that she could multiply some but didn’t know much about adding and subtracting. She then said she would tell the truth regardless what her father had told her to say. The learned trial judge then asked: “Is the testimony you are going to give here something your father told you, or what you yourself saw?” Answer: “What I Saw.” “And you are going to tell that and that alone?” Answer: “Yes, sir.” The court then permitted her to testify before the jury. The testimony she then gave shows she understood and grasped the questions asked her, and her answers were as clear and intelligent as is usual for one of her age, race and schooling. The only serious question about her capacity as a witness is her answer, made to a question asked by able counsel for appellant, that her father had told her what to say and she would say that regardless of the truth of it. Later, she said he had not told her what to say and that she was going to tell what she saw. We do not think this alone disqualified her as a witness. It would be interesting to know the percentage of children eleven years of age who would follow the lead of truth rather than the command of *891 father. This child was before the learned trial judge. He saw and observed her. He heard her words and noted her actions. He was in much better position than is this Court to say whether she was qualified as a witness. That was a question of fact, “the decision of which, in the language of Mr. Justice Brewer in Wheeler v. United States, 159 U. S. 523, 16 S. Ct. 93, 40 L. Ed. 244, ‘rests primarily with the trial judge, who sees the proposed witness, notices his manner, his apparent possession or lack of intelligence, and may resort to any examination which will tend to disclose his capacity and intelligence, as well as his understanding of the obligations of an oath. As many of these mattérs cannot be photographed into the record, the decision of the trial judge will not be disturbed on review unless from that which is preserved it is clear that it was erroneous.’ ” The common sense of the ordinary juror is also a protection against error in this regard. They see and hear the child testify and are in position to evaluate the accuracy and weight of the testimony. It is usually more a question of credibility than of qualification. We cannot say the court erred in permitting her to testify.

Appellant further says no conviction can be had in this proceeding because the proof fails to show that the wound inflicted by him upon Vera Evans caused her death. We will summarize the evidence on that question. Anderson stabbed Vera Evans in the chest with the sharp point of a file. This instrument was about ten inches long, and tapered to a point at one end. It was the usual file used in this state for sharpening hoes. It was introduced in evidence and the jurors saw and examined it. The. stabbing took place in a field where Vera was hoeing cotton in June 1945, at about 6 o ’clock in the afternoon. When the wound was inflicted, she cried out and started from the scene across the field and fell face down when she had gone a short distance. She was unable to rise without aid. Blood was coming from the wound. iShe was carried to her home in a wagon. About midnight, *892 she was taken to Dr. W. D. Smith. He testified he found: “. . . a punctured wound at the junction of the second rib and the breast bone, in the center ... It wasn’t in the breast. It was the center of the chest ... It went down to the bone. It didn’t penetrate or fracture the bone”; that it was merely a flesh wound. He was asked whether that wound of itself would have caused her death. He replied: “Not the puncture. There was a blow behind that.” Just what he meant by the last statement is not clear. He dressed the wound and told her husband to take her home; that he did not think the wound was serious or that there was any need for her to be brought back to him, and that 'her death was a surprise to him. Eva died around 8 o ’clock the next morning at her home. Clyde Evans testified that after leaving the office of Dr. Smith she had great difficulty breathing; that she grew worse and became unconscious and was never again in condition “where she could talk right”; that she was bleeding profusely from the wound, and, as stated, died around 8 to 91 o ’clock the next morning. He further said Vera was five to six months with child; that she was in good health and had worked regularly at manual labor in the fields during that year. There is no intimation that there was any cause for her death other than the wound inflicted by appellant. That question was specifically submitted to the jury by an instruction granted the defendant, and the jury found that the wound inflicted by appellant caused her death. We think there was ample evidence to sustain that finding.

Appellant next contends that the evidence in this case fails to show that he had any malice towards Vera Evans, but, if so, the uncontradicted testimony, both on behalf of the state and the defendant, is that this wound was inflicted during a mutual combat and fight between himself and Vera Evans, and in the heat of passion, and that, for these reasons, he should not have been convicted of a greater crime than manslaughter. The proof in this regard discloses that appellant and his wife and *893 Martha Newberry, and Martha’s daughter, Sara Jane Newberry, were hoeing* cotton in a field adjoining a field in which Vera Evans and her step-daughter Bessie May Evans and Tillie Woods, sister of Clyde Evans, were also hoeing cotton. Of these, only Martha, Sara Jane and Bessie May testified.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
25 So. 2d 474, 199 Miss. 885, 1946 Miss. LEXIS 258, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/anderson-v-state-miss-1946.