Bell v. State

42 So. 2d 728, 207 Miss. 518, 1949 Miss. LEXIS 360
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 14, 1949
DocketNo. 37258.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 42 So. 2d 728 (Bell 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
Bell v. State, 42 So. 2d 728, 207 Miss. 518, 1949 Miss. LEXIS 360 (Mich. 1949).

Opinion

*522 Smith, J.

Appellant, a Negro, was indicted for the murder of Mr. C. W. Broughton, a white man, and manager of a large plantation in Coahoma County, on which appellant was employed as a tenant in 1945, upon his discharge from the Army. Appellant was convicted and sentenced to be electrocuted. He appealed here.

At the conclusion of all of the testimony in the case, appellant moved for a directed verdict that he was not guilty of murder, which motion was overruled. Upon the coming in of the jury’s verdict, he made a motion for a new trial, which was likewise overruled. In this Court, appellant contends that he is not guilty of murder; and that he is not guilty of any crime, — certainly no offense greater than manslaughter. [He was also refused a directed verdict that he was not guilty of manslaughter. He complains that these actions of the trial court were reversible errors. We will not reach the issue of manslaughter, since, after a most careful consideration of the evidence, and of the briefs, we have concluded that appellant acted in self-defense in the regrettable slaying of deceased.

' Here are the facts, practically without contradiction in the record. Appellant, at the time of the trial, was twenty-four years old, married, and the father of three children. Upon his discharge from the Army in 1945, he moved on a plantation of which the deceased, Mr. Broughton, was manager, and there embarked upon the making of a crop. On numerous occasions, without any apparently just provocation, he was cursed, threatened with whippings, and threats were made against his life, — all from the manager, which generated in him a sense of terror. At the happening of the last of such events, appellant, in pursuance of a mutual aid arrangement with his uncle, was helping to pick the latter’s cotton, when the manager came by and saw him. Blowing his whistle, which was a summons to him to approach the manager, *523 and appellant, upon responding, was then and there again cursed, threatened with whipping or death if he did not immediately return to his own field, in spite of his explanations to deceased of what appellant called “picking in and through.” Appellant testified that he knew the manager went armed habitually with a pistol. The use of this whistle, and Mr. Broughton’s habit of carrying a pistol, being known to appellant, will reveal their importance later herein on further development of the facts. Appellant testified that he said nothing to the manager, but, three or four days later, being frightened, he left his ungathered crop and fled the place. From that date until the day before the tragedy, Mr. Broughton himself never saw appellant because appellant kept out of his sight, although appellant espied him many times.

On the Monday preceding the homicide on the following Thursday, in 1948, the father-in-law of appellant called at his home and requested him to let his wife return with the father-in-law, Brown, to the latter’s home, and help her mother make lard and sausage. Appellant consented, and his wife and children departed with the father-in-law, and, as they were leaving, the appellant told his wife he would himself come down later that week and bring some money to get the children some “Santa for Christmas.” He set no definite date, as his then employer’s gin was out of repair, and he could not leave at the moment.

On the following Wednesday afternoon, he embarked upon the promised visit on the bus. Just as appellant alighted, he saw Mr. Broughton’s truck coming down the road, and appellant continued down towards the river, seeking to reach the home of his father-in-law. But Mr. Broughton came on up, and headed his truck in there, stopped, and blew his whistle. Let it here be recalled that this was a familiar signal to appellant, because, as stated supra, it was the method used by Mr. Broughton to summon the Negroes with whom he desired to converse, this being a fair inference from the testimony. Two Negro men were in the truck with Mr. Broughton *524 at the time, and immediately one of them got out and came running down the road toward appellant, and called him to wait, saying he wanted to talk to him. Appellant, with the past heavy upon him, especially mindful, he said, of Mr. Broughton’s numerous threats against his body or life, fled further toward the river. The truck attempted to head him off, so he hid on the river bank. Being unable to catch or locate appellant, his pursuers turned the truck and departed. Apprehensive that this was not an abandonment of the search for him, but a ruse to make him think so, appellant remained hidden. His fears were justified, apparently, when about an half hour later the truck reappeared and circled around, but being still unable to locate appellant, and it left the vicinity. Appellant here testified: “I was still on the river bank staying out of their way so I could get to the house and give my wife this money. I didn’t want him to see me. I knew what he was going to do to me— what he said.”

When he reached the home of his father-in-law, the latter was not in, but appellant’s mother-in-law, his wife and their three children, were. He had hardly finished greeting them, when, on looking down the road, he saw the truck coming straight toward the house, whereupon he grabbed some shells and the shotgun of his father-in-law for the purpose of self-defense, and fled, running to the cane brakes. The truck then came after him again and hemmed him in so he could not flee along the road he intended to follow. He was cut off; there were three other men with Mr. Broughton this time; and the sun by then was low. He testified that he was not intending to harm a soul and “wasn’t wanting nobody to harm me.” By then, it was night and he could see the lights of the truck, so he hid in a ditch, intending to leave the gun there for his father-in-law. However, at that precise moment, the truck reappeared. Men were throwing flashlight beams around, and into cotton houses, so he stayed concealed in the ditch all night long.

*525 Before daylight on the following morning, Thursday, he crawled out of the ditch, and went to the home of a Negress named Louella Mayes, and asked for permission to enter and warm. This was on the 23rd of December. Louella got out of bed and let him in, and he was making a fire when the last eventful scenes in this tragedy began to progress toward a climax. The home of Louella was on the plantation managed by Mr. Broughton, where she had lived for approximately two years, and he had never' come there prior to this particular day. It contained three rooms. The front room, empty except for a single article of furniture; a bedroom, in which Louella slept with her children; and a kitchen, with doors leading from room to room. There was a large pile of dirt right near the house, which had been pulled up by a bulldozer, and which prevented those inside from seeing an approaching vehicle until it came close to the house. A horn blew, and appellant looked out and identified Mr. Broughton as one of the two men in the same truck, heretofore ¡mentioned. He told Louella whc it was, saying “They are going to kill me if they come in here,” and also testified he plead with her to say he was not there.

By that time, the manager had reached the porch, and Louella was going to the door, whereupon appellant fled to the middle room, and he then heard Mr.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
42 So. 2d 728, 207 Miss. 518, 1949 Miss. LEXIS 360, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bell-v-state-miss-1949.