Busby v. State

170 So. 140, 177 Miss. 68, 1936 Miss. LEXIS 233
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 19, 1936
DocketNo. 32004.
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 170 So. 140 (Busby 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
Busby v. State, 170 So. 140, 177 Miss. 68, 1936 Miss. LEXIS 233 (Mich. 1936).

Opinions

*74 McG-owen, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court on suggestion of error.

At the last term of this court this case was affirmed and a memorandum opinion filed. During the term a suggestion of error was filed and continued to this term of the court.

Upon a re-examination of this ease on the suggestion of error we have decided to withdraw the former memorandum opinion and set aside the judgment heretofore rendered therein. We file this opinion in lieu thereof.

Upon an indictment charging W. A. Busby, the appellant, with murder in the killing of Hubert Wood, he was tried by a jury, convicted, and sentenced to be hanged, and from a judgment entered accordingly he appeals here.

In the forenoon of May 29, 1935, the appellant and the deceased, Wood, engaged in a difficulty which resulted in Busby stabbing Wood with a knife, from the effects of which he died in a very short time. According to the evidence, Wood lived with his mother in a house very close to that occupied by Busby and his wife and children; the houses were only about ten feet apart; both faced the highway just outside the city of Hattiesburg. Each lot was fifty feet wide and extended back a distance of about two hundred feet to a creek; wire fences inclosed both lots, and separated each from the other; there was also a fence on Wood’s lot paralleling the division fence and three or four feet therefrom; and these two fences made a lane extending to the rear fence at the back of the lots. There appears to have been some vacant ground between the creek and the back of the lots.

Mrs. Wood testified for the state that she was sitting in a swing on her back porch on the morning of the *75 difficulty; that Bay Clark was sitting with her, and that Hubert Wood came out of the living room and, without speaking to either of them, went out the hack door and turned down the lane; that she arose and ran to the door, Bay Clark preceding her, and that when she looked down the lane she saw Busby striking her son over the head with something that he had in his hand, she ran into her room and seized a gun; that when she was about halfway down the lane she saw blood streaming down her son’s face; and that when she was within a few feet of them she saw Busby strike Wood again with something strapped to his wrist, which she supposed was a blackjack; that her son was standing trying to push Busby away from him; that she raised the gun to shoot, but feared she would shoot her son, so she started through the gate, and as she went through Busby snatched the gun from her and struck at Hubert, who dodged the blow, and Busby hit the tree; that Busby remarked as he grabbed the gun from her, “I’m gonna kill both of you God-damned son of bitches;” that the gun broke as it hit the tree, and then appellant hit Mrs. Wood with it; that the appellant held Hubert against the fence with his body, put his blackjack in his pocket and took something out of his pocket which she thought was a gun; that she could not tell whether he was opening a knife or what he was doing, but that she saw him pushing it toward her son; that when he stabbed Hubert he lunged forward and pushed Busby partly down, and when Busby raised up she grabbed the gun and struck him; that she struck Busby a second time; and that Hubert started staggering toward the house. On further examination she was positive that the struggle over the gun occurred subsequent to the time Busby inflicted the knife wound on Wood. It further appears that when the gun broke Mrs. Wood seized the barrel and used that in the fight, while Busby used the stock of the gun.

Bay Clark testified that the first thing he saw was Busby hitting Wood with something in his hand. He *76 then ran to a neighbor’s for assistance and saw no more of the difficulty.

Harvison, a witness for the state, testified that he saw the difficulty after he left his house and was proceeding down the lane, and substantially corroborated Mrs. Wood’s testimony, both of them saying that she hit Busby twice over the head with the gun barrel.

Wood fell in the lane and was conveyed promptly to a hospital, where he died in a few minutes. The physician who examined him at the hospital testified that he found three cuts on his head, that there was no fracture of the skull, but that both the skin and tissue had been cut in one place about an inch and a half to two inches long, extending from the front to the back of the head; that there was another wound about an inch long; that the knife wound entered the body at the left of the sternum between the fifth and sixth rib and pierced the right auricle of the heart, the range of the wound being slightly upward. Mrs. Wood also had scalp wounds on her head, one of which she exhibited to the jury and said that it had required some stitches.

The appellant’s version of the killing was to the effect that he had assisted his wife in washing clothes that morning, and as he walked out on the back porch Wood, who was in the lane, called to him and said, “I want to talk to you;” that he walked on down the lane following Wood, thinking he wanted to have a private conversation; that as he started to crawl through the fence, and before he had straightened up, Wood struck at him, and that thereupon they engaged in a fist fight; that when they had struck five or six blows the next thing he knew somebody struck him from behind; that he looked around and saw Mrs. Wood standing there and drawing the gun back; that he grabbed the gun as she struck at him the second time, and struck her with his fist, which knocked the gun loose from her hands; that he then had the gun in his hands. Hubert had stepped back, and he had backed off to get out of Hubert’s reach *77 in order to keep him from getting the gun; that he could have shot Wood but he clubbed him with the gun and the barrel fell on the ground, Busby retaining the stock; that Mrs. Wood picked up the barrel, Wood ran into Busby, and he struck Wood with the gun stock, and Mrs. Wood hit appellant again and knocked him away from Wood; that he fell, and as he was getting up Wood hit him and Mrs. Wood struck him again with the gun barrel. Appellant testified further that when Wood was striking him in that position he realized he was fighting for his life, that he got his knife out of his pocket, opened it, made an attempt to get up, and struck with the knife as he got up, and that he did not know whether he had cut Wood or not because his mind was blank for a second. He further testified that he received several blows on the head. He denied positively that he had stabbed the deceased with a knife before the battle with the gun started. He denied that he had used a blackjack or anything except his fists and the knife in the fight.

Busby’s daughter corroborated his statement that Wood was the aggressor and struck her father as he went through the gap in the fence, and that Wood had something in his hand. The evidence of these two witnesses as to Wood being the aggressor in the beginning of this difficulty is not disputed. The daughter fled from the scene and did not see all that transpired there.

The physician who examined Busby at the jail found that he had a bruised eye and three wounds on his head of about the same character as those upon the head of the deceased.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
170 So. 140, 177 Miss. 68, 1936 Miss. LEXIS 233, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/busby-v-state-miss-1936.