Carter v. State

145 So. 739, 167 Miss. 331, 1933 Miss. LEXIS 84
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 6, 1933
DocketNo. 30073.
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 145 So. 739 (Carter 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
Carter v. State, 145 So. 739, 167 Miss. 331, 1933 Miss. LEXIS 84 (Mich. 1933).

Opinion

McGowen, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

Appellants, Fred and Murray Carter, together with their father, J. W. Y. Carter, were indicted for murder in the killing of Robert McCain. Fred and Murray Carter were brothers, and Robert McCain was their brother-in-law, having married their sister. A severance was granted the father, and the two brothers, the appellants, were jointly tried, convicted by the jury of manslaughter, and sentenced by the court to serve a term of fifteen years in the state penitentiary. The parties to the' difficulty lived in the Kokomo neighborhood some distance from Columbia, Mississippi. On the afternoon of the killing, the Carter and McCain families had an altercation, the details of which do not disclose just what caused it, and the parties were separated without injury on either side. During that afternoon there was considerable traveling on the road west toward Kokomo in their automobiles by the Carters and the McCains. Late in the afternoon, McCain, the deceased, accompanied by his children and friends drove towards Kokomo, passing *337 the Carters in their car. While passing the latter car, some one in it shouted something to the McCains. What was said the record does not disclose. The Carters drove a short distance and stopped, the McCains, coming up in a little while, stopped within a few feet, and both par ties got out of their cars. The Carters, father and sons, according to the state’s evidence, held their guns upon McCain. In a short time, several members of both con tending families assembled there. The state’s evidence tends to show that Fred Carter, at a time when McCain, the deceased, was standing within a few feet of the Carters, who, as stated above, held their guns on him raised his gun and shot McCain at a time when no overt act of any kind was shown on the part of the deceased. The record discloses that they stood in this situation for some time, that finally a brother of Robert McCain, the deceased, came up.and was requested by McCain to notify the sheriff of his situation, which we have already described, and that he left to do this.

The defense was to the effect that McCain, the deceased, cursed and threatened the appellants, and was in the act of drawing his pistol from the bib of his overalls when Fred Carter, one of the appellants, shot him. Carter claims that he tried to shoot the hand that was drawing out the pistol, to prevent McCain’s using it, and not for the purpose of killing him. Many threats of the deceased against the accused were offered in evidence, all of which evidence was admitted by the court.

The appellants sought to show the details of a difficulty between McCain and his wife, the sister of the appellants ; that she was beaten unmercifully by him, and her clothing torn from her, on an occasion more than a, year prior to the homicide. The court declined to permit any testimony relative t,o the assault and battery on the wife of McCain. Mrs.' Eva McCain, the wife of the deceased, Robert McCain, at the time of.his death, and living with him, was introduced as a witness, and no ob *338 jection was offered by the state as to her competency as such in the case. She testified as to many threats to kill appellants made to her by her husband, which were communicated to her brothers.

Mrs. McCain, the wife of the deceased, was examined out of the presence of the jury, and in her testimony it was disclosed that on one occasion, when McCain threatened to take the life of the accused, the threat was in connection with the fact, as she stated, that her brothers, the accused, had been active in assisting her in procuring an indictment against the deceased for assault and battery upon her. This evidence was offered by the defendant as a whole, including the details of the assault and battery, the brothers not being shown to have been present or to have participated in that difficulty between the wife and husband, to all of which the court sustained the objection of the district attorney, which was general and in nowise specific; the court not stating at the time upon what ground the objection was sustained.

The evidence of the state tended to show that McCain was killed by the Carters at a time when he was defenseless and helpless. The evidence offered for the defendant tended to establish self-defense.

It is assigned as error that the court should have permitted the details of the assault and battery, alleged to have been committed more than a year before the homicide, on the sister of the accused, to be introduced. That difficulty was a collateral issue, and whatever wrongs had been perpetrated upon his wife by McCain, the deceased, would not have shed light upon this homicide; and the court properly excluded the details and the evidence tending to show the severity and cruelty of the beating administered to his wife by the deceased. Counsel cites many cases, and confuses, in our opinion, the principle of lawmaking competent, when properly connected, evidence of previous difficulties between the parties, the deceased and the accused, and the rule as *339 to a wholly disconnected difficulty between the deceased and a third party, to which the accused was not a party nor in any way a participant.

Counsel for appellant cite the case of Clark v. State, 123 Miss. 147, 85 So. 188, in which case Clark killed Boles, the deceased. They had both been rivals for the hand of the same woman. She married the appellant, Clark. On one occasion prior to the killing, deceased went to appellant’s home, found his wife alone, and there ravished her, sending an insulting message to the husband of what he had done, and that he intended to kill the husband so that he might have the woman for himself. This evidence being excluded by the trial court, this court said that the above-quoted testimony was admissible, and that the threats should have been admitted together with evidence of the rape, saying the circumstance under which the threat was made was competent to show its meaning and significance. The rape, the message, and the threat were inseparably linked together. The case is easily distinguished .from the ru.le which obtains in this state by which this court holds that evidence of the details of a previous difficulty between a party to a homicide and a third party is not competent. See Thompson v. State, 84 Miss. 758, 36 So. 389; Brown v. State, 88 Miss. 166, 40 So. 737; Herman v. State, 75 Miss. 340, 22 So. 873; Raines v. State, 81 Miss. 489, 33 So. 19; Hale v. State, 72 Miss. 140, 16 So. 387; Foster v. State, 70 Miss. 755, 12 So. 822, and especially Mabry v. State, 71 Miss. 716, 14 So. 267.

We come now to the sharp question presented: That the appellate court should reverse this cause because the court declined to permit the statement to go to the jury that the deceased threatened the accused because of, and in connection therewith, the appellants’ activity in procuring an indictment against the deceased for an assault and battery upon Mrs. McCain, his wife. This *340 character of testimony is generally relevant and pertinent for the reason stated in the Clark case, supra.

We have searched the record, and nowhere else, nor by any other witness, did the accused seek to make this specific proof as to the motive for the threats, uttered by the deceased, against their lives.

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Bluebook (online)
145 So. 739, 167 Miss. 331, 1933 Miss. LEXIS 84, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carter-v-state-miss-1933.