Chambers v. State

1919 OK CR 231, 182 P. 714, 16 Okla. Crim. 238, 1919 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 206
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma
DecidedJuly 26, 1919
DocketA-3418
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 1919 OK CR 231 (Chambers v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chambers v. State, 1919 OK CR 231, 182 P. 714, 16 Okla. Crim. 238, 1919 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 206 (Okla. Ct. App. 1919).

Opinion

*239 DOYLE, P. J.

This is an appeal by C. C. 'Chambers from a conviction of murder and judgment and sentence of death. The information charged that C. C. Chambers did, in Okfuskee county, on or about the 22d day of April, 1918, kill and murder one S. M. Wilson, by shooting him with a pistol. In accordance with the verdict of the jury, he was sentenced to suffer the punishment of death by electrocution as provided by law. When the appeal was perfected, an order was entered and served on the warden of the penitentiary, staying execution of the sentence pending decision of the appeal.

The errors assigned are:

That the court erred in overruling the defendant’s motion for a new trial.

That the evidence is insufficient to support the verdict assessing the extreme penalty -of the law, because the punishment is excessive and unreasonable, and said verdict is the result of prejudice and bias against the defendant and. is not based upon the law and the evidence.

It appears that the deceased, S. M. Wilson, left Oké-mah in an automobile with two Indians, Jonah Bear and Joe Caney, and in driving through the town of Castle met defendant. The deceased asked defendant to get into the car and go with them, and they drove to the town of Boley, then went several miles west of Boley, looking for witnesses in a lawsuit, and returned to Boley between 4 and 5 o’clock that afternoon. The deceased had served four years as sheriff of Okfuskee county, during which time defendant, a negro, was his deputy. They were good friends. They had both been drinking during the day. The deceased furnished the whisky and both became somewhat intoxicated. That night between 9 and 10 o’clock they had a scuffle in *240 the automobile, and defendant shot the deceased, killing him instantly.

The evidence in the case was substantially as follows:

Jonah Bear testified:

“I live five miles west of Okemah and knew Sam Wilson for a long time. Í understand only a few words of English. When we started there were three of us, I, Sam Wilson, and Joe Caney. At 'Castle, Chess Chambers got in with us, and from there we went to Boley, then out in the country, and back to Boley. We were drinking. Sam Wilson furnished the whisky. He gave Chambers a bottle. Between 9 and 10 o’clock we started to go home. I got in the car first. Sam Wilson and Chess Chambers got in the front, and Sam told Chess two or three times to get out, ar d Chess said he would not get out, and Sam just pushed him out, tried to push him out, you know, and Chambers pulled out a six-shooter and shot him; that was all there was to it. When I saw him pull the six-shooter, I started to grab it. I was directly behind Sam, so I could not reach it, and he shot him. Joe Caney was outside of the car on the ground. Sam did not have a gun, only just tried to push him out, was all. I 'hadn’t taken but three drinks while we were in Boley. Sam gave me the drinks.”

Joe Caney testified:

That Sam Wilson came to his place a little before noon. Jonah Bear was with him. “I went with them to the other side of Boley, between Okemah and Boley. At Castle, Chess Chambers got in the car. When we got to Boley, we stopped about 20 minutes and then went on west to •Jimmie Huchinula, looking for witnesses in the Ponsey ■•case, now pending in this court. A little after 4' o’clock 'we returned to Boley. I was right in front of the car when •Sam Wilson was shot. Defendant was on the front seat on the right side of Sam Wilson. Sam told him to get out and get in the back seat; that he wanted Joe to sit by him. That is what he said. Chambers made a whole lot of talk. *241 I saw Chambers get a gun out and shoo-t Saftn. The car ■was Sam Wilson’s. Jonah Bear was in the car.” That he was a -Creek full-blood and did not drink whisky. That they had been gone from the car about three -hours, and when they returned they could not walk good. That he did not think he could drive the oar.

John Owens testified:

“I live at Boley. I am city marshal. When Chambers shot ■•Sam Wilson, I was sitting on the sidewalk 'in front of the Masonic Temple, and the car was just across the street and a little angling to the north. The first thing that attracted my attention was some men tussling in the car. It was just dusk. I started to get up and go over there, and about the time I started a gun fired. I ran and jumped in the front end of the car and found a man with his head down. I raised him up and recognized Sam Wilson. I asked, ‘Who killed him?’ Chambers was sitting right by him with a pistol in his hand, and he said, ‘I killed him.’ I took hold of the gun and wrenched it from, his hand. Several others were there. Ed Grad-dy, Reuben Tyler, H. C. Cavill, and others; I can’t name them all. Two Indians were there. One, Jonah Bear; the other I did not know. Chambers seemed to -be drinking. I asked some -one to call a doctor. -Chambers at the time was deputy sheriff.”

H. C. Cavill testified:

“That he stepped out of Spencer’s store four or five steps from where the shooting occurred, and saw Jonah Bear standing up in the back end of the car; Wilson and Chambers -were sitting with their faces together in the front seat, Mr. Wilson saying, ‘Get out,’ and just then the gun fired.”

Dock Barnett testified:

That he was standing about 10 or 12 steps from the ear when the gun was fired, and heard Sam Wilson tell Chambers to get in the back seat and let one of the Indians get in the front seat with him, and Chambers told him he *242 did not ride in no damn man’s back seat, and then the gun fired.

Dr. W. A. Paxton testified:

He had been a practicing physician at Boley for ten years, and was called and found Mr. Wi'lson sitting in a drooped position in the car where the chauffeur sits, saw that he was shot, and found he was dead. The wound was in the breast, through the upper portion of the heart, and death was instantaneous.

Dr. C. M. Bloss testified:

' That he was a practicing physician at Okemah, was called to examine the body of Sam Wilson; and found it in the seat of his car, which was standing in the streets of Boley, and found a gunshot wound in the breast just beneath the sternum, and the skin was powder burnt.

For the defense, Wm. S. Peters testified:

“I have lived at Boley for seven or eight years, practicing law. I knew Mr. Wilson and defendant Chambers during that time. I' saw them two different times that evening. When I left the office for the evening, they were on the other side of the street and called me over and began to talk to me. From their appearance I did not want to talk with them, and I got away from them as quickly as I could conveniently. About an hour later I started home and came in contact with them again on the street, and they began to talk to me again. Something was said about Bradley. They discussed two different subjects with me, and one would say to the other, ‘You can’t tell it,’ and one would say, ‘Let me tell him,’ and Mr. Wilson pushed Chess back, and he would try to talk to me, and Chess would push him back and say let <him tell me.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1919 OK CR 231, 182 P. 714, 16 Okla. Crim. 238, 1919 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 206, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chambers-v-state-oklacrimapp-1919.