Cole v. State

150 So. 757, 170 Miss. 800, 1933 Miss. LEXIS 14
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 6, 1933
DocketNo. 30533.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 150 So. 757 (Cole 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
Cole v. State, 150 So. 757, 170 Miss. 800, 1933 Miss. LEXIS 14 (Mich. 1933).

Opinions

*804 Cook, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

In the circuit court of Warren county, the appellant, Eritz Cole, was convicted of the murder of Pat Henry, Jr., and was sentenced to be hanged.

The testimony shows that the appellant and one George Whitaker and Pat Henry, Jr., were friends, and had been for many years. For several hours preceding the killing, the appellant and Whitaker were together attending a ball game and riding in Whitaker’s automobile. About seven o’clock P. M. they drove to the home of a young lady, where Pat Henry, Jr., was visiting. They stopped in front of this house, and Henry went out to the automobile, where, in the presence of a brother of the young woman, the three men engaged in a friendly conversation for some time. Whitaker finally went into the house, leaving Henry and the appellant engaged in conversation. Shortly thereafter Whitaker returned to the automobile and started an argument with Henry about his attentions to the young lady, which resulted in a fist fight, in which the appellant was in no-way involved, either by word or act.

From the time the automobile stopped in front of the home of the young lady until after the shooting the appellant did not leave his seat in the automobile, but all the while wás seated with his feet resting on the running-board thereof. While Whitaker and Henry were engaged in the tussle, the appellant picked up Whitaker’s automatic shotgun, which was in the automobile, and, without having said a word to anyone while the fight was in progress, and without any provocation whatever, first shot and killed Whitaker, and immediately shot and killed the said Pat Henry, Jr. Is.

' A witness for the state who appeared on the scene about the time of the shooting testified that he had a tussle with the appellant over the possession of the gun;. that they finally .dropped the gun and went to a nearby.. store; that the appellant called the proprietor, and, fail *805 ing- to secure admission, kicked the glass door out and entered, and that he then said to the proprietor of the store, “Call the law, somebody has been killed.” The appellant testified that he drank some whisky during the afternoon preceding the killing. The two eyewitnesses to the shooting, the proprietor of the nearby store, the sheriff, and the two deputies who arrested him testified that the appellant had been drinking some, but that there was nothing in his appearance or conduct to indicate that he was drunk at the time of the shooting.

The fact of the killing was not denied, and the only defense offered was that of the insanity of the accused at the time of the shooting. In support of this defense, there was offered evidence to the effect that, after the appellant’s return from approximately two years’ service overseas in the World War, he was periodically insane, during which periods his mind was totally blank, and that after these periods, when his normal state of mind had returned, he remembered nothing that happened during these periods. As tending to show that the appellant suffered irrational and insane periods, there was offered evidence to the effect that on one occasion he shot and killed his entire flock of chickens for which he had built houses and which he was carefully nursing and raising. On another occasion he killed all his dogs, nine in number, of which he was very fond. On another occasion, while he was in his home' with his wife, and a friend, he suddenly got out of bed, seized his pistol, and shot twice into his clock, which was on a mantel by which his friend was standing, and then seized his shotgun and shot three times into the wall of the room. Other instances of shooting by the accused at imaginary objects, and thereby endangering the lives of friends and relatives, as well as incidents indicating an unsound and irrational mind, were testified to, and the testimony was to the effect that in each instance when he committed these acts the appellant was entirely sober, and that he remembered-nothing of them when he regained his normal mind.

*806 Dr. W. E. Clark, an expert in mental diseases, who has been connected with the Mississippi Insane Hospital for fifteen years, and who heard all the testimony offered at the trial, testified that the appellant’s acts on the various occasions described by the witnesses, and at the time he killed the deceased, could only be explained on the theory that he was either drunk, under the influence of cocaine, or insane; that he was not suffering from that form of insanity known as paranoia, but, assuming that he was not drunk, or under the influence of drugs, he was epileptic, or an epileptic equivalent, that is, suffering from a blank state of mind that takes the place of an epileptic seizure, and that during the period of these attacks he was wholly incapacitated to recognize and appreciate the nature and quality of his acts or to distinguish between right and wrong. In rebuttal, the state offered Dr. S. W. Johnson, who testified that, in his opinion, the appellant was not suffering from any form of insanity at the time of the killing, or on the occasions testified to by witnesses for the defense, but that his abnormal mental condition on these occasions was due to alcoholic intoxication.

The appellant was offered as a witness in his own behalf, and he neither admitted nor denied that he killed the deceased, but testified that he had no knowledge or recollection whatever of any of the incidents of the evening in question, and that he had no recollection of any of the various incidents which were detailed by the witnesses as indicating a diseased and disordered mind. There was also testimony to the effect that during his lifetime the appellant’s father suffered from similar periodical attacks, during which time his mind was a total blank.

Anticipating the defense of insanity, the state asked a number of its witnesses, on direct examination, if they ever observed the appellant when he appeared to be insane, or if they had ever heard it said or intimated that he was insane. Practically the same questions were asked *807 as to the state of mind of Dan Cole, deceased, the father of appellant. One witness who testified that he had never heard it intimated that the appellant or his father was insane was asked, on cross-examination, if he had not heard Dr. I. C. Knox testify in a contest of the will of the said Dan Cole, deceased, that he was insane when he wrote his will. The witness denied having heard Dr. Knox testify in that case, and thereafter the state offered in evidence an order of the chancery conrt directing an issue of fact as to the validity of the will of Dan Cole, deceased, and a decree of that court, adjudicating that, at the time of the execution of said will, the testator was of sound mind and memory. Over the objections of appellant, this decree was admitted in evidence, the court saying: “It, of course, has no bearing on this case other than to throw light upon what Dr. Knox testified to, if anything, in the trial of that issue. . . . It is admitted for that purpose only, and only because of the question asked before the jury by defendant’s counsel of the witness, R. B. Hall, as to what Dr. Knox testified to in the trial of the will case referred to.”

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Related

McDaniel v. State
356 So. 2d 1151 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1978)

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Bluebook (online)
150 So. 757, 170 Miss. 800, 1933 Miss. LEXIS 14, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cole-v-state-miss-1933.