Crum v. State
This text of 349 So. 2d 1059 (Crum 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.
Opinion
Virginia CRUM
v.
STATE of Mississippi.
Supreme Court of Mississippi.
Harry L. Kelley, Jackson, for appellant.
A.F. Summer, Atty. Gen. by Frankie Walton White, Sp. Asst. Atty. Gen., Jackson, for appellee.
Before INZER, ROBERTSON and BOWLING, JJ.
BOWLING, Justice, for the Court.
This appeal is by appellant from a conviction in the Circuit Court of Alcorn County of manslaughter and a sentence of fifteen years with six years suspended. Appellant assigns only one ground of error, as follows:
Appellant respectfully submits that the lower court erred in admitting into evidence a towel and an officer's testimony as to what he saw at appellant's home as this was the result of an illegal search and seizure made without a warrant, not as an incident to arrest and without consent of appellant.
This assignment of error necessitates a discussion of the pertinent parts of the evidence. The evidence is practically undisputed. About eight o'clock P.M., on April 19, 1974, Sheriff Ralph Lambert of Alcorn County received a telephone call from a woman who asked to speak to the sheriff. Upon ascertaining that the sheriff was on the telephone, the woman transferred the telephone to another woman who identified herself as the defendant, Virginia Crum. She told Sheriff Lambert that she had shot her husband and wanted him to come to her brother's house where she had gone to make the telephone call. She did not have a telephone at her home. Her brother and sister-in-law lived about one hundred yards from the Crum residence.
Sheriff Lambert and a deputy, Harold Mullins, went to the home of Mrs. Crum's brother. Upon arrival, Mrs. Crum handed the sheriff a pistol from her purse and told him that she had shot her husband with the gun. She further stated that her husband was still in the house. The sheriff and deputy went immediately to the Crum home, entered and found Mr. Crum lying on the living room floor near the couch. They found him to be dead. An examination was then made of the premises. The house consisted of four main rooms a living room, *1060 kitchen and two bedrooms. On looking into one bedroom, the officers found what obviously was the result of a struggle, such as an overturned lamp and other items in disarray. In the other bedroom they found a dresser with a broken mirror and a bullet laying on top of the dresser. In the bedroom where there appeared to have been a struggle, they found a bullet embedded in the wall over the bed. They found drops of blood leading from this bedroom to the living room and to the point where Crum's body was found. These drops of blood were small at the beginning but increased in size near the body.
By the time this initial and hurried examination of the premises was made, an ambulance arrived to take charge of Crum's body.
Due to the examination of the premises and finding the two bullets, Sheriff Lambert then determined that it was necessary for him to go to the hospital where the body had been taken and examine the body. The hospital was an eight to ten minute drive from the Crum residence. Upon arriving there, it was ascertained that Mrs. Crum had been brought to the hospital, evidently by some member of her family.
The sheriff and his deputy viewed the body and found that it had received five shots two in the chest area, two in the groin area, and one in the leg. After considering this investigative evidence along with what he had already seen in a hurried examination of the premises, Sheriff Lambert instructed Deputy Mullins to return to the Crum home and continue the investigation there. Deputy Mullins later testified that from the time they first left the Crum home until he returned was approximately twenty-five minutes.
About the same time Deputy Mullins left the hospital, Sheriff Lambert determined that he needed to secure a statement from Mrs. Crum as to what occurred surrounding the entire incident. He asked her to go to the jail with him for the purpose of securing this statement. She agreed to do so and accompanied him, without being arrested, although Sheriff Lambert stated on cross-examination that if she had refused he would have had to arrest her and take her over her objections. Upon reaching the jail, Mrs. Crum signed a "waiver of rights" form and freely gave the sheriff a written statement. After this statement was secured and signed, the sheriff confronted Mrs. Crum with the facts that were found in the bedroom and the trail of blood. She had not related to him anything that happened in the bedrooms in her written statement. According to Sheriff Lambert, she then made oral changes, and according to the evidence this was partially brought about by a towel that Deputy Mullins brought to the jail after he had gone back and completed an examination of the Crum home.
Deputy Mullins testified that upon returning to the Crum home and looking around the premises he saw a towel underneath a chair in the living room. He examined the towel and found on it what appeared to be powder burns. While there, he drew a rough sketch of the premises, showing the location of the rooms, the body, and the articles found. He returned to the jail with the towel and the sketch while Sheriff Lambert was still questioning Mrs. Crum. Later, she was arrested and charged with the murder of her husband.
The usual hearing was had out of the presence of the jury, with the attorney for appellant contending that the second trip and examination of the Crum home when the towel was found constituted an unreasonable and illegal search, and, therefore, this article of evidence was inadmissible. In overruling this contention, the lower court said: "The search, even though interrupted by some several minutes by going to the hospital to view the body, was still in the process of being made when Officer Mullins went back to complete it at a later time."
The primary question on this appeal is whether or not the second trip to the Crum home by Deputy Mullins some twenty-five or thirty minutes after leaving to view Crum's body at the hospital was a continuation of the initial permitted search *1061 and investigation, or whether or not it was an unreasonable and thereby illegal search and seizure under the provisions of the Fourth Amendment to the United States Constitution and Article 3, section 32 of the Mississippi Constitution.
Appellant relies primarily on the case of May v. State, 199 So.2d 635 (Miss. 1967), and two prior cases cited in the May opinion: Page v. State, 208 Miss. 347, 44 So.2d 459 (1950), and Lancaster v. State, 188 Miss. 374, 195 So. 320 (1940).
The May case is not applicable. There the defendant had already been taken to jail; later the officers went to defendant's home after getting the defendant's fifteen-year-old son to accompany them to the premises. The son let the officers into the house and permitted them to make a search. The Court merely held that defendant's rights against an unconstitutional search could not be waived by his son.
In Lancaster v. State, supra, defendant was convicted of killing his wife. She was found lying by the steps leading into the house, after which the sheriff came to the house and the accused made no objection to his going about the premises. Later, the accused was arrested and lodged in jail. After securing information from the physician who examined the deceased, the officer, on the next day after the homicide, made an affidavit for a search warrant, obtained it, and made a search of the premises, resulting in the finding of damaging evidence against the accused.
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