Dillard v. State

165 So. 783, 27 Ala. App. 50, 1936 Ala. App. LEXIS 18
CourtAlabama Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 4, 1936
Docket4 Div. 148.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 165 So. 783 (Dillard v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alabama Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dillard v. State, 165 So. 783, 27 Ala. App. 50, 1936 Ala. App. LEXIS 18 (Ala. Ct. App. 1936).

Opinion

BRICKEN, Presiding Judge.

This appellant was put to trial upon an indictment which charged her with the offense of murder in the first degree, in that she unlawfully and with malice aforethought killed Murie Ruffin by shooting him with a gun or pistol, etc.

The record appears regular in all respects, and from the judgment entry it is disclosed that, the trial., in the lower court resulted in the conviction of the defendant of manslaughter in the first degree, and her punishment was fixed, by the jury, at imprisonment in the penitentiary for a term of five years.

The evidence is without dispute or conflict to the effect that Ruffin, the deceased, died as a result of a gunshot wound in his groin, and it is likewise without dispute that the defendant had the gun in her hands at the time the fatal shot was fired. There were no eyewitnesses to the killing and the above-stated fact was ascertained from the confession of the defendant, which was obtained from her by one Dr. Pruitt, who appeared to be the principal witness for the state. There were other witnesses who also testified as to a confession of the defendant.

Dr; Pruitt testified that he went to the home of this appellant, saw and examined the wounded man in a back room of the house, and found a gunshot wound in his right groin about the size of a silver dollar ; that the place was bleeding; the wound was ragged, and ranged downward and outward.

The confession of the defendant, as testified to by the witnesses in each instance, was to the effect that on the afternoon in question, she and her two daughters, aged 9 and 12, were at her home and all of them were ironing clothes, etc. The two children were in the next room to her, and that the deceased came to her home in the afternoon and entered the room she was in; that he was drinking and raised a “rucus” with her, and he had a knife in his hand and got after her with that; that he tore her dress and scratched her breast, etc. Her alleged confession was in line with and of the same import of her testimony where she stated as follows:

“I have got the waist along with me that was torn that day. This is'the front side (Exhibiting the waist). That’s the one that was 'torn there by Murrie Ruffin.

“At this point defendant offered in evidence the garment just referred to and the same is, for purposes of identification, to be marked ‘Exhibit 1.’

“As to what happened when Murrie came up there to my house: He came in there, he was drunk, and he said bad language; he said he wanted to talk to me and I asked him what he wanted to talk about, and he asked me — bad language, and I told him to go on, I didn’t have no time to fool with him, I had to iron them clothes, and he used bad language, and I asked him, I said, ‘You’re drinking,’ and he used bad language, and I told him to go ón and he used bad language again, and he said, ‘Is you going to do what I asked you?’ And I didn’t tell him nothing right then, and I walked on out after that-, out of the room into the other room, tracing around, and he come on out of that dining room and come in the room where the children were, and I come out of that room where I was and corpe in the room where the children were, and I come out of that room where I was and come by him and he grabbed me and tore my dress and started on me with the knife, and I run and he run and I grabbed the gun and told him to get back and he used bad language, and he just come running, and I backed up from where I got the gun up at, and backed up, and he caught hold of the gun, about eight feet from where I got the gun at: I picked up the gun and he caught hold of it and he tussled there and I jerked the the gun loose, and it fired. He was still coming in my direction. After I grabbed 'the gun I backed up eight feet, and then he grabbed hold of the gun, and I wrung it loose, and he continued to come on me and I fired. * * * After the gun fired he just said he was shot. He moved from where he was standing at the time he was *52 shot. He moved about five feet, I reckon, and fell. He was right in the kitchen when he fell and he commenced crawling to the dining room. He was in the dining room at the time these other people came.”

The foregoing testimony of the defendant was in several material ways corroborated by the testimony of her two daughters above mentioned; however, these two girls both testified they did not see the gun when it fired, as their mother and deceased were in another room.

The foregoing evidence was without dispute, a.nd at the conclusion of the evidence for the state, the appellant made motion to exclude the testimony and discharge the defendant; insisting in this connection that the evidence showed without dispute that the defendant was in her own home, where she had the right to be, and that the testimony tending to show the killing also disclosed, under the law, that said killing was justifiable under the law of self-defense, that said defense was fully made out by tl;e evidence upon which the state relied for a conviction. Further, that there was no semblance of testimony tending to show a motive upon the part of the' accused to take the life of the deceased, etc. ' The court overruled the motion to exclude the testimony and discharge the defendant, and in our opinion this ruling was without error. This view obtains for the reason that while there was no substantial conflict in the evidence, as above quoted, there was evidence adduced that search was made for the alleged knife claimed to have been in the possession of the deceased, as above quoted, and that no knife was found upon his person, or about the house where the killing occurred. Thus a conflict in the evidence on this .question was engendered, and there being a conflict in the evidence, even to this extent, the court was required to and did properly submit the case to the jury for its consideration.

There was error, however, in the ruling of the court in declining to let the defendant show by her witness Georgia Law Dillard that just prior to the shooting and during the difficulty that the deceased said hard words to her mother, and that he threatened her. These questions had reference to matters of the res gestas, and were admissible for that reason, as well as under the elementary rules of evidence in a case of this character. Appellant’s counsel made known to the court upon the sustaining of the objection to the question, “Did he threaten her?” that she expected to prove by said witness, if permitted to answer this question, witness would swear that Ruffin did threaten to take the life of the defendant there on that occasion. The question was not objectionable on the ground that it called for an opinion or conclusion of the witness. In Bass v. State, 219 Ala. 282, 122 So. 45, 47, the Supreme Court said: “The question called for evidence of a collective fact, whether or not his father had threatened to kill his mother, qnd not an opinion of the witness. If the exact language is desired, it could be ascertained on further examination.”

Witness Flossie Smith testified: “I am a sister to Dezzie B. Dillard. She and I reside in the same house. * * * At the time the shot was fired I was about forty or fifty yards from my house. When the gun fired I struck out in a trot. I went up there. When I'got there I found Murie (deceased) laying between the kitchen and the dining room.

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Bluebook (online)
165 So. 783, 27 Ala. App. 50, 1936 Ala. App. LEXIS 18, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dillard-v-state-alactapp-1936.