Dixon v. State

143 So. 855, 164 Miss. 540, 1932 Miss. LEXIS 226
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 17, 1932
DocketNo. 30089.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 143 So. 855 (Dixon 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
Dixon v. State, 143 So. 855, 164 Miss. 540, 1932 Miss. LEXIS 226 (Mich. 1932).

Opinion

*544 Cook, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The appellant was jointly indicted with Robert Woodward on a charge of the murder of Joe Rustici. There was a severance, and upon the separate trial of the appellant, he was convicted and sentenced to be hanged.

The facts upon which the conviction was based, as they appear from the record, are substantially as follows : Joe Rustici, who was sixty-eight years old, owned and operated a grocery store in Silver City, in Humphreys county; Mississippi. Adjoining this store-room, and opening into it, were a bedroom and kitchen used and occupied by him. Several years prior to the homicide the appellant had been employed by Rustici as a servant in and around the store and premises, and still had free access to all parts of the building, but, at the time of the homicide, the defendant, Robert Woodward, had succeeded him as the servant and attendant of the *545 deceased. On the night of the homicide, the appellant, Robert Woodward, and a woman, Annie Lanrie Bridges, were in and aronnd the store and in the kitchen, where they prepared and ate supper. There were also several white men in the store when the proprietor was ready to close, and all these parties went out in front of the store. Rustici closed the front door of the store and went into his bedroom. Robert Woodward and Annie Laurie Bridges went a short distance down the street and sat in the window of a vacant building, while the white men and the appellant stood conversing in front of the store about fifteen minutes. The white men then entered an automobile and drove away, leaving the appellant in front of the store.

The following morning the deceased was found lying dead in the storeroom in a pool of blood. There were many wounds and bruises on his body, the skull was crushed in several places, and his jaw and one of his shoulders broken. The furnishings of the storeroom were in confusion, and there was a large quantity of blood on the floor of the room. Fear by were two twine-holders, one made of iron and the other of glass, and both were covered with blood. The iron twine-holder weighed about two and one-half pounds, while the glass one was slightly heavier. The pockets of the deceased’s clothing were turned inside out, and the disorder in the rooms of the building indicated that they had been ransacked.

Adeline Wheeler, at whose home the appellant and Annie Laurie Bridges were staying, testified that at ten minutes after eleven o’clock, Robert Woodward was at her home, and that the appellant came to the front and called him out; that later the appellant came back, washed at a hydrant in the yard, and then came into the house; that his clothing was bloody, but he explained that his nose had been bleeding; that he had a roll of money and paid her three dollars and then went into the *546 room where Annie Laurie Bridges was in bed; that she later ordered the appellant to leave her home, and that he and Annie Laurie Bridges did leave. She further testified that the next morning she found a bloody lining of a coat sleeve by the side of her house. She identified the shirt and coat that the appellant had on the night of the homicide. The lining was gone from one sleeve of the coat, and she testified that the coat sleeve lining which she found was of the same character of material as the lining remaining in one sleeve of the coat.

Annie Laurie Bridges testified that the appellant came to her room at the home of Adeline Wheeler and exhibited to her a sum of money; that he stated that he and Robert Woodward had taken the money from Joe Rustici, and that Rustici had recognized him and struck him with a flashlight; that he “jumped down on Mr. Joe and choked him;” that the appellant gave her thirty dollars, and they then went to the home of Ed Blair; that she gave this thirty dollars to Emma Blair; and that later in the night when she became very much frightened, the appellant said to her: “You ain’t done nothing, I am the one that killed old man Joe.”

After some investigation following the discovery of the murder the next morning, E. S. Nolen was deputized to arrest the appellant. He went to his home to- get his pistol out of a safe, and while engaged in opening the safe the appellant appeared at his side and asked for a drink of whisky. The appellant had a pistol sticking in his belt, and was wearing a bloody shirt. When the officer succeeded in opening his safe, he picked up' his pistol and covered the appellant with it, and ordered him to put up his hands. When he was a little slow in so doing, the officer jabbed him with the pistol, and called another party to search the appellant and take his pistol. This search revealed a roll of money, some of which was bloody. ' This officer testified that while he had *547 the appellant covered with the pistol and while the search of his person was in progress, he said to him, “How come you go over there and kill old man Joe?” And the appellant replied, “I did not kill him.” That he (the officer) then said: “Don’t you know everybody knows you killed him. There is his gun, and you are bloody, and you have got a pocket full of money. Where did you get that?” And the appellant then replied, “Yes, sir, go get Robert Woodward too.”

John D. Purvis, sheriff, testified that the appellant made certain statements or confessions to him which were free and voluntary on his part, and made after he had been warned that any statement he made would be used against him. The substance of this statement of appellant, as detailed on direct examination of the sheriff, was that he and Robert Woodward agreed that Woodward would take some groceries from the deceased’s store and place them by a coal house at the rear, and that he (the appellant) would carry them away; that when he went to the rear of the store- to get the groceries, Woodward opened the back door of the store and called to him to come in; that he then followed Woodward into- the store, where they found Rustici; that Woodward threw at Rustici and struck the appellant. On cross-examination of this witness, further details of the statement made by the appellant were developed to the effect that after Woodward threw something and hit him over the eye, he heard another lick and heard Joe Rustici, the deceased, groaning; that he then said, “I am going to leave,”- and Woodward said, “If you leave, I will kill you.” The sheriff further testified on cross-examination that the appellant stated that after they left the store, Woodward threw the- decedent’s pocketbooks under the front gallery; that they then went to a hydrant and washed some of the blood off of him (the appellant); that they then went to a ginhouse near *548 by and divided tbe money and then went to Woodward’s home, where Woodward secured a pair of yellow trousers, for the appellant; that they then went to the river and undressed and he (the appellant) put on the yellow trousers, and Woodward then threw something into the river. The sheriff further testified that he detailed his movements for the balance of the night, all of which were in accord with the testimony of other witnesses, which has been already herein detailed.

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Bluebook (online)
143 So. 855, 164 Miss. 540, 1932 Miss. LEXIS 226, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dixon-v-state-miss-1932.