Eaton v. State

140 So. 729, 163 Miss. 130, 1932 Miss. LEXIS 23
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedApril 11, 1932
DocketNo. 29814.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 140 So. 729 (Eaton 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
Eaton v. State, 140 So. 729, 163 Miss. 130, 1932 Miss. LEXIS 23 (Mich. 1932).

Opinion

*137 Anderson, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

Appellant was jointly indicted with Clovis, Dell, and Edgar Eaton at the August term, 1931, of the circuit court of Prentiss county, of the murder of Clyde Rivers, a deputy United States marshal for the Northern District of this state. There was a severance granted appellant, who was tried, convicted of murder, and, the jury being unable to agree on the punishment, was sentenced by the court to life imprisonment in the sthte penitentiary. From that judgment, appellant prosecutes this appeal.

Some months prior to the killing of Rivers, appellant was convicted in the United States District Court for the Northern District of this state of violating the national prohibition act, and was sentenced by the court to pay a fine of two hundred fifty dollars, and serve a term of imprisonment of eighteen months. After six months’ imprisonment he was paroled by the federal judge during good behavior. The federal judge, having knowl *138 edge later that appellant had violated the terms of his parole, revoked it and ordered his arrest and imprisonment for the purpose of carrying out the judgment of conviction. Accordingly, a capias mittimus was issued by the clerk of that court for appellant, and placed in the hands of Clyde Rivers, a deputy United States marshal, for execution. The capias was issued on the 28th day of April, 1931. On Saturday, the 16th day of May of the same year, appellant came into the town of Boone-ville, the county seat of Prentiss county, at about one o’clock in the afternoon. Something like an hour later the city marshal of Booneville, Mr. Fulgham, arrested appellant and started to the courthouse with him. On their way to the courthouse appellant jerked away from Fulgham and fled down an alley and made his escape. Appellant then went to his home in the country and came back to Booneville about dark of the same day. Somewhere between eight and nine o’clock that night Curtis Morgan, a constable of the Booneville district, attempted to arrest the appellant but failed; some other person interfered; and, while Morgan was trying to make the arrest, appellant escaped. Immediately after the attempted arrest by the constable, appellant, together with his brothers Clovis, Edgar, and Dell Eaton, and two others. Tobe Morgan and A. K. Little, got in appellant’s car, which was being driven by appellant. After driving around the courthouse square once or twice, appellant stopped at the Reed filling station and had water put in ihe radiator of his car. There were two shotguns in the car, and appellant was armed with a pistol. One witness testified that, while appellant and his companions were waiting for water to be put in the radiator of the car, Clovis Eaton remarked, “we are going to burn somebody down tonight;” some one on the back seat answered, “We have got the tools to do it -with,” to which Edgar Eaton replied, “Yes, we’ll do it, toó.”

*139 About the time these occurrences were happening, Rivers, the deceased, called on Earl Womack, a deputy sheriff of Prentiss county, to go with him and assist him in arresting the appellant. Rivers was seeking to execute the capias referred to. Rivers and Womack were passing Reed’s filling station when they discovered the Eaton car driven by the appellant going west. Rivers and Womack followed in their car for about two miles, when they overtook the Eaton car, which stopped on the right-hand or north side of the road. Just as the car occupied by Rivers and Womack came up to the Eaton car, one shot was fired by some one in the Eaton car. Womack, the deputy sheriff, testified that as they overtook the Eaton car he saw two men jump from that car and go through a fence on the north side of the road, the fence being something like three feet from the road; that he stopped his car a little in front of the Eaton car, and, as he did so, Rivers sprang to the ground, approached the Eaton car, declared himself the United States deputy marshal, and stated that he had a capias for the arrest of appellant; that immediately, upon making this statement, Edgar Eaton appeared on the scene and engaged in some sort of scuffle with Rivers; while thus engaged, Rivers reouested the witness to get a gun out of the Eaton car which he had evidently seen; that about this time Rivers disengaged himself from Edgar Eaton and struck him on the head with his pistol, knocking him down, and thereupon shots were fired from a northwesterly direction, the direction taken by the other Eatons in their flight from the car. The evidence showed that many buckshot struck Rivers in the back and the side of his body, from the effects of which wounds he died within á few minutes.

Dave Griscoll lived a short distance from where ¡the killing took place. He testified that after the killing, and between nine and ten o’clock that night, appellant and *140 Clovis Eaton came to Ms home and hollered “hello;” that he found them in the back yard; that they stated that a man had been shot up the road, and said, “We are going to take your car, you will find it at Pap’s in the morning;” that they took the car, and the next morMng he found it at his father’s; that appellant had a pistol; and that Clovis had a gun of some description, it was long.

Alma G-ullett, a witness for the state, testified that on the 6th or 7th of May, the month in which Rivers was killed, she was with appellant; that they had made a trip together up into Tennessee; that on that trip they met a car that had a puncture; that there was a car on the other side of the road from it; that appellant, on seeing these cars, said “be guessed it was the law trying to arrest Mm and said it took one time to die and he didn’t aim for any law to take him, he knew he had broken his parole, but he didn’t aim for nobody to put him in jail . . . he reached over in the pocket of the door and said he didn’t aim for anybody to take him and got his pistol.” and said he heard the government' officers were after him.

The evidence did not show who fired the .fatal shot or shots. It was at night. The evidence showed, however, that the shots came from the direction in which the Eatons had gone when they were overtaken by Rivers and Womack.

Appellant assigns and argues as error the action of the court in ruling out certain questions propounded by appellant to the jury on their voir dire examination. Re-fore setting out those questions, however, we will set out the questions which the court did permit the appellant to propound to the jury, and also the questions which the court itself propounded to the jury, to all of which the jury gave negative answers. Appellant was permitted to ask these questions: “I want to know have any of you formed any opinion of the guilt or innocencé of *141

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Bluebook (online)
140 So. 729, 163 Miss. 130, 1932 Miss. LEXIS 23, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/eaton-v-state-miss-1932.