Eaton v. State

28 So. 2d 230, 200 Miss. 729, 1946 Miss. LEXIS 341
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 9, 1946
DocketNo. 36249.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 28 So. 2d 230 (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, 28 So. 2d 230, 200 Miss. 729, 1946 Miss. LEXIS 341 (Mich. 1946).

Opinions

*733 L. A. Smith, Sr., J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

Appellant was convicted of the murder of Dalton Wren. The jury was unable to agree upon the punishment, and accordingly he was sentenced to imprisonment for life in the penitentiary.

Dalton Wren married the daughter of the appellant, and to this union were born two children, quite young at the time of the slaying. They lived about ten miles in the country from Booneville, while appellant’s home was on the outskirts of that city. During the latter part of September 1945, while her father and mother were absent in another city, appellant’s daughter, with the two children, came to the home of her father with her face beaten and bruised, and the parents on their return found them there. The State, in its brief, says about it: “Evidently a temporary separation from her husband, the deceased, *734 which from all of the evidence was the cause of the hilling. ’ ’

About ten days later, responding to urgency of the husband, which the wife tried to say was in part in the form of threats to take one of the children away from her if she did not, appellant’s daughter returned to her husband, the deceased. Quoting further from the State’s brief, we find that: “While they were separated, the. evidence shows that the deceased threatened the life of appellant, committing many acts of violence against- him, and on several occasions using abuse and insulting language while talking to his father-in-law, the appellant.” .Appellant told his son-in-law to stay away from his home.

On October 22,1945, the deceased brought his wife and children to town in a school truck. The daughter asked her husband to put her and the children out at the corner near her father’s home instead of in front of his gate in order to avert trouble between her husband and father, and to call for her at the same corner in the afternoon when he was ready to return home. The appellant was uptown, the morning of the trouble, and seeing his son-in-law upon the street returned home, seeking to avoid having any trouble with him.

Mrs. Wren and the two children were at her father’s home that afternoon when her husband came by to pick them up. Instead of stopping at the corner, as she had requested him to do, the son-in-law drove up in front of the gate of appellant and parked there, staying in the truck. With him were two neighbors and his own father, two of whom dismounted from the truck. Someone in the house exclaimed, “Here is Dalton.” Appellant immediately went to the living room of his home, obtained a pistol he kept there, stuck it into the belt of his overalls, and went down the steps part of the way toward the truck. He said to his son-in-law: “Dalton, I have asked you not to stop in front of my house anymore;” and, according to appellant’s testimony, the son-in-law retorted: “Well, I am here, and what in the hell are you going to do about *735 it, ’ ’ at the same time reaching into the bib of his overalls for a pistol, appellant feared. Appellant then pulled his pistol and shot deceased in what he considered his necessary self-defense. The father of deceased testified he never saw the pistol until appellant raised it to shoot, ‘ ‘ about that time, ’ ’ that is, the end of the above colloquy.

The father of the victim had gone into the house for one of the children. The wife of deceased had gotten the baby, and was sitting in the truck with it at the time of the shooting. The father of the deceased was between the porch and the street. He was looking at appellant when he fired the shot, and hence did not see what his son was doing. The wife testified that she could see her husband’s left hand on the steering wheel but could not see his right hand, and did not know, what he was doing with it. The friend who had gotten out of the truck into the street said he had his back turned to the son-in-law, watching the father-in-law, and hence did not know what the former was doing at the time of the shooting. The other passenger in the truck testified that he could see the head and left hand of the son-in-law but could not see what he was doing, if anything, with his right hand.

This one shot killed the son-in-law. The wife testified that he owned no pistol, and the undertaker testified that in removing the body he did not feel any pistol, but made no search for it. Appellant testified that he thought his son-in-law was “going for his gun.” He had reason to apprehend that this was true, and that his son-in-law carried a pistol in the bib of his overalls, because of an experience he had had with the deceased at a barber shop in the City of Booneville shortly prior to the killing. On that occasion, while appellant was in the barber shop, his son-in-law entered, called him to the back and commenced cursing him about taking his wife and children away from him. Appellant assured him that he had nothing to do with it, and asked him to leave and let him alone. Appellant started back to the front of the shop when the deceased jerked him back and put his hand down in the *736 bib of his overalls and pulled out a gun so that the appellant saw the handle and hammer of it, and applied an obscene epithet to him. There was corroboration of this episode at the barber shop.

However, when appellant undertook to lay the predicate for this corroboration, in answer to the question “Were people hearing it?” he replied “Yes, a fellow got up and tried to stop it, and he stepped back and jerked his hand to bib to says ‘ What in the hell have you got to do with it?’ ” The court sustained the objection of the district attorney to this testimony, although without objection the next question and answer that the man was seeking to prevent the son-in-law from pursuing appellant was admitted.

The evidence offered of appeals to the sheriff and mayor for protection of the law, and refused admission by the trial court, was incompetent, and the court was correct in excluding it. Brice v. State, 167 Miss. 255, 148 So. 348.

A witness in the case approached the deceased in connection with the trouble between him and appellant. In the conversation, deceased said: “that there wasn’t any way to settle this trouble and there wasn’t anything I could say to him to change his feeling. ’ ’ The court sustained the objection of the district attorney to this testimony.

In the same conversation, this witness testified, referring to the son-in-law: “He just said Plato had told him to stay away from his house, but said he wasn’t afraid to go out there, wasn’t afraid to go in the house if necessary, that he wouldn’t do a damn thing, says ‘I have done tried him out and know he ain’t going to do anything.’ ” The court sustained the district attorney’s objection and said to the jury: “Gentlemen, you won’t pay any attention to this last conversation, there is not a semblance of a threat in it. ’ ’ Another witness stated that he was hailed by the deceased on one occasion, as he was driving by, whereupon he stopped, and deceased asked the witness for some cartridges, “I said for a rifle or pistol?1” and he said “a pistol,” and I said “No, you are *737 not going to kill anybody are ? ’ ’ and he said ‘ ‘ I might.

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Bluebook (online)
28 So. 2d 230, 200 Miss. 729, 1946 Miss. LEXIS 341, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/eaton-v-state-miss-1946.