Fanning v. State

1923 OK CR 369, 224 P. 359, 27 Okla. Crim. 27, 1923 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 368
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma
DecidedDecember 31, 1923
DocketNo. A-4171.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 1923 OK CR 369 (Fanning v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fanning v. State, 1923 OK CR 369, 224 P. 359, 27 Okla. Crim. 27, 1923 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 368 (Okla. Ct. App. 1923).

Opinion

BESSEY, J.

Arthur Fanning, plaintiff in error, here designated the defendant, was on the 11th day of June, 1921, in the district court of Canadian county, convicted of the crime of manslaughter in the first degree, for the death of Garnett Barker on December 24, 1920. His punishment was fixed at confinement in the state penitentiary for a term 7 years. From the judgment rendered on the verdict, he appeals to this court.

The record in this case is voluminous, comprising more than 1,000 typewritten pages. Both sides were represented by able counsel, and, considering the number of persons involved in the difficulty out of which this tragedy, grew, and the complex attending circumstances, the record is singularly free from error. The only complaint urged by the defendant is that the instructions of the court were insufficient and misleading.

*29 In order that this assignment of error may be comprehended it will be necessary to make'a statement of the testimony at some length. This homicide and the death of Elmer Fanning at the same time were the culmination of ill feeling between Garnett Barker and his father, Beverly Barker, and their friends and employes on the one side, and, the. defendant and his brother, Clint Fanning, and their friends and employes on the other' side. At and near the scene of the homicide there were 7 men, armed with various kinds of weapons, among which were 3 shotguns, '2 or more pistols, and a double-bitted ax. Garnett Barker and Beverly Barker, his father, lived on farms adjacent to lands leased and cultivated by the defendant and his brother, Clint Fanning, located between two Barker farms. On this leased land there was about 30 acres of standing corn then being harvested by the Fannings, assisted by three neighbors. One-third of the com so harvested was to be delivered to one of the Barkers on the Barker premises. The one to whom this rent portion originally belonged had transferred his interest to the other Barker shortly before harvest time. During the crop season the Barkers and their employes passed back and forth by and through the Fanning cornfield, sometimes going through the field and sometimes skirting it on either side.

During the crop season and before the com was gathered some stock had broken into the cornfield and eaten or destroyed some of the corn. There was some question as to whether Beverly Barker or the defendant, Fanning, was responsible for the trespass of the stock in the corn. In any event some controversy arose between the parties with reference to that portion of the crop so destroyed. That matter had been adjusted between the parties, and no further trouble was had between them until about the 21st or 22d of December, 1920, two or three days before the homicide. At that time Garnett Barker, accompanied by a hired hand, Tom *30 Womack, and Louis Barker, a cousin, came through the cornfield where the defendant was shucking com. Garnett Barker had an ax with him, and it is claimed by the defendant and his witnesses that the deceased threatened to chop the the defendant up with this ax; that, however, was denied by the other witnesses accompanying the deceased at that time.

On the night of the 23d of December, the night before the homicide, the defendant sent his brother, Clint Fanning, over to the home of Ed and Dave La Follette, who lived about a mile southeast of Arthur Fanning’s residence, to employ the two La Follettes to help shuck corn the next day, in order that the shucking might be finished before Christmas. At that time Arthur Fanning’s father, T. E. Fanning, was living about 20 miles east of the home of Arthur Fanning, and, as Arthur Fanning was preparing to leave the Barker neighborhood as soon as the corn crop was gathered, he had been hauling his part of the corn crop to his father’s place. On the day before the homicide he had returned from his father’s, where he had delivered a load of the corn, accompanied by his brother-in-law, a Mr. Phillips, and by his brother, Elmer Fanning, who was badly crippled and unable to perform manual labor.

On the morning that the homicide occurred, after the chores had been done by Garnett Barker, Louis Barker, and Tom Womack, they were ready to leave and go . back to Beverly Barker’s about 10 o’clock. Garnett Barker went out and procured a stick which he measured and cut to the length of 26 inches, with the avowed intention of measuring the wagon box of the defendant, Arthur Fanning. He also procured a .38 special Colt’s revolver which he owned, and asked his wife where the shells for the revolver were kept. She refused to disclose their whereabouts to him, and urged him not to take his gun with him. He replied that he was *31 going to take the gun with, him for protection, and that he was going to protect himself. His wife still refusing to show him where the shells were, he made a seareh for them and found them in another house some distance from the main residence. He loaded his revolver and put two or three of the shells in his pocket. Then either the deceased himself, or one of the parties with him, procured a double-bitted ax, and with these weapons and the 26-inch stick the deceased, Tom Womack, and Louis Barker left the home of the deceased and started for the home of Beverly Barker, passing through the Fanning cornfield.

At about this time Clint Fanning, brother of the defendant had left the cornfield with Ed La Follette’s wagon loaded with corn to take the same to the home of Garnett Barker, as part of his share of the crop. He was accompanied by Elmer Fanning, the crippled brother. When the deceased, Garnett Barker, was some 75 or 100 yards north of the road he or his companion saw Clint Fanning coming down the road with the load of corn, and the deceased and his companion turned and walked back down to the road, where they met Clint and Elmer Fanning. Some conversation occurred there, the substance of which was that the deceased asked Clint Fanning when they would finish, and he stated he thought they would finish by noon, or in time to get home for Christmas. Then, the deceased gave some directions about putting a board across the window of the - crib to keep the corn from rolling out, and with his companion started up the road in the opposite direction from which Clint Fanning had come.

At this time Garnett Barker was armed with the .38 caliber revolver. After he and his companion had proceeded .up the road perhaps 100 yards, according to the evidence, Elmer Fanning, the crippled brother, asked Clint if he saw *32 the gun in Barker’s pocket, and Clint stated that he did. Without saying anything further Elmer Panning got •' off the wagon and started back up the road following the deceased and his two companions.

At this time 17 or 18 rows of corn remained to be gathered; the rows being less than a quarter of a mile long. Arthur Fanning was shucking corn at- the south end of the rows and just north of the road; Dave La Follette was shucking about 100 yards north and along the west side of the cornfield; Ed La Follette, his brother, was shucking almost opposite him on the other side of the corn row — each shucking north, one being right-handed and the other left. • The deceased, Garnett Barker, continued up the road, to the east until he came to the wagon where Arthur Fanning was shucking corn.

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Related

Whitfield v. State
1929 OK CR 528 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma, 1929)

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Bluebook (online)
1923 OK CR 369, 224 P. 359, 27 Okla. Crim. 27, 1923 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 368, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fanning-v-state-oklacrimapp-1923.