Folks v. State

95 So. 619, 85 Fla. 238
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedFebruary 26, 1923
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 95 So. 619 (Folks v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Folks v. State, 95 So. 619, 85 Fla. 238 (Fla. 1923).

Opinion

Whitfield, J.

Upon an indictment charging murder in the first degree by shooting Lonnie Studstill in Levy County, Florida, Floyd Folks was convicted of manslaughter and took writ of error to a judgment imposing a seven years sentence.

A motion was made for a change of venue upon the ground that it. is not practicable to obtain in the county a fair and impartial jury for the trial of the case, because the prejudice against the defendant is so widespread and acute and -because the deceased “belonged to a family, the members of which either by blood or marriage, is very numerous, and there is scarcely a locality in the county where some one of said family, either of affinity or consanguinity, does not reside.” The motion was supported by affidavits of “opinion that it would be impractical to get an impartial jury in the said county to try the said Folks on said charge or to give to the said Folks a fair and impartial trial.”

The court overruled the motion and it does not appear that there was any difficulty in securing “an impartial jury” as is required by the constitution and contemplated by the statutes under which the jurors are selected. No [241]*241abuse .of discretion or unfairness to the defendant is shown by the refusal to change the venue. Adams v. State, 28 Fla. 511, 10 South. Rep. 106.

An application for a change of venue is addressed to the sound judicial discretion of the triál court, and the refusal of such application will not be held to constitute reversible error by the appelláte court, unless it is plainly made to appear from the transcript of the record that the trial court acted unfairly and abused such discretion. Chisolm v. State, 74 Fla. 50, 76 South. Rep. 329.

It appears that the decedent, the accused and his brother made a round-trip journey in an automobile and procured a quantity of moonshine, .an intoxicating beverage, of which they partook pretty freely. On the journey a pistol was borrowed by the accused and at another place cartridges for the pistol were bought by the accused. But it does not appear that this was done with any ill will or unlawful intent towards the deceased. Before the trio on their return reached the place from which they started, the deceased .who sat on the front seat with the accused was shot in the chest and the accused who was driving the automobile was shot in the lower right side. Another person was met on the road and induced to ■ drive the car for a mile or more to the starting point because of the wounded driver. Upon arrival at the initial point the deceased' was taken from the ear and died within an hour afterwards.

A physician testified that when he was called to the automobile “Floyd recognized me, but Lonnie said nothing, and I saw that Lonnie was dying. I proceeded to the other side of the car. With the assistance of some one that came up, we helped him just inside the store door and laid him on the counter, and there we administered first aid help to him, and in that time they had gotten Floyd [242]*242through the store, back into my .office, which is in the rear of the building. At that time I asked Lonnie J. Studstill where he was shot, and he s.ays ‘there’ (indicating chest), just put his hand up there, and I examined him there and found there was 'a 'bullet wound in his chest. It was about one and three-quarter inches'just right Of the median line, belowthe fork of the breast'bone. ' I did hot máke an examination of the wound to see the direction it went, until after he was'dead and we laid him out. I saw and made an examination after he was dead. I found that' the wound went right straight in. In my opinion, from what I saw of the wound, he was shot from the front. The bullet did not go through. It lodged in the body. That wound caused death. Other than that shot in the chest, he was shot between — in the three off fingers of the hand — left hand — the three off fingers. As to the náture of that wound in the hand, there was just a hole all the way through all three of" those fingers, piercing through. He was not shot any place else. Q. At the time that you helped him out of the car and carried him to your office, as you testified, did he or not ask you what his condition was. A. He did after I got him inside. After he asked me, I stated to him what his condition was. My answer was that he was in a desperate condition; that his chances were ninety-nine to one against him. " * * * In my opinion that wound caused his death; it was sufficent to cause death. The wound in the chest was sufficient to cause death.”

Testimony was adduced that “Mr. Alford, before Lonnie died some three or six minutes, warned and cautioned Lonnie Studstill that he was going, to die. . He says to Lonnie Studstill, ‘Lonnie, you are going to die, you know you are going to .die; you ain’t, going to be but a few minutes about it;, tell us who shot you; and he said ‘Floyd Folks.’ [243]*243Lonnie said ‘Floyd Folks.’ I judge lie lived three to six minutes after that statement.” * “He did not say whether Floyd shot him on purpose or by accident.” *' “He asked me several times to stay with him.”

It is contended that the admission over objection of the testimony as to what the deceased said about who shot him was reversible error because it was not properly admissible as. a dying declaration.

To render dying declarations admissible, the judge must be fully satisfied that the deceased declarant, at the time of their utterance, knew that his death, was imminent and inevitable, and that he entertained no hope of recovery. This absence of all hope of recovery and appreciation by the deceased of Lis speedy and inevitable death is a preliminary foundation that must always be laid to make such declaration admissible. It is a mixed question of law and fact for the judge to decide before permitting the introduction of the declaration itself. It is not necessary that such preliminary test should consist of express utterances, but it may be gathered from any circumstances or from all the circumstances of the ease. Lowman v. State, 80 Fla. 18, 85 South. Rep. 166.

Evidence of dying declarations is. admissible only in cases where the declarant has abandoned all hope of recovery from the injury received at the hands of the accused,' and is convinced that his death is inevitable and near at hand. But in passing upon the question of whether the declarant was in such mental state at the time of making the declaration as to render it admissible under the' foregoing test, resort may be'had tó all the circujnstánces of the cáse and' expressed utterances are not essential.

Whether a sufficient, and proper predicate had been laid for the admission in evidence of dying declarations is a [244]*244primary matter for determination' by the trial.court; being a mixed question of law and fact, and the judgment- of such court thereon is entitled to great weight, every presumption being:in,favor of. its correctness,- but such ruling is subject to review by an appellate court, though it will not be disturbed, unless it clearly appears to be erroneous. Richardson v. State, 80 Fla. 634, 86 South. Rep. 619; Copeland v. State, 58 Fla. 26, 50 South. Rep. 621; Little v. Barlow, 37 Fla. 232, 20 South. Rep. 240; Malone v. State, 72 Fla. 28, 72 South. Rep. 415; Gardiner v. State, 55 Fla. 25, 45 South. Rep. 1028.

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Bluebook (online)
95 So. 619, 85 Fla. 238, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/folks-v-state-fla-1923.