Gaddis v. State

42 So. 2d 724, 207 Miss. 508, 1949 Miss. LEXIS 359
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 14, 1949
DocketNo. 37296.
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 42 So. 2d 724 (Gaddis 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
Gaddis v. State, 42 So. 2d 724, 207 Miss. 508, 1949 Miss. LEXIS 359 (Mich. 1949).

Opinion

Montgomery, J.

Appellant was convicted in the Circuit Court of Itawamba County on an indictment charging him with the murder of one Noonan Lentz, was sentenced to life imprisonment in the state penitentiary, and appeals here.

*512 The facts in the case are practically without dispute. The appellant and his wife had been having some family difficulties, the nature of which do not appear from this record, and on Monday night, previous to the killing on the following Thursday, July 1, 1948, Gaddis’ wife came to the home of the deceased and his wife and remained there until about sundown on the afternoon of Thursday, July 1st, at which time, the appellant came after her. Mrs. Gaddis was on the porch and Gaddis caught her by the hair with his left hand, while brandishing a pistol in his right hand and led her away by force to his own home. Apparently Mrs. Gaddis escaped in some way not shown in the record, for after a lapse of some 30 or 40 minutes, Gaddis cajne back to the Lentz home and asked Noonan Lentz if she was there and Lentz told him she wasn’t, and that he, Lentz, didn’t want him, Gaddis, to come there any more. Gaddis was mad and invited Lentz out into the road, but Lentz refused to go and told Gaddis to go on home and put up his gun and that he, Gaddis, was mad and that he, Lentz, would talk with him the next morning. Gaddis didn’t say anything more and went back down to the road and started toward his home. Noonan Lentz took a seat in a chair on the front porch and Mrs. Lentz remained on the porch also. Then night came. About 30 minutes after Gaddis had left, Mrs. Lentz heard a noise in the road like some one walking from the direction of the Gaddis home. She looked out and saw the bulk of a small man about the size of Truman Gaddis. About that time a car passed arid the ■lights fell on this figure and Mrs. Lentz recognized the figure to be Truman Gaddis. Mrs. Lentz testified Gaddis was “hunkered” or crouched down on the opposite side of the road from the Lentz mail box. Noonan Lentz was seated on the porch in a straight chair leaning back against the corner of the house where the porch made .a. turn. Gaddis was to the right of the mail box on the opposite side of the road. Lentz lit a cigarette just before the car passed and in a few seconds after the car *513 passed there was a shot that came from the direction of the road. This occurred at about 8:30 P.M. on Thursday, July 1, 1948. The bullet struck Lentz in the left arm, about two inches below the shoulder and entered the chest, passing through both lungs and the upper part of the heart and lodging against the ninth rib on the right side, shattering a part of the rib. Lentz got up, stepped off the porch and fell. In 15 minutes he was dead. Dillard Reeves, Perry Hargett, Cortez Lentz and Rex Barrett, neighbors, on hearing the shot started toward the scene and found Truman Gaddis in the road about 75 yards from the Lentz mail box with a pistol in his right hand. Gaddis handed his gun to Hargett without protest. None of the witnesses last mentioned saw anything to indicate Gaddis was drunk. Cortez Lentz asked Gaddis: “What’s the matter, what happened, have you shot Noonan?”, and Gaddis replied “I don’t know, you go and see”. At about daylight the next morning, Roy Holly and Sam Mayhall found an empty cartridge case qr shell in the ditch nearly straight across the road from the Lentz mail box. This gun and empty shell were turned over to the F. B. I. along with the bullet removed from Noonan Lentz’s body and the empty shell was identified by George Berley, ballistics expert of the P. B. I. as having been fired in the Gaddis pistol. The bullet was compared with test bullets fired from the Gaddis gun and the rifling characteristics were found similar but due to mutilation of the bullet it was not sufficient to permit adequate comparison to be made.

Gaddis’ defense was that he had been drinking beer, gin and whiskey since noon and the last thing he remembers was his drinking beer at the house of one Coot Horn. The next thing he remembered was the next morning when he awoke in the Pulton jail with a hangover. He testified that he didn’t know whether he went to the Noonan Lentz house or what he did. Several witnesses testified for the defendant that they saw him that afternoon and some say he was drinking and others *514 say he was drunk. Numerous witnesses testified for the state that Gaddis was not drunk, though some admitted he had been drinking. On this theory the appellant obtained two instructions, numbered 4 and 5 and reading as follows:

“No. 4. The Court charges the jury for the defendant that even though you should find from the evidence that the defendant shot and killed Lentz, yet the court further charges you that if you find from the evidence that the defendant was so driunk,. coupled with his domestic trouble, on the occasion when Noonan Lentz came to his death that he had lost the power to reason and to form an intent, then you cannot find the defendant guilty of murder.”
“No. 5. The Court charges the jury for the defendant that even though you may believe from the evidence to a moral certainty and beyond all reasonable doubt that this defendant shot and killed Noonan Lentz, yet the court further charges you for the defendant that before you can convict the defendant of murder the evidence must convince your minds beyond all reasonable doubt and to a moral certainty that the defendant was in such a mental condition of sobriety at the very instant of the shooting as to enable him to premeditate and deliberately form the specific intent to unlawfully, feloniously, and of his malice aforethought to kill and murder Noonan Lentz.”

Gaddis further defended on the ground that on the occasion of the killing he was intoxicated and his intoxication in connection with his domestic trouble put bim in a wild and excited state of mind so that he shot his gun recklessly and that his shot unintentionally struck Lentz and killed him at a time when defendant had no deliberate design to effect his death. On this theory he obtained from the court an instruction reading as follows : “The court charges the jury for the defendant that even though you should believe that at the time and on the occasion of this killing that this defendant became *515 and was intoxicated and that his intoxication with his domestic trouble put him in a wild and an excited state of mind so that he shot his gun recklessly and that his shot unintentionally struck Lentz and killed him at a time when defendant had no deliberate design to effect his death, then the court says to you that you cannot find him guilty of murder but under such a state of facts the jury would be warranted only, if it so believed from the evidence beyond a reasonable doubt, in finding him guilty of manslaughter, and in that event, the form of your verdict should be: ‘We, the jury, find the defendant guilty of manslaughter.’ ”

The jury found the appellant guilty as charged but were unable to agree on the punishment and accordingly he was given a life sentence.

The appellant has assigned some fourteen grounds of error. We find no merit in any of them and therefore consider it unnecessary to set them out in this opinion.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
42 So. 2d 724, 207 Miss. 508, 1949 Miss. LEXIS 359, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gaddis-v-state-miss-1949.