Gray Ex Rel. Gray v. Earls

250 S.W. 567, 298 Mo. 116, 1923 Mo. LEXIS 158
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedApril 6, 1923
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 250 S.W. 567 (Gray Ex Rel. Gray v. Earls) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gray Ex Rel. Gray v. Earls, 250 S.W. 567, 298 Mo. 116, 1923 Mo. LEXIS 158 (Mo. 1923).

Opinions

On the 25th day of September, 1919, one Ollie Gray died as the result of gunshot wounds inflicted upon him on that day by respondents. On June 16th, 1920, the appellants, minor children of deceased, brought this suit for damages in the sum of ten thousand dollars, in the Circuit Court of Pemiscot County, by their guardian, the mother of appellants, and widow of Ollie Gray, who had not in her own behalf brought suit on account of the death of her husband. There was a verdict for defendants, by ten jurors, and from the judgment thereon plaintiffs have appealed by due steps taken.

The petition charged that the defendants "wrongfully" fired and discharged a loaded gun at and against Ollie Gray, "thereby wrongfully and without any just *Page 124 cause or excuse injuring and wounding the said Ollie Gray, from which injuries and wounds and unlawful acts of the defendants" he immediately thereafter died. The petition did not charge negligence, nor did it set forth the particular circumstances under which the shooting was done by defendants. The separate answers filed by the defendants were identical in character. Each consisting of (1) a general denial, (2) a plea of self-defense and (3) a plea that the shooting and killing was caused by the negligence and carelessness of Ollie Gray directly contributing thereto. There was no specification of facts constituting either of these defenses. Plaintiff's reply was a general denial. Defendants objected to the introduction of any evidence, upon the grounds that the petition failed to state a cause of action against defendants, or either of them, and that there was a misjoinder of parties defendant. The objection was overruled, and defendants excepted.

The shooting occurred at night, and near the cabin of one Tom Collins, a negro. The persons present were defendants Ed Stout and Alvin Earls, a man named Hannah, Ollie Gray and Tom Collins. All of them had crops in one enclosed field of about one hundred and sixty acres adjacent to the cabin of Tom Collins, and all lived nearby. This negro had been stealing corn from the fields of the others, and they had been watching to catch him stealing. All four of them had been watching the negro on the afternoon and night of the day before the day on which the shooting occurred. On the night before, they had heard him pulling corn in Gray's field, and heard later the sounds as of a sack being thrown down and the feeding of hogs. Defendant Earls testified that on that occasion they heard near the hog pen the sound of talking, and Ollie Gray said it was "Knox and Tom," Knox being also a negro and living near to the other.

They agreed to watch again the following night. On the next afternoon Hannah and Earls watched the negro Tom Collins, and noticed he was wearing a white shirt. The arrangement was that the four of them should meet *Page 125 again that night, at the place they had met the night before. The defendants and Hannah, all armed with shot guns, went that night to the place agreed upon, which appears to have been in the field of defendant Stout. For some reason not appearing Ollie Gray did not join them there. He went alone. On that afternoon Earls says he told Gray they were going armed and to bring his gun, and that Gray replied it was out of commission. Earls suggested he get one, but Gray did not promise to do so. He went unarmed, and apparently into his own field of corn to watch for the negro. The three others watched for the negro Tom Collins from a point not far from his cabin and not far from the field of Ollie Gray. Toward eleven o'clock the negro, Collins, came out singing. They heard him say, "I feel like a sixteen-year-old tonight." He went toward the corn field of Ollie Gray, and they heard a sound as of some one pulling corn. They moved up to a path by which they expected the negro to return, but, as he did not return that way, and hearing sounds from the negro's hog pen, near his house, as of corn being thrown down, and as if hogs were being fed, they moved up that way. Earls and Hannah told defendant Stout, who was hard of hearing, of the sounds, and placed him between themselves so he might hear what was said by the others. They went forward. They came to where there were some boxes or coops piled up, and there were some trees about. It was very dark. As they passed the boxes they saw the forms of two men. The negro Tom Collins was nearest to Hannah, who advanced quickly and threw his gun down on the negro, telling him to hold up his hands. This the negro did, saying, "They are up, Mr. Hannah." This was heard by Earls, who was on the right, and nearer than Hannah was to the man who proved to be Ollie Gray, who was to the right of and several feet distant from the negro. Earls was nearest Gray, who was standing, or slowly walking up at that time. The two defendants moving up, presented their guns at the other man (Gray), and Earls called three or four times, "Throw up your hands" or *Page 126 "Stick up your hands, Tom." This was heard by Stout, and also by Hannah, whose attention was directed chiefly to the negro. Gray had his hands down by his side, but it was too dark to tell whether they were in his pockets, or not. He was dressed in blue or dark clothes.

The defendant Stout described what happened from the time they saw the two men, as follows:

"I could not distinguish who anybody was, or the man I saw over there, because it was dark and I could not tell only the bulk of the man. I didn't say anything to him. I heard Alvin (Earls) say, `Hold up your hands,' four or five times, `Tom.' Then this man put his hands in his pockets and came toward us. When he moved he had both hands in his pockets. I never heard him say anything. When the shots were fired I guess he was somewhere within nine or ten feet of me. I shot because I thought he was the negro and if he got to the house I considered he would get me, any of us if he could." Cross Examination:

"It was a dark night; I could't tell then whether it was a white man or a nigger. He was kinda stepping towards us. He was fronting us, kinda walking down towards us in the direction of the negro house, and I was afraid he would get to the negro house and shoot me. I don't hardly know how far he would have had to go from where I saw him over to the nigger's house, might have been fifteen feet, maybe twenty, somewhere between ten and twenty feet, I didn't measure it. The best I could tell he was walking kind of sideways toward the house, but still facing us boys. He did not have a gun in his hand, he had his hands in his pocket; the best I could tell they were in his pockets. I shot because I thought if he got to the house he would kill us all. I can't say if he had a gun on him. . . . I saw the man that was coming towards me, and I didn't hear him say anything. Yes, sir, I heard Earls tell him to stick up his hands four times, and when he didn't stick up his hands Earls shot, and then I shot."

The defendant Earls described it as follows: *Page 127

"We waited there for some little while and we heard the nigger come up singing around, said he felt like a sixteen-year-old, and then he went on out and we heard him breaking corn out in the field, which was Ollie's field. We then crossed over in front of the lot — crossed the corner of the nigger's yard, there was a path leading by there that we thought the nigger would have to come by us to get there and he didn't come by. After waiting there awhile we heard him throw his corn in the hog pen in the yard. Mr. Hannah took to the left and we taken to the right — I seen two men there the best I can recall, and the one that proved later to be Ollie was standing out like down that way from me, as I came around the boxes around that way.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
250 S.W. 567, 298 Mo. 116, 1923 Mo. LEXIS 158, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gray-ex-rel-gray-v-earls-mo-1923.