Gray v. State

1943 OK CR 129, 38 P.2d 967, 56 Okla. Crim. 208, 1934 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 93
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma
DecidedOctober 12, 1934
DocketNo. A-8689.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 1943 OK CR 129 (Gray 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
Gray v. State, 1943 OK CR 129, 38 P.2d 967, 56 Okla. Crim. 208, 1934 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 93 (Okla. Ct. App. 1934).

Opinion

DAVENPORT, J.

The plaintiff in error, hereinafter referred to as the defendant, was by information charged with the crime of murder; was tried and convicted of manslaughter, and sentenced to serve a term of 16 years in the state penitentiary.

The testimony on behalf of the state shows the defendant lived in Pontotoc county, near Steedman, Okla.; that the deceased, Charley Long, was a share cropper with the defendant; on the 7th da yof July, 1933, the defendant with other parties went to the city of Ada, Okla,., and while there procured some whisky, ami on their way home bought a quart of whisky; the parties took one or more drinks of this whisky, and when they reached defendant’s home they had something like a pint left; Bill Hopkins and defendant, when they returned from Ada, sat down on the porch in front of the defendant’s house and drank some more of the whisky; shortly after the parties returned from Ada, the deceased, who had been plowing near the defendant’s house, quit plowing and came to the house to do the chores before night; wrhen he passed where the defendant and Bill Hopkins were sitting, they asked him to take a drink of whisky and he did so1 and passed on toward the bam; later he came back and got the milk bucket *210 and was gone a short while and came back and set the bucket down. The trouble arose over some papers to be turned in to- the federal government with reference to ploAving up a cotton crop on the farm in which the defendant and deceased were interested.

As shoAvn by the proof the deceased claimed he asked the defendant to- sign the papers, and that the defendant did not sign them in the proper places and as many times as was intended they should be signed. Witness Hopkins states deceased told the defendant he asked him to sign the cotton papers in three places, and the defendant called the deceased a “God damned liar,” and deceased reached doAvn and picked up a rock, and says: “Don’t call me a God damn liar, I will knock your God damned brains out.” At this time the Avitness Hopkins states the defendant was sitting in a chair on the porch.

The deceased still held the rock in his hand, and told the defendant he would go in the house and get the God damned papers and burn them; deceased then walked into the middle room of the house, got the papers, and stepped off the porch into the yard; Avhen he had gotten about four or five feet off the porch, the defendant got up and walked around and entered the middle room of his house; at this time the deceased turned and started to face toward the east; Hopkins states he could not see the defendant at the time, but did see about six or eight inches of a gun barrel sticking out of the door; that deceased whirled around throwing his right side to the door, and about that time the gun fired. Witness thought the shot hit the deceased in the right side; the deceased threw up his hands and then went to sinking down; after which the defendant ■ got closer to the door and fired the second shot; the body of the deeeasfed then flattened out on the porch; his head *211 went off the north end of the porch with his head and shoulders almost against the house. Witness at that time did not know where the wife of the defendant Gray was; the defendant came out without the gun and stepped into the yard; at the time deceased Charley Long was shot, the witness says the rock was in his hand; that the deceased did not at any time attempt to attack the defendant with the rock; witness stated he was within about eight feet of where the shooting took place. After the shooting defendant came out in the yard and asked the witness to come to him, taking the witness into the log room that stood south from the other room and a little bit east; witness then stated:

“I asked Mr. Gray what he did that for and he stated, ‘You don’t know all I know. I have been wanting to do this a long time.’ The defendant then said, ‘I am going to Charley’s house, you stay here until I get back, if you don’t, God damn you, I will kill you.’ I told him to shoot, I was going to Charley Brooks.”

Witness never saw the defendant from that time until the preliminary trial.

The testimony shows that Bill Hopkins was the only eyewitness to the trouble between the deceased and the defendant, unless defendant’s wife was in one of the rooms of the house where she could have seen what took place. She was not called as a witness; therefore the only eyewitness testifying was Bill Hopkins.

The state called the funeral director, Wyley Keith, who stated there were two wounds on the body of the deceased, one on the right side about the third rib, and the other on the back; either of the wounds would have been fatal. The wounds seemed to have been inflicted by a shot gun.

*212 The state also called Dr. I. L. Cummings, who testified to the location of the wounds, and that either would be fatal. Further testimony was offered by the state as to the location of the house, porch and barn.

The defendant, testifying in his own behalf, stated he came to Oklahoma from North Arkansas; admitted the killing of Charley Long at his home in Pontotoc county on the 7th day of July, 1933. The defendant further stated the deceased was living at his home and making a share crop. He also gave some testimony as to what he heard about the deceased being quarrelsome and having had trouble with other parties. With reference to the killing he stated when he and Bill Hopkins returned from Ada and sat down on the porch of his home, they had about a pint of whisky:

“Charley was plowing over east about 150 yards, maybe 200; in ten or fifteen minutes Charley came along going south; Bill Hopkins asked him, ‘Don’t you want a drink of whisky?’ and he said, ‘I believe I do.’ He took a drink and it looked like he drank about half of what was in the jar, something like a half pint, and went on I suppose to put up his mules; he came back and asked me, ‘Why don’t you sign them papers?’ And I said, ‘Charley, I did sign them papers, where that little dash was on the paper and got Francis Johnson to witness it.’ He said, ‘You are a damned liar, you didn’t. I will get the damned papers and burn them up,’ and he went in the house. I did not see him get the papers but he came out with some in his hand and went to milk the cows; when he returned he set the milk bucket down by the well and stepped back and says: ‘God damn you, you know you did not sign them papers like I told you.’ I said I signed them papers like he told me, and he said, ‘You are a God damn liar,’ and jerked up a rock and says, ‘I will knock your God damn brains out.’
*213 “When, he did that he started around the well; I got my gun and when he was coming on the porch with the rock I was coming toward the door with the gun, and I was, the best I remember, about seven or eight feet of the door Avhen he was just outside the door; I says, ‘Charley, if you don’t stop, I will kill you,’ and he did not stop and I shot two shots just as fast as I could fire them; that is all I knoAv about it; he had a big rock in his hand; the rock looked bigger than this rock, but it looked something like that size; I thought he was going to kill me; the gun Avas in the room in a rack on the wall just above Charley’s trunk.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1943 OK CR 129, 38 P.2d 967, 56 Okla. Crim. 208, 1934 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 93, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gray-v-state-oklacrimapp-1934.