Greenwood v. State

1931 OK CR 215, 299 P. 248, 51 Okla. Crim. 74, 1931 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 228
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma
DecidedMay 2, 1931
DocketNo. A-7432.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 1931 OK CR 215 (Greenwood 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
Greenwood v. State, 1931 OK CR 215, 299 P. 248, 51 Okla. Crim. 74, 1931 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 228 (Okla. Ct. App. 1931).

Opinion

EDWARDS, J.

The plaintiff in error, hereinafter called defendant, was convicted in the district court of Haskell county of manslaughter in the first degree, and was sentenced to serve a term of 25 years in the state penitentiary.

The record discloses that defendant and his son, Orville Greenwood, lived near the town of Keota, and near them lived Sam McCann, Henry McCann, A. W. Piatt, their stepfather, and T. A. Lowe, a friend of the McCanns. Sam McCann bore an unenviable reputation as being of a domineering disposition and a lawbreaker. The reputation of Henry McCann was attacked to some 'extent. The defendant and his son appeared to have borne an excellent reputation. A short time before the tragedy, which is the basis of this prosecution, Orville had ridden a horse *76 to where Sam McCann was, and, according to defendant’s/ evidence, Sam McCann had taken the horse from Orville at the point of a gun and had ridden it away. Orville reported the matter to defendant, and a complaint charging Sam McCann with the theft of the horse had been filed before a justice of the peace at Keota. On the day of the tragedy a preliminary hearing was had, which resulted in the discharging of McCann at the conclusion of the state’s evidence. In attending the trial, defendant and his son each carried a loaded pistol which they deposited in a drug store. After the conclusion of the trial and the discharge of McCann, they went back to' the drug store and got their pistols. They came out of the drug Store, and, as they were passing the store adjoining, Sam McCann started into the store, and Orville Greenwood made two or three steps toward him, but did nothing further; that defendant said to him: “You were too slow.” Defendant and his son then walked down the street, while Sam McCann went into the store where his mother was and took his small son to the back of the store and gave him a drink of water and then left the store with the others to. return home. The witnesses for the state testify that, as Sam McCann passed the Greenwoods opposite the stairway leading to the courtroom defendant said to Orville: “Shoot him! Shoot him!” Orville drew his pistol and shot Sam McCann in the back, and McCann ran up the stairway; Orville followed, shooting him about four times, and McCann fell down the steps to the foot of the stairs. T. A. (Jud) Lowe was standing near the foot, and seized Orville Greenwood around the waist, for the purpose, as he says, of preventing his shooting Mc-Cann. Defendant stepped up and shot Lowe in the face and head, and Lowe fell to the sidewalk, pretending to be dead. Defendant and his son next turned to the east and Henry McCann was standing near the bank building about *77 20 feet away. Defendant fired at him, and Henry Mc-Cann ran behind a post in front of the bank and dodged behind a conple of bystanders and begged defendant not to shoot him, but despite this defendant reached over the shoulders of some bystanders and shot him in the back about four times, killing, him instantly. At about this time Dick Piatt, stepfather of McCann, seized the pistol in Orville’s hands, and in the struggle over the pistol it fell to the ground, and about this time defendant shot at Piatt, but missed him, and Orville recovered his pistol and shot Piatt in the arm. Piatt fell, and defendant shot at him again, and then snapped his pistol at him. It appears that neither of the McCanns nor Lowe nor Piatt were armed. This case is a prosecution for the killing of Henry McCann. The record is voluminous. All the eye-witnesses to the homicide except defendant and his son testified for the state. One was a relative of defendant.

The theory of the state is that the killing of Henry McCann was the result of a conspiracy between defendant and his son. Defendant contends the killing of ,Sam McCann by Orville Greenwood was in self-defense, and the shooting of Lowe by defendant was in defense of his son; that, when he saw Henry McCann, he had his hand under the bib of his overalls, coming toward defendant, and he believed he was going to shoot him, and the first two shots he fired at Henry McCann were also in self-defense. Further, that he believed Sam McCann and Lowe were acting together in an assault upon Orville Greenwood. Defendant testified he had no' recognition of the last shots fired at Henry McCann; thus presenting the further defense of insanity. The instructions of the court cover both the law of self-defense and insanity. Both the state and the defendant were represented by very able counsel. The case was closely tried, and is well briefed.

*78 ■ Numerous assignments of error are argued. The first contention is that the court committed error in overruling the motion to quash a special jury venire, particularly as to 20 names included therein of jurors called in a previous special venire which had been quashed, citing Shuford v. State, 4 Okla. Cr. 513, 113 Pac. 211; Hisaw v. State, 13 Okla. Cr. 484, 165 Pac. 636; Combs v. Slaughter, Hardin (3 Ky.) 67. The sheriff was a witness; the court appointed a special officer to serve a special venire for 30 persons to act as jurors. The special officer appointed to serve did not take an oath of office before serving this first special venire. On motion, the court quashed this first special venire, reappointed the special officer, who then took the oath, and he was directed to serve another open venire for 30 persons to serve as jurors. The special officer did this, but in the second venire served were 20 persons who had been summoned by the first special venire. The motion to quash the fit’s!: special venire was sustained because the special officer had neglected to take an oath of office. He was, however, a de facto officer. State v. Hudson et al., 44 Okla. Cr. 1, 279 Pac. 921; Rosell v. Board of Education, etc., 68 N. J. Law, 498, 53 A. 398. It would not have been error for the trial judge to have overruled the motion to quash the first special venire. Under the circumstances, the including of some of the jurors discharged under the first venire was not error.

Complaint is next made that the state was permitted to introduce incompetent and immaterial evidence, prejudicial to defendant. This assignment is directed to various items of evidence. It is pointed out that a state’s witness, .Smith, an eyewitness who had testified he had no acquaintance with the participants in the tragedy, was permitted to answer on redirect that his son and the Greenwood boy were good friends. Another complaint *79 under this assignment is directed to the cross-examination of defendant’s witness Harding, who had testified that Sam McCann, about a month before the tragedy, on the occasion of his arrest on a whisky charge, had made a threat against defendant. On cross-examination it was drawn out- that McCann was released on that charge. Another item is that the state’s witness Lowe was permitted to give hearsay testimony. Another, that defendant was required to answer on cross-examination of the taking together of a picture of one of the sons of defendant and a niece of deceased, and the introducing of the picture in evidence. Another, is the testimony of this niece of deceased in reference to the picture referred to and of the friendly relations of this witness to> the family of defendant. Also that the state was permitted to show that, when Sam Mc-Cann went into the store, just before the homicide, he made some statement to his mother or some members of his party.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1931 OK CR 215, 299 P. 248, 51 Okla. Crim. 74, 1931 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 228, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/greenwood-v-state-oklacrimapp-1931.