Gregory v. State

118 So. 906, 152 Miss. 133, 1928 Miss. LEXIS 235
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 12, 1928
DocketNo. 27332.
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 118 So. 906 (Gregory 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
Gregory v. State, 118 So. 906, 152 Miss. 133, 1928 Miss. LEXIS 235 (Mich. 1928).

Opinion

Cook, J.

The appellant, H. C. Gregory, was indicted and tried in the circuit court of Clarke county for the murder of his wife, and was convicted of manslaughter, and sentenced to the penitentiary for ten years; and from this conviction and sentence he prosecuted this appeal.

About six o’clock in the evening on December 28, 1927, the wife of appellant was shot with a pistol. The bullet took effect in the upper part of her chest near the heart, and she died from the effect of the wound about twenty-four hours later. She was in her home at the time she was shot; and her husband, the appellant, and their ten-year-old son were present when the shot was fired.

S. A. Boykin, a witness for the state, testified that he lived about twenty-five yards from the ,h°me of appellant; that he heard the pistol shot, and that a few min-, utes later he heard the son of appellant run up the street screaming; that he then went to the Gregory home, and, upon reaching there, found Mrs. Gregory lying on the bed with her clothing pulled up around her neck and head so as to interfere with her breathing*; that appellant was raising her up and letting her fall back upon the bed, and he requested him to let her remain quiet; that, when he asked appellant “what was the matter,” he replied:

*136 ‘ ‘ My wife got in one of her tantrums and tried to kill herself—shot herself, I have sent for a doctor, but I am in hopes that she will be dead before he gets here.”

He further testified that, after he spoke to him, appellant removed her clothing from around her head and face, and she began to breath freely, and that a few minutes later she said to appellant, “You done it—-you done it—you done it;” that he replied: “Oh, darling, I did not do it,” and slapped his hand over her mouth; that a little later she said to appellant, “You were the cause of it; you done it—you done it—you done it,” and he again denied it. All of this testimony was admitted without objection.

For the appellant, after a predicate had been laid for , the admission of the statement as a dying* declaration, the doctor who attended the deceased testified that she said to him, “I did it myself.” The nurse who attended the deceased while she was in the hospital testified to a dying declaration made by the deceased, her version of this declaration being as follows:

“Mrs. Gregory said at first that they had had a family quarrel, and she told her husband that she was going to kill herself, and that he went and got the gun and shook the cartridges out of it and gave it to her, and she put it back together and snapped it, and it did not fire, and she snapped it again and she shot, and she said, ‘I did it all myself. ’ ’ ’

A deputy sheriff, who was present when the deceased made this statement in the presence of the nurse, gave substantially the same version thereof.

Hugh L. Gregory, the ten-year-old son of the appellant and the deceased, testified that his father and mother and a Mrs. Garner went to the woods to procure brush brooms; that, after returning home, his father and mother quarreled about the relations between his father and Mrs. Garner; that his mother was sitting in a rocking chair, and he (the witness) was standing at the back *137 of the chair; that his father went to a bed, and got the pistol from between the mattresses, and then unbreeched it and hammered it on the bed, and then snapped it together, and handed it to his mother; that she took it and placed it against her chest, and pulled the trigger twice; that his father laughed and said to her, “You can’t kill yourself with an empty gun;” that his mother pulled the trigger the third time, when the pistol fired, and she fell to the floor; that his father immediately sent him after Mrs. Garner, and, when he returned, sent, him after the doctor. He further testified that, when his father was getting the pistol, he shook his head at him and asked him not to do it.

The appellant testified that during the afternoon prior to the shooting, he, his wife, and Mrs. Garner went out to gather brush brooms; that his wife kept insisting on getting some whisky, and he got some whisky, and all of them drank some of it; that he discovered that his wife was drinking too much, and he attempted to take the bottle away from her, and in scuffling over the bottle it cut his wife’s lips, making her very angry;- that, when they reached home, they first carried Mrs. Gamer to her home; that his wife was still angry with him, but he carried her into the house, and she took á seat in a rocking chair, while he seated himself in a straight chair in front of her. He further testified that his wife continued to fuss about the injury to her lips, while he insisted that she did it herself, and then she said: “I am going to kill myself this very night;” that he replied: “No, you are not g’oing to do that, I am not going to let you; ’ ’ and she then said, “I will whenever you go to sleep—I will get up and get the gun,” to which he replied, “No, you will not;” that he then .went to the bed and procured the pistol from between the mattresses, and threw the cylinder out, pushed the injector several times, and “almost hammered it against the bed, so that I would be sure that all the cartridges were out, and also I slapped it in my • *138 hand that way with the cylinder slung- out. ’ ’ He further testified that, as he walked back toward his chair, his wife grabbed the pistol as he was passing her; that, after a slight struggle over the pistol, he turned it loose, believing that all the cartridges were out of it, and that'it-was. harmless; that he took his seat, and his wife placed the gun to her bosom, and pulled the trigger twice, and the gun snapped each time; that he then said to her, “You can’t kill yourself with an empty gun,” and she then pulled the trigger the third time, when the gun fired, and his wife fell to the floor; that he immediately sent his boy to call the neighbors and the doctor. He denied that he placed her clothing over her face and head so as to smother her, or that he put his hand over her mouth to prevent her from talking, and he denied that he said that he had sent for a doctor, and hoped that she would be dead before he reached there, and testified that what he did say was, “I am afraid she will die before the doctor gets here.”

The first assignment of error argued by counsel for appellant is based upon the action of the court in failing to direct that, a copy of the indictment and the special venire be served on the defendant or his counsel for one full day before the trial of the cause and in forcing the appellant to trial without such service of the- special venire and indictment.

Section 1481, Code 1906 (TTemingwaj^’s 1927 Code, section 1302), provides:

“Any person indicted for a capital crime shall, if demanded by him, by motion in writing, before the completion of the drawing of the special venire, have a copy of the indictment ‘and a list of the special venire summoned for his trial, delivered to him or his counsel at least one entire day before said trial. . . .”

"When this case was called for trial, the defendant objected to proceeding with it, on the ground that he had not been served with a copy of the indictment and spe *139

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Bluebook (online)
118 So. 906, 152 Miss. 133, 1928 Miss. LEXIS 235, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gregory-v-state-miss-1928.