Hadley v. State

171 P. 485, 14 Okla. Crim. 644
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma
DecidedMarch 23, 1918
DocketNo. A-2900.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 171 P. 485 (Hadley 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
Hadley v. State, 171 P. 485, 14 Okla. Crim. 644 (Okla. Ct. App. 1918).

Opinion

DOYLE, P. J.

The plaintiff in error, Paul V. Hadley, and Ida Hadley were jointly charged with the murder of W. J. (Jacob) Giles, alleged to have been committed in Muskogee county on or about the 24th day of March, 1916, by shooting him with a pistol. Upon their trial the jury rendered verdicts finding “the defendant Ida Hadley not guilty on account of insanity,” and finding “the defendant Paul V. Hadley guilty of the crime of murder as charged in the information, and fix his punishment at imprisonment in the state penitentiary at hard labor for life.” From the judgment rendered in pursuance of the verdict, the defendant Paul V. Hadley appeals.

*645 The evidence shows: That Paul V. Hadley and Ida Hadley resided in Beaumont, Jefferson county, Tex. That Paul V. Hadley was indicted for assault with intent to kill in Jefferson county, Tex., and as a fugitive from justice was arrested March 20, 1916, in Kansas City, Mo., where he was -going under the name of J. O.- Kendrick. That W. J. (Jacob) Giles, sheriff of Jefferson county, Tex., was notified of his arrest, and in the meantime Hadley was incarcerated in what is known as the matron’s department at the police station. That while held there his wife, the defendant Ida Hadley, visited him several times, and had several conversations with him before Sheriff Giles arrived in Kansas City. That on the 2Sd day of March, Sheriff Giles arrived in Kansas City with a requisition from the Governor of Texas for Paul V. Hadley. That the defendant Ida Hadley met Sheriff Giles at the police station and requested the sheriff to allow her to return to Texas with her husband. That in response to that request Sheriff Giles replied that she could come if she wanted to, but she would have to pay her own railroad fare. That she then gave the money to Mr. Sanderson, who was present, to purchase a ticket for her, which he did. That Sheriff Giles, with both the defendants, left Kansas City on a train called the “Katy Limited” at 5:30 p. m. on the 23d day of March, 1916, which train arrived in Muskogee just after midnight the next morning. That before leaving Kansas City, Ida Hadley requested Sheriff Giles to remove the handcuffs from Paul V. Had-ley, who had agreed to return to Texas- with Sheriff Giles by signing a written waiver of formal requisition. That the sheriff did not grant her request. That when the train left Parsons, Ida Hadley was sitting- in the rear seat on ■the right side of the chair car, and shortly after- the *646 sheriff, with Paul V. Hadley in custody, came out of the smoking car into the chair car, where Hadley sat down by his wife, and the sheriff sat down in the seat across the aisle; that the defendants engaged in a whispered conversation, and Ida Hadley went to the ladies’ toilet in the front end of the car several times, and each time returned to her seat by her husband. That at that time the handcuffs had beén removed from Hadley, and he was riding just as any other passenger in company with his wife. That Sheriff Giles at that time was sitting across the aisle in the third seat from the rear, the back of which had been reversed, and he was facing the defendants. That when the train left Muskogee, Ida Hadley said to Sheriff Giles, “You' might just as well go to sleep; Paul and I are going to sleep in a minute”; that within ten minutes after leaving Muskogee,. Ida Hadley got up from her seat and walked to the ladies’ toilet in the forward end of the car; that after staying there a few minutes she returned, carrying a satchel or package; that reaching the sheriff, she drew a pistol from somewhere about her person, and shot Sheriff Giles in the back of the head; that the bullet passed through his head and fell on the floor; that the train at that time was passing through the town of Oktaha, Muskogee county; that instantly Paul V. Hadley jumped across the aisle and grabbed Sheriff Giles’ pistol and said to his wife, “Hold the gun on all of them; if they move blow their heads off”; that Ida Hadley said to the other passengers in the car, “Don’t a man or woman of you get up”; that Paul V. Hadley, after taking the sheriff’s pistol, proceeded to go through the pockets of the sheriff, taking papers out of his pockets and sticking them into his own pockets; that about this time the train auditor came into the car, and Paul V. Hadley, holding his pistol on him, *647 said, “Stop this train, God damn you, or I will blow your brains out”; that the auditor pulled the bell cord, but the train did not stop; that the Hadleys then went out on the front vestibule of the car, and there kept their guns on, the auditor, demanding that he stop the train; that the train stopped at Checotah, and the two defendants stepped off; that they walked about five miles south from Checotah and stopped at the home of Mr. Ennis, and asked permission to stop there until morning; that they also arranged to have Mr. Ennis’ son drive them to Briartown in the morning; that young Ennis started to drive the defendants to Briartown or Porum; that after going about ten miles he left them at Mr. Stevens’ place on Hi Early Mountain; that Sheriff McCune, of McIntosh county, with a posse, arrested the defendants there that forenoon; that Ida Hadley asked Sheriff McCune if Giles was dead, and he told her he was, and she asked, “What are you going to do with us ?” and the sheriff said, “We are going to take you to Eufaula, the county seat of the county where you killed this man”; the defendant Paul V. Hadley then said, “I am in it just as much as she is; just as much to blame as she.” It appears that Sheriff Giles' never spoke after he was shot, and died two or three minutes after he was taken from the train at Checotah. The defendant Paul V. Hadley did not testify as a witness. The defendant Ida Hadley testified as a witness in her own behalf and in behalf of her codefendant.

In rebuttal R. H. Gaines, for the state, testified that he was in the hotel business at Checotah, 'and was present with others there when Ida Hadley stated in the presence of her husband, Paul V. Hadley:

“That her husband had shot a man down in Texas; that she expected that some time he would be arrested, and *648 it was her intention to • take him away from' the officers when they started back to Texas with him; that she had put her gun in her grip, and had kept it there all the- time since the trouble ■ in Texas; that when her husband was arrested in Kansas City she asked Sheriff Giles’ permission to accompany him back to Texas; that her husband knew the gun was in the grip, and they had talked this matter over several times — that is, the possibility of her taking him away from the.officer — and when they got to a little city above here that had- electric lights, a city of 15,000, 20,000, or possibly 30,000 people, she whispered to Mr. Hadley, ‘When we leave this town I am going to take Jake’s gun off of him, and you get ready to make your getaway.’ ”

And that she further stated:

“I asked Giles to lend me his drinking cup; he let me 'have the cup, and I started back to the wash room; there I took the gun out and put it in my dress, and I came out and down the aisle toward Mr. Hadley and Jake, and when I got near Mr. Hadley I gave him a nod to get ready to get up; that she and Mr.

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Related

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1926 OK CR 31 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma, 1926)

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Bluebook (online)
171 P. 485, 14 Okla. Crim. 644, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hadley-v-state-oklacrimapp-1918.