Hare v. State

1936 OK CR 20, 54 P.2d 670, 58 Okla. Crim. 420, 1936 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 142
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma
DecidedFebruary 7, 1936
DocketNo. A-8964.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 1936 OK CR 20 (Hare 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
Hare v. State, 1936 OK CR 20, 54 P.2d 670, 58 Okla. Crim. 420, 1936 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 142 (Okla. Ct. App. 1936).

Opinion

HOYLE, J.

In the information in this case, filed in the district court of Tulsa county, Clifford Hare was charged with the crime of murder, alleged to have been committed in said county on or about the 12th day of November, 1934, upon the body of William Mushrush, by shooting him with a rifle. Upon his trial the jury returned their verdict finding the defendant guilty of manslaughter in the first degree, and assessed his punishment at imprisonment for a term of fifteen years. February 8, 1935, the court pronounced judgment and sentenced the defendant to imprisonment in the state reformatory at Granite for a term of fifteen years. From this judgment, he appeals.

The defendant admitted the killing, but contended that the homicide was justifiable in self-defense, or, more definitely stated, in defense of his mother and himself.

The theory of the state is that it was a deliberate wanton murder. There is very little conflict in the testimony of the witnesses for the state and those of the defendant; the undisputed facts are as follows:

The defendant, a young man twenty years of age, was at the time living with his mother, brother, and a sister on a farm adjoining the public highway, between the towns of Sperry and .Skiatook, as tenant farmers. The defendant and his brother visited their father, living in Helaware county, returning on the night of November 3', *422 1934; they bad a car collision on tbe Grand River Bridge, near Salina, and tbe defendant received severe injuries, including a broken arm, lacerations on bis legs, and was rendered unconscious. Removed to tbe Momingside Hospital in Tulsa, be regained consciousness tbe following morning. On November lltb, he left the hospital, returning to bis home. On tbe afternoon of tbe following day, while in bed, be was called by bis sister, saying that some people were picking pecans on tbe place. His mother bad gone to tbe orchard, and be took a 22 rifle and followed her.

Tbe state called Mrs. Musbrush, widow, and Mrs. J. M. Musbrush, mother of tbe deceased, Newton S. Hughes, and Frances Cremin, and their testimony was to tbe effect that on tbe afternoon of November 12th, Armistice Hay, tbe deceased with bis wife and children, bis mother, and Miss Frances Cremin, were on a pleasure drive looking for persimmons.

Tbe Musbrush family and Newton S. Hughes bad been friends for a number of years. Mr. Hughes! was employed as a pumper on an oil lease on and near tbe same land occupied by the defendant and bis mother. Passing a private road leading from tbe main highway to Mr. Hughes’ home, about a quarter of a mile from tbe road, they decided to drive into Mr. Hughes’ bouse and ask him where they could find some persimmons. While on this private road, tbe children, seeing pecans nearby, asked their father to stop and let them gather some. He stopped tbe car and they all got out, and were picking pecans. Tbe defendant’s mother, seeing them in the pecan grove, ran toward where they were; they, seeing her coming, returned to tbe car and drove on to tbe Hughes home, sounded tbe born, then drove around tbe bouse and started back to *423 wards the main highway. The defendant’s mother was standing in the road waving a club; the deceased, unable to drive by her, drove to the side of the road to avoid hitting her and stopped. She then threw her club at the car, but missed it. The testimony tends to show that she was much agitated and very abusive in her language.

The deceased suggested to his family, perhaps he had better get out and talk to her, which he did. She picked up another club or stick and attempted to strike him with it; he held her hands and tried to reason with her; he then released her hands and started to his automobile, and as he was about to enter it a shot was fired by the defendant from a point 75 yards away, which struck him in the hip, mortally wounding, him. The defendant then came to the car and made threats to shoot and kill. His mother finally prevailed upon him to permit the deceased and his family to drive on away. The defendant saying, “Get to hell out of here and stay out.” The deceased drove his car to Tulsa and was taken to the hospital, where he died a few days later.

Newton S. Hughesl testified that he lived on the lease near the property upon which the Hare family have an agricultural lease; that he built a private road going directly west from the paved highway to his house; that he was working at a well and saw Mr. Mushrush drive the car to his house and then “blow the horn a couple of times,” and saw the car turn back toward the main highway; meeting Mrs. Hare Fowler in the road, the car stopped. Saw Mr. Mushrush get out of the car and appeared to be talking to Mrs. FoAvler; that he saw something in her hand and saw some commotion going on. Next he saw the deceased holding her hands. Then he saw the defendant going through the brush with a gun, saw him *424 fire tbe gun; that at the time Mr. Mushrush was shot he had one foot on the running board, getting into the car, and Mrs. Fowler was seven or eight feet from Mr. Mush-rush, at the time he was shot; that he saw the defendant go up to the! ear after Mr. Mushrush had started to drive away and he stopped the car, but he was too far away to' hear the conversation which took place.

Flay McDonald, deputy sheriff, testified that he had a conversation with the defendant in the sheriff’s office after he was arrested, as follows :

“I asked him if he intended to shoot that man and he said: ‘What the hell do¡ you think I shot for if I didn’t intend to hit him.’ I said: ‘You surely did not intend to kill a man for picking up pecans did you?’ He said, ‘Well, the sons of bitches have got to be weaned sooner or later, and if you have to' have a killing, it might as well come now as later.’ ”

Dr. Fred A. G-lass testified that he was a surgeon, and as such attended William Mushrush; that he died from the effects of a bullet wound in the left hip, which punctured the intestines and lodged in the bladder.

On the part of the defendant, Mrs. Bessie Fowler, mother of the defendant, testified, that when the deceased and his family got in their car and started in the direction of the Hughes home, she followed them, thinking they were going back in to the pecan orchard as others had done, and that she followed, going in the middle of the road; that the deceased, in front of Mr. Hughes’ house, sounded his horn once, then drove around behind the house, stopped, and sounded his horn again, but did not wait for a response and came on up the road towards her, and that when she saw him coming she picked up a little club and tried to wave him down; that he stepped on the *425 gas and rushed towards her as if to run oyer her, and when within a short distance she stepped out of the road to the south side and threw a stick at the headlights; that he jumped out and came around the car cursing her, and after an exchange of words he got back in the car.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1936 OK CR 20, 54 P.2d 670, 58 Okla. Crim. 420, 1936 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 142, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hare-v-state-oklacrimapp-1936.