Harvell v. State

1964 OK CR 81, 395 P.2d 331, 1964 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 209
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma
DecidedJuly 22, 1964
DocketA-13319
StatusPublished
Cited by66 cases

This text of 1964 OK CR 81 (Harvell 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
Harvell v. State, 1964 OK CR 81, 395 P.2d 331, 1964 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 209 (Okla. Ct. App. 1964).

Opinion

JOHNSON, Presiding Judge.

On May 28, 1962 the county attorney of Sequoyah County filed an information in the district court of said county, charging the plaintiff in error, Ray C. Harwell, with the crime of “first degree murder”, in that he shot and killed one Samuel R. Pleasant on May 21, 1962. The plaintiff in error, hereinafter referred to as the defendant, was tried to a jury, and convicted of manslaughter in the first degree, the jury fixing his penalty at sixteen years in the State Penitentiary. Judgment was rendered on September 24, 1962, and petition in error with casemade was duly filed in this Court.

In the petition in error counsel for defendant set out nineteen assignments of error, and in their brief argue them under four general heads:

I. The court erred in overruling defendant's motion to quash and set aside information.
II. The conviction should be reversed because of the misconduct of the county attorney (A, B, C).
III. The verdict should be reversed because of errors of the court in denying evidence offered by defendant, and by allowing incompetent evidence offered by the State (A, B).
IV. The verdict was contrary to the law and the evidence.

The Attorney General answers each of these assignments in the order set forth.

The facts in this case are substantially as follows: The defendant, 19 years of age, was in the Army in May, 1962, stationed at Ft. Bragg, North Carolina, a paratrooper with the 82nd Airborne division. On the date of this tragedy he was at his home in Muldrow, Oklahoma, on leave, having left Ft. Bragg on May 14, 1962 and hitchhiked to his home.

The testimony of the defendant shows that on the morning of May 21, 1962, this defendant got up about 11 o’clock in the morning, and went to town, and later drove to Ft. Smith, Arkansas, a distance of about ten miles, to see something -about his leave, *335 and then returned to Muldrow. About 3 or 3:30 that afternoon, the defendant and his brother Carlos took a .22 calibre pistol (45 frame, nine-shot) from the glove compartment of their father’s car, and placed it under a blanket covering the front seat of the car, and started to go squirrel hunting. Before'they got out of town they met some friends of the brother, and he got out of the car, and defendant went on hunting alone. He went into some woods and stayed about half an hour, and shot the gun three times, but seeing no squirrels, returned to town, and met his father, who asked him to go for some milk. Defendant and a younger brother, Ewing, went for the milk. Defendant then took a friend, Ronnie Morgan, to his home about a mile from town, and spent about an hour there, and he and the friend fired the gun several times at cans. He testified that he had seven shells in the gun when he left the Morgan home. That he put the gun back under the blanket on the seat of the car, went back to town, purchased $1 worth of gas and started from Muldrow to Ft. Smith for the purpose of picking up a cousin to bring him to Mul-drow to spend the night.

As the defendant was leaving the filling station he picked up a hitchhiker, an elderly man who, as it developed, was Samuel R. Pleasant. Defendant testified that just after getting out of Muldrow, the man pulled out a bottle of wine from under his coat and offered defendant a drink, which he refused. He testified that the hitchhiker then asked him for “a couple of dollars”, and defendant told him he did not have any money. Defendant testified that he was driving about 40 miles an hour, but after the man had taken several drinks of the wine (offering defendant a drink each time, which he refused), he became suspicious, and speeded up his car to about 60 miles. Defendant testified:

“A Well, we went up and we got about two miles west — west of Fort Smith, Arkansas and he pulled a bottle out and offered it to me again, and I said, ‘No, buddy, I told you that I didn’t drink that stuff.’ And he took another drink from it and put it away. And I speeded on up a little more.
“Q. Did he say anything then? A When he offered me the drink and I told him I couldn’t drink the stuff, it would make — it would make me sick, and he said, ‘Old Smart Boy.’
“Q ‘Old Smart Boy’? A , Yes, sir, and then he put that bottle back away.
“Q And what did he do after he said that? A Well, he took another drink.
“Q All right. A And then he put his bottle away, and I speeded up again and I was watching the road, and I glanced over there and he had his knife out and was coming at me with it.
“Q He had a knife and was coming at you with it? A Yes.
“Q. Now, when was the first time you saw the knife? A When he had it out and was coming at me with it.
“Q In which hand did he have it? A His right hand.
“Q His right hand? A Yes.
“Q How was he holding it ? A Like this (indicating).
“Q You say he was coming at you with- it? A Yes, sir;, he was coming around like that (indicating),
“Q All right. Did he say anything? A Not to me that I heard him1 say. He just looked wild.
“Q And what did you do? A Well, when I seen that knife, I hit my brakes and grabbed for the door handle, and they was broke, and at the same time I was getting my pistol out from under the seat, and when he went up against the dash, I looked over that way and he come back up with that knife and that’s when I shot him.
“Q All right. Now how many times did you shoot then? A Just one I shot then, and I was still trying to get that door open and I glanced back over there, and when I glanced back over *336 there, he was coming up again. And so I shot again.
“Q Ray, was your life in danger at that time? A Yes, sir.
“Q Would you have shot him if you thought your life would not be in any danger? A No, sir.
“Q How many times did you shoot? A I don’t know.
“Q Were you excited? A Yes, sir. I was scared to death.”

This occurred about 6 or 6:30 in the afternoon. Defendant turned his car around and started back toward Muldrow, hut turned on to the river road and drove to a high bluff known as “Wilson’s Rock”, pulled the body out of his car and pushed it over the cliff (between 15 and 30 feet) into the Arkansas River. He then got in his car and started to Muldrow. On the way he remembered that the deceased had placed a small bag back of the front seat when he got in the car, and defendant stopped on the road near some houses, and testified that he reached over the back seat and picked up the bag, and when he did, it came open and some “stuff” fell out — a rag and some letters.

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Bluebook (online)
1964 OK CR 81, 395 P.2d 331, 1964 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 209, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harvell-v-state-oklacrimapp-1964.