Hornsby v. State

260 S.W. 41, 163 Ark. 396, 1924 Ark. LEXIS 292
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedMarch 31, 1924
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 260 S.W. 41 (Hornsby v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hornsby v. State, 260 S.W. 41, 163 Ark. 396, 1924 Ark. LEXIS 292 (Ark. 1924).

Opinion

Wood, J.

The appellant rented a small farm in Monroe. County, on which he and his wife and children resided until the summer of 1923, when his wife died, and appellant and his children went to live with his mother, who resided near by. Walter Fells, who was twenty years old, and his wife, who was sixteen, lived on a farm about one and three-quarter miles from the appellant. After appellant’s wife died he entered into a contract with Fells, by which Fells and his wife were to move into the house, on the place where appellant and his wife lived prior to her death, to assist appellant.in gathering the crop. Soon after Fells and his wife moved on the place, appellant .and his children moved back into the house with them. Mrs. Fells was to do the cooking and take care of appellant’s children. Shortly after, appellant became acquainted with Mrs. Fells, and before she and her husband had moved into appellant’s house, he had made love to her. He told her that he loved her from the first time he saw her.

Without setting out the testimony in detail, suffice it to say it tended to show that there was improper intimacy.between appellant and Mrs. Fells even before the Fells moved into appellant’s house, and that it continued -up to the time the appellant killed Fells. Appellant had told her that, if she would be his, he would buy her everything she wanted. He had ordered her some clothes about a week before he killed Fells. They had talked about leaving together, on the Sunday before the killing occurred. Fells and his wife and the appellant had all been living in the house together about a week, and appellant was continuing his love-making to Mrs. Fells. Mrs. Fells and her husband had had some trouble; he told her that he would cut up the clothes appellant bought for her, and appellant said that he wouldn’t. This was about a week before the killing. Appellant thereupon loaded his guns. One was a nineteen-inch-barrel gun and the other was a twelve-gauge. On the night of the killing, after supper, Fells went to bed, and appellant and Mrs. Fells were sitting across from each other at a small table, talking, Appellant wrote something on a mail order blank, and handed it across to Mrs. Fells. Fells observed it, and got up and put on his clothes and walked over to the table where they were sitting. Mrs. Fells turned the paper over and began, drawing on it. She then tore it, and put a part of it in her mouth. Fells thereupon slapped her, and told her to go to bed. She then started towards her bed and appellant towards his, and Fells walked out on the front porch. When he came back into the room, Mrs. Fells was standing- by her bed and appellant was sitting on a trunk at the-foot of his bed, unlacing his shoes. As Fells came into the room he was saying something, but neither appellant nor Mrs. Fells understood what it was. Appellant then inquired of Fells whether he thought that appellant was the cause of the trouble between him and his wife, and Fells replied', “By Gr — , you wrote that,” and appellant said, “Well, you Gr— d-son of a b-, grab your gun.” Appellant reached back and got his gun, and Fells ran towards the middle door and Mrs. Fells ran toward the front door, and as Fells opened the door it threw him towards the appellant, and' appellant shot him in the stomach. Mrs. Fells testified that she did not see anything in her husband’s hand when he re-entered the room. She described the room and the situation of the'parties at the time of the shouting. Appellant laid Fells down. She ran up and asked him to let her have the gun, and told him that he ought not to have done that. He replied, “Did you want'me to get killed?”

Wes Bryant, a near neighbor, who heard Mrs. Fells scream, ran over and arrived about the time Fells died. When he arrived, appellant was holding F'ells’ head with his right hand and had his left hand over Fells’ stomach. Appellant told witness to go for a doctor, but witness replied' that it was no use. On witness’ first trip he did not see anything of a knife. He went home, and returned soon thereafter, and when he got back the second time he saw a knife sticking in the floor, where the appellant called his attention to it. Appellant then exhibited to witness a place on his arm which looked like some one had grabbed him, and had the prints of finger nails as if some one had scratched him, and appellant told witness that Fells had struck at him with a knife, and that he had to shoot him. He said to witness that, if he could not do him any good not to do him any harm, and asked Mrs. Fells if she could tell it like it was, and she replied that, when Fells started toward the door she thought he was trying to run, and appellant replied, “No, he aimed to shut the door and whirl on me.”

It was shown that Fells was shot in the center of the stomach with shot that looked like buckshot. The shot ranged down, and was at close range. The State, without objection of appellant being offered at the time, introduced evidence to the effect that, on the morning after the killing, there were blood stains, yet damp, on the sheets and quilts, and permitted the State to introduce the clothing that Fells had on at the time he was killed. After the State rested, the appellant moved the court to exclude the evidence as to the blood stains on the bed clothing and the clothes worn by Fells at the time he was killed. The court ruled that the jury could consider the testimony to determine the entire facts in the case, to which ruling appellant duly excepted. The court, over the objection of appellant, permitted the State to introduce certain letters written by the appellant to Mrs. Fells after he and Mrs. Fells were put in jail. The court, in refusing to exclude this testimony, ruled that the same “is admitted for the purpose only of showing the motive for the killing, if they do show any, and the relationship of the parties prior to the killing, if these letters shed any light upon that situation.”

On behalf of the appellant the testimony tended to prove that, when he asked Fells the question whether he thought appellant was the cause of the trouble between him and his wife, Fells was standing with an open knife in his hand, and replied that appellant had written to his wife, and cursed appellant. Fells then started toward the door and in the direction of the appellant. As Fells came on appellant with his knife, appellant reached back for his gun, and, as he came up with it, Fells grabbed the end of the barrel. A scuffle ensued. Fells cut appellant’s shirt, his arm and his finger, and was striking at him with his knife when appellant shot him.

Among other instructions, the court gave the following: “No. E. The defendant seeks to justify the killing under a plea of self-defense. On this plea you are instructed that the plea of self-defense cannot avail the defendant in this case unless he was without fault or carelessness upon his part, and must have used all means within his power, consistent with his safety, to avoid the danger and avert the necessity of taking the life of the deceased, and if you find from the evidence that the defendant brought about this difficulty, then he cannot plead self-defense, unless he honestly and in good faith endeavored to withdraw from this difficulty before firing the fatal shot which caused the death of the deceased.” The appellant made the following objection to instruction No. E: “Because it does not give a correct definition of the law of self-defense, and because it tells the jury that, if the defendant brought on the difficulty, he could not act in self-defense in taking the life of Fells, and for the further reason that it is abstract and misleading. ’ ’

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Related

Mode v. State
350 S.W.2d 675 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1961)
Clark v. State
287 S.W. 765 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1926)
Stepp v. State
170 Ark. 1061 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1926)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
260 S.W. 41, 163 Ark. 396, 1924 Ark. LEXIS 292, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hornsby-v-state-ark-1924.