Houston v. State

264 S.W. 869, 165 Ark. 294, 1924 Ark. LEXIS 506
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedJune 30, 1924
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 264 S.W. 869 (Houston 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
Houston v. State, 264 S.W. 869, 165 Ark. 294, 1924 Ark. LEXIS 506 (Ark. 1924).

Opinion

McCulloch, C. J.

Appellant was tried under an indictment charging him with the crime of murder in the first degree, committed by killing Claude Anderson, and the trial resulted in appellant’s conviction of the crime of murder in the second degree.

Appellant admitted, before and during the trial, that Claude Anderson came to his death as result of the discharge from a pistol in the hands of appellant, who claimed that the killing was accidental. The principal contention here is that the evidence is not sufficient to sustain the verdict.

Appellant and Anderson were young men, near the same age, and both resided in the town of Walnut Ridge. Anderson was married, and he and his wife occupied a residence, consisting of five rooms, in Walnut Ridge. The killing occurred on the night of 'Sunday, September 16, 1923. Appellant claimed, and so testified in the trial, that, on the night in question, he and Anderson and three other young men, who lived in or about Walnut Ridge, took a ride in a Ford car, driving out on a macadamized road towards Jonesboro, and that, as they were on the return trip, the pistol was accidentally discharged while in appellant’s hand, the bullet taking effect in Anderson’s back. Appellant and his companions testified that Anderson’s death occurred in that manner. They testified that Anderson was occupying the front seat with the driver; that appellant was sitting on the rear seat, immediately behind Anderson; that appellant had the pistol in his hand, and was snapping it to see whether or not it would fire, when one of his companions remonstrated with him, suggesting that the pistol might go off and hurt somebody; that appellant replied that there was not a shell in the pistol, and at once attempted to put the pistol in his pocket, when it fired, and the bullet struck. Anderson. Witnesses testified that Anderson died immediately, and that appellant went to a house near by, the home of one Corcoran, and telephoned to a deputy sheriff at Walnut Ridge, informing the latter that Anderson had been accidentally shot and killed. This was between one and two. o’clock in the morning, and Corcoran testified about appellant coming to his house to use the telephone, and he stated in his testimony that appellant was intoxicated at the time. Officers" came out from Walnut Ridge, and the body was taken charge of by the coroner and carried to an undertaking establishment, where an inquest was later held.

Appellant admitted ait all times that he had fired the shot that killed Anderson, or, rather, that the pistol was in his hand at the time the shot was accidentally fired. Witnesses introduced by the State testified to numerous contradictory statements made by appellant as to the manner in which the killing occurred. Witnesses also testified that they examined the seat of the car on which Anderson’s body was found, and that there was no blood on the seat, and also that there were no powder burns on Anderson’s coat.

The proof shows that the bullet entered Anderson’s body in the back, several inches below the left shoulder-blade, and made its exit in front, on the right side, at about the same.level as the point of entrance. There was testimony of other witnesses besides Corcoran tending to show that appellant was intoxicated at the time the killing was reported.

Early on the Sunday morning in question Anderson took his wife to the country to visit her parents. He procured a man by the name of Williams to drive them out to the country in a car. According to the testimony of Mrs. Anderson, wife of the deceased, she and her husband put the house in order early that morning, closed and locked the doors, and started to the country with Williams, and that, after reaching the home of her parents, she got out of the car and remained there, and Williams and her husband started back to town. Mrs. Anderson remained at the home of her parents until the next morning, when- she was informed at an early hour that her husband had been killed during the night, and she then came back home.

The testimony shows that, during the day (Sunday), appellant and these young men with whom he was associated that night, and perhaps other young men, were riding about in a service ear, owned and operated by one of the young men — the same car in which they took the ride that night. Between nine and ten o’clock that night appellant, Anderson, and two or three others went to a restaurant to obtain something to eat, and, as they were leaving the place, appellant handed the young lady in charge of the restaurant an automatic pistol and asked her to keep it for him. The young lady testified that, in about fifteen minutes, appellant came back and asked for the pistol, and that she gave it to him, and that appellant at the time said, “The boys won’t let me go with them if I don’t take my gun.” Appellant testified that he had purchased the pistol, which was an automatic, the day before, and he admitted the conversation with the young lady at the restaurant. Appellant and his associates testified that they left town for a ride about eleven o ’clock, or a little later. Witnesses testified that, during the day in question, deceased had a watch on his person, and also twenty-five or thirty dollars in money., There is no showing in the record as -to what became of the watch and the money.

Mrs. Anderson testified that, when she returned home, early Monday morning, she found the front and back doors open, and the bed in the living room disarranged, as if some one had been lying on the bed. She testified positively that, before she left home Sunday morning, she made up the bed, and that the doors were locked when she and her husband left home. Mrs. Anderson’s father testified that, a little earlier than the arrival of Mrs. Anderson, he went to the house and found the front door closed but unlocked, and that the back door was open. Other witnesses who examined the premises Monday morning testified that they found a small pool of blood on the floor in the kitchen at Anderson’s home, and also found blood on the. back steps, and also a much larger pool of blood under the edge of the front porch. They testified that there was no fence around the yard, and that, near the edge of the front porch, there was the print of the wheels of a car — wheels of narrow tread.

The theory of the State, in introducing testimony to establish these facts, was that Anderson was not killed in the car, as claimed by appellant and his associates, but that he was killed in his own home, and afterwards his body was put in the car and taken out' on the highway. One of the witnesses introduced by the State testified that, about a week after the killing, he examined the rooms in Anderson’s house and found three bullet-holes in the wall, that the bullets appeared to have been fired from a 32-ealiber pistol. Other witnesses testified that, about two weeks before the trial, which was perhaps five months after the killing, they also examined the house, and found and examined the three bullet-holes. Mrs. Anderson testified that, up to the time she and her husband left home on the Sunday morning in ouestion, the bullet-holes were not in the wall. She testified that she went back to the house about a month before the trial, and was shown the bullet-holes, and that they were not there at the time she and her husband left the house on the Sunday morning in question.

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Bluebook (online)
264 S.W. 869, 165 Ark. 294, 1924 Ark. LEXIS 506, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/houston-v-state-ark-1924.