Howell v. State

22 S.W.2d 47, 180 Ark. 241, 1929 Ark. LEXIS 327
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedOctober 28, 1929
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 22 S.W.2d 47 (Howell 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
Howell v. State, 22 S.W.2d 47, 180 Ark. 241, 1929 Ark. LEXIS 327 (Ark. 1929).

Opinion

Mehafey, J.

Appellant was convicted of murder in the first degree, and the death penalty was imposed. No motion for a new trial was filed, and we can therefore consider only the errors that appear on the face of the record. The attorney representing' appellant here did not represent him in the lower court.

The evidence showed that Howell was an inmate of the county hospital in Crawford County; that, a few days before the killing with which he is charged, the superintendent, Deffenbaugh, asked Howell to fix a bed for a patient, and Howell told him he would not do that for him or anybody else. He became enraged, and packed his grip and left. He had on a pair of boots that the heels were worn off, and they made a grating on the floor when he walked. The killing took place ahont 7:30 or 8 o ’clock, and one of the witnesses saw a man run out and slam the screen door, and testified that he heard a scraping noise like tacks striking on the concrete. In the room where the shooting took place Nicholson was found dead, Deffenbaugh was dead, and Mrs. Deffenbaugh was lying on one side, still living, and asked for help, and said that W. H. Howell did it. The witness who testified to seeing the man run could not recognize him.

Deffenbaugh and Howell had not had any quarrel, but, after he had told Howell to help him with the bed, Judge Stockard discharged Howell. Howell, before the killing, left the county farm, and said he was’ going down and tell the county judge what they had been doing; that they had turned him out, and he was going to see the judge. He was mad.

Another witness testified that Howell said they turned him away without cause, and were keeping two young men there who had never paid a cent of taxes. This was about three days before the killing-.

The county judge testified that he had sent Howell to the county house temporarily, and told him so at the time he sent him. On Wednesday before the killing Howell went to his office, and wanted to know whether he had been let out, and the judge told him he had. Howell remonstrated with the judge, and the judge ordered him out of his office. As Howell was leaving, he remarked: “I will g-et even with the last one of you that had anything to do with it.” The judge then reached for a hammer, and told Howell to get out of his office, and Howell left.

Another witness testified that he saw Howell in a hardware store, the day before the killing, and he bought some 38-calibre' Winchester shells. The empty shells that were found were identified by witness as the same kind that Howell had bought. Howell was seen on the same day of the killing with something in & gunnysaok that looked like a walking stick. He was going towards the county infirmary, and another witness testified that he saw Howell on the day of the killing. Howell rode with him a short distance, and this witness said Howell had something in his sack, and he asked him what it was, and Howell said it was a gun.

About noon on the day of the killing another witness said that a large man came to her house, wanting some dinner, and that he had something in a sack. She pointed out the man in the court room.

Another witness testified that Howell came to her house in the afternoon before the killing, and wanted something to eat, and that when he left he went in the direction of the county farm.

When Howell was arrested, the Monday morning before the killing, he had his Winchester, and the shells in the gun were the same kind as the empty shells picked up in the hall where the parties were killed. They were 38-calibre.

Other witnesses testified that they picked up empty shells around the infirmary, and identified them as 38-calibre shells.

I. N. Alexander said that some time last December Howell was at his house and ate supper. He was there 25 or 30 minutes. He was carrying a Winchester. That he was mad, and said he had just had a fight.

Another witness testified that a man came to his house, and said his name was Thompson. He had a Winchester, and said he was lost. Witness then pointed out the man at the end of the table as the same person.

There was some testimony that Howell was not entirely normal.

Appellant was being tried for the murder of J. D. Nicholson, and the prosecution proved by witnesses that Mrs. Deffenbaugh, who was evidently killed at the same time, had made a dying declaration in which she stated that Howell did it.

It is contended by tbe appellant tbat he did not have a fair and impartial trial, and that the dying declarations of Mrs. Deffehbangh were improperly admitted in evidence.

There is some conflict in authority about the admissibility of the dying declarations of a person other than the one defendant is 'being tried for killing, some courts holding that, where two or more persons are killed at the same time by the same person in the trial for killing one, the dying declaration of one of the others that was killed at the same time is admissible. Most courts, however, hold that only the declarations of the person whose death is the subject of the charge against the accused are admissible. Under the common law, dying declarations are admissible in criminal prosecutions for homicide only, and the declaration is then admissible only when the declarations are those of the person whose death is the subject of the charge against the accused, and the circumstances of such death are the subject of the declarations. Such declarations are not admitted to prove the killing of any other than the declarant.

“According to' the weight of authority, this rule is adhered to where the accused has killed two or more persons by the same felonious act, and is on trial for the murder of one of them; but there are cases holding that, upon the trial of the accused for the murder of one of his victims, the dying declarations of another are admissible, inasmuch as he might have been charged in one indictment for the murder of all of them, when such evidence would have been clearly admissible.” 21 Cyc. 982.

This court, however, has held that the dying declaration of the person for whose death the defendant is being tried only can be introduced; that the dying declaration of any other person, although killed at the same time and by the same person, is not admissible.

“Dying declarations are admissible only in case of homicide where the death of the person killed is the subject of the charge, and the circumstances of the death are the subject of such declarations.” Rhea v. State, 104 Ark. 102, 147 S. W. 463; Moore v. State, 125 Ark. 177, 188 S. W. 3.

Therefore the dying declaration of Mrs. Deffenbaugh should not have been admitted; .but no objections were made in the trial court, and it cannot be considered here. The evidence, without the declaration of Mrs. Deffenbaugh, was sufficient to- justify "the jury in finding that the appellant killed the three persons. No objection having been made to the introduction of this testimony, it cannot be- considered here.

Harding v. State, 94 Ark. 65, 126 S. W. 90, was a ease where the defendant was convicted of murder in the first degree.

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Bluebook (online)
22 S.W.2d 47, 180 Ark. 241, 1929 Ark. LEXIS 327, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/howell-v-state-ark-1929.