Huddleston v. State

98 So. 839, 134 Miss. 382, 1924 Miss. LEXIS 265
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 11, 1924
DocketNo. 23564
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 98 So. 839 (Huddleston v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Huddleston v. State, 98 So. 839, 134 Miss. 382, 1924 Miss. LEXIS 265 (Mich. 1924).

Opinion

Ethridge, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The appellant was indicted, tried, and convicted of murder and sentenced to imprisonment for life. The killing occurred very late at night following a fish fry or party at which the deceased and the defendant were on said night. There were two eyewitnesses to the killing — Glover Brown, a state witness, and the defendant. The killing as detailed by the state witness was the culmination of a dispute or argument between the deceased and the appellant, in which dispute the deceased called the defendant a “damn liar,” and according to the state’s witness the defendant stated, “If you call me that again, I will shoot your head off.” Whereupon the deceased" repeated the statement, and the defendant stepped in front of him, threw up the gun, and fired; the shot taking effect in the left eye, tearing away the eye, the left cheek bone, and the lower part of the skull. After the shooting the defendant -turned and ran back southwardly in the direction from which they came, and disappeared from the community, and was later arrested in the Delta and returned for trial.

The state’s witness states that when the defendant ran past him that he then ran in the opposite direction and caught up with some other parties, who were also returning from the dance, and told them about the matter; that they went on to a white man’s house and told them about it, and the state’s witness and two or three others returned to the place where the deceased was lying; that the gun was lying near the deceased and was a single-barrel shotgun, which the deceased and some others, including the brother of the defendant, had carried to the fish fry or party. The defendant was not with them until after they reached the party, but when [387]*387they started to leave the party he and the deceased and a number of others left together; the deceased then having the gun. The party separated at a certain point in the road; the deceased, the defendant, and,the state witness Brown going one way, and the others taking another road. The defendant at some point on the journey took the gun before any dispute arose. It seems from the state’s witness’ testimony that the dispute was about a girl.

The state introduced evidence of a previous threat against the deceased made some three days before the shooting, growing out of some contest or rivalry between the' defendant and the deceased in their work, which was swamping for a lumber concern. It seems from the evidence that the deceased could do more rapid work and won in these contests, and that this irritated the defendant.

It was also proved by the state that during the party the defendant was intoxicated, and that he threatened to kill him a man and buy a black box. The testimony concerning this evidence as to the drunkenness and these threats was objected to, the objection overruled, and exception taken.

The defendant’s version of this affair was that he and the deceased were good friends, and that the deceased was going home with him to spend the night; that the deceased had the gun and gave it to him requesting him to carry it awhile, and that he was carrying the gun unbreeched on his arm, and that he did not know it was loaded; that he and the deceased were walking along talking, and the state’s witness Brown was behind them some steps, and not knowing the gun was loaded he decided to breech the gun, and in breeching it the gun discharged, killing the deceased, his friend; and that he was excited and ran back to a relative and told them about it and was advised to leave, which he did because so advised by relatives. He denied the threats, denied [388]*388being intoxicated, and proved by others that the gun was a tricky gun and would sometimes fire on being breeched, but that he did not know that, and that he did not own the gun; it being owned by his brother, who was with the other party after they separated at the road.

The defendant also introduced numerous witnesses who contradicted the state’s witness Brown by statements made by him to them immediately after the killing in which he stated that he was walking along about asleep some eight or ten steps in the rear, and that he was awakened by the gun, and that he did not know how it occurred. Also, by numerous subsequent statements up to the day of the trial in which he stated that he knew nothing of how the killing happened.

The state’s witness on cross-examination admitted that he had not told how it happened until he took the stand, and that his reason for not doing so was that he did not think he had a right to, and that the law would not permit him to give his evidence except on the stand. He denied, however, some of the statements about which he was impeached.

There are numerous assignments of error, the first of which is that the court erred in introducing in evidence the defendant’s condition as to drunkenness or soberness the night of the homicide and the purported threats made as above stated. We do not think it was reversible error to admit evidence as to the condition of the defendant shortly before the occurrence, and that he was threatening to kill some one, though not mentioning by name the party. The transaction here turns on conflicting* statements as to how the killing actually happened, and the defendant’s state of drunkenness or sobriety might be very persuasive in determining whether purposely he did the act or not, and also as showing his state of mind.

[389]*389The second assignment of error is the admission over the objection of the defendant of the statement of one Laura Edwards, who stated that the defendant was at the party and was drinking, and stated that he had been trying to marry ever since he was grown but no one would have him, and that he was going to kill some one and buy a black box. A part of this statement, of course, was not admissible; but we do not think it was reversible error. The part of the statement that he had been trying to marry and could not find any one who would marry him was clearly incompetent, but we do not think it was so prejudicial as to call for a reversal of the case.

The third assignment of error is the sustaining of an objection to the testimony of a witness.Pace as to the condition of the ground and what he observed at the scene of the homicide shortly thereafter. The statement of the witness with the objections is as follows:

“Did you see any signs of tracks around there that morning? Yes, sir. Tell the jury what you saw with reference to those tracks? As I walked up, Mr. Callahan and Mr. Massengale were standing over here, and the negro was lying in this position with his head to the southwest, in the ditch, and as I come up they spoke to me and said, ‘Don’t step over there, that is the tracks,’ and I looked, and Victor Huddleston was walking just not quite in the center of the road, to the east of the road, and Lish Harralson’s feet — -(State objects. Sustained. Defendant excepts.) Tell about the tracks you s.aw. The tracks were nearly in the center of the road; one man’s tracks. Which way were they going? To the north. What else did you see about the tracks? This track, or the track of this foot, and the track on the other side, the left foot, were about something like three feet apart. You saw a big track to the right? Yes, sir. It was going north? Yes, sir. Did you see another track? Yes, sir. To the left of that or to the right of it? To the left of that. What direction- was it going? [390]*390North. Did you see any track where a man stepped around and turned backwards? No, sir.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
98 So. 839, 134 Miss. 382, 1924 Miss. LEXIS 265, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/huddleston-v-state-miss-1924.