Hurd v. State

102 So. 293, 137 Miss. 178, 1924 Miss. LEXIS 230
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1924
DocketNo. 24147
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 102 So. 293 (Hurd 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
Hurd v. State, 102 So. 293, 137 Miss. 178, 1924 Miss. LEXIS 230 (Mich. 1924).

Opinion

Cook, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

In the circuit court of the Second district of Hinds county the appellant, Lester Hurd, was convicted of murder,' and sentenced to be hanged, and from this conviction and sentence he prosecuted this appeal.

To establish the guilt of the appellant the state first offered the testimony of two negroes, Eoosevelt Kichardson and Walter Johnson, who testified, in substance, that just before dark on the day of the killing they boarded an east-bound freight train of the Alabama &• Vicksburg’ Eaihvay Company just as it was leaving the Vicksburg yards; that shortly thereafter this appellant and two companions also boarded the train; that after the train had traveled several -miles toward Jackson the appellant came over the train to the car on which the witnesses were riding and asked them for a match; that they had no matches, but, as one of them was smoking, he gave the appellant a light; that the appellant then returned to the place where his companions, were riding, and shortly thereafter the three together came onto the car on which these two witnesses were riding, and after some conversation suddenly covered them with pistols and proceeded to rob them, securing from the person of [182]*182Koosevelt Bichardson the sum of nine dollars and thirteen cents and from Walter Johnson twenty dollars in money, a small pistol, and a jug* of whiskey. They further testified as to the details of this robbery, and that each of their assailants was armed with a larg’e pistol; that when they reached the suburbs of the town of Edwards their assailants forced them to leave the train, the train proceeding east toward Jackson; and that they immediately reported the robbery to the marshal of the town of Edwards.

This east-bound freight train proceeded to the town of Bolton, where it stopped on a. side track to await the arrival of a west-bound passenger train, and J. W. Moore, a constable residing at Bolton, testified that about the time this train reached Bolton he received a telephone message from the marshal of Edwards informing him of this robbery and giving him a description of the parties who had committed it, and requesting him to meet this train and arrest them; that he immediately communicated this information to Ollie Lancaster, the marshal of Edwards, and together they proceeded westward down the railroad track to the point where this train was standing; that when they reached the locomotive they separated, Lancaster going in the north side of the train, and the witness, Moore, on the south side; that he., Moore, met a Mr. Hamilton and another man, and was thereby delayed a few moments; that Hamilton wanted to go with him, but that he appeared to be somewhat intoxicated, and he told him to go on to town; that he, Moore, then proceeded along the south side of the train, and when he had gone about half the length thereof there was a fusillade of pistol shots on the north side of the train about one car length ahead of him, the number of shots being estimated by him at from fifteen to twenty and the number of pistols firing at about three; that he ran forward for the purpose of crossing to the north side of the train at the first opening between the [183]*183cars, but that about the time be reached this opening some one crawled out from under the train a short distance in front of him; that this party, having something’ in his hand which appeared to be a pistol, got onto his feet, and started to run south directly away from the train; that he Moore, ordered this party to halt, but he did not do so, and he then fired twice at him, the second shot bringing* the fleeing man to the ground; that he then heard some one approaching him from the rear, and he wheeled around and covered this man with his gun, but at once recognized him as the man, Hamilton, whom he had ordered not to come down there; that he pushed this man back and directed him to go back to town, and he started in that direction; that he, Moore, then started in pursuit of the man that he had wounded, but had only proceeded a few steps when he heard three shots behind him; that he turned and started back towards the place where these last shots were fired, but before he reached there Hamilton called to him that he had been shot, and that he discovered Hamilton between the two box cars at the first opening east of the point where he had left him; that Hamilton was wounded, and he carried him up the train toward town until he met another white man who, at his request, carried Hamilton to a doctor; that he, Moore, then came back to the point where Hamilton had been wounded, and there crossed over the train to the north side thereof; that when he got on the north side of the train he saw no one, but after some search he found the marshal, Ollie Lancaster, dead on the ground, several bullets having* taken effect in his body.

He further testified that he then went to the place where the man at whom he had shot fell, and there found blood stains, and tracks indicating that the man had crawled away on his hands and knees, sometimes crawling on his hands and one knee, and at other places on both knees; that he followed these blood stains and [184]*184tracks about two hundred yards to a bridge on a public road south of the railroad; that he traced these blood stains and tracks under this bridge,'and to a point, where they came out from under the bridge, but there lost the trail.

The state next offered the testimony of Yancy Cook and his negro chaffeur, who testified, in substance, that they were driving into Bolton between eleven and twelve o’clock on the night of the killing; that when they crossed this bridge about one hundred seventy-five or two hundred yards south of the place where the shooting occurred they found the appellant lying in or crawling across the road; that his leg was shot and broken; that he said that trainmen had put him off a fireight train and had shot him, and that he wanted to go to Jackson; that they took the wounded man in the car, and, finding a large crowd in the town of. Bolton, they brought him on through to Jackson and delivered him to the police at the city jail. They further testified that when they picked up the appellant he had removed one shoe and had a small pistol concealed in this shoe, and that they took the pistol from him and delivered it to the officers. The witness Walter Johnson identified this pistol as the one which was taken from his person by the appellant at the time of the robbery at Edwards. The witness Roosevelt Richardson testified that on the day before the trial the appellant called-him to the jail and talked to him about having robbed him, and said, “Don’t breathe I had a pistol or anything.” The man, Hamilton, who was wounded at the scene of the shooting, was not jntroduced as a witness.

At the conclusion of the testimony for the state the appellant filed a motion to exclude the evideuce and direct a verdict of not guilty. This motion was overruled, and thereupon the appellant, without introducing any evidence whatever, rested his case.

In the brief and argument of counsel for the appellant three grounds for a reversal are presented: First, that [185]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
102 So. 293, 137 Miss. 178, 1924 Miss. LEXIS 230, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hurd-v-state-miss-1924.