Jones v. State

213 S.W.2d 974, 213 Ark. 863, 1948 Ark. LEXIS 546
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedOctober 4, 1948
Docket4512
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 213 S.W.2d 974 (Jones 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
Jones v. State, 213 S.W.2d 974, 213 Ark. 863, 1948 Ark. LEXIS 546 (Ark. 1948).

Opinions

Smith, J.

Appellant was convicted and given a life sentence in the penitentiary upon the charge that he had murdered Nancy Chansley, who was his mother-in-law, and from that judgment is this appeal.

He filed a motion to quash the jury panel, which motion was overruled, and while that action is assigned as error, the assignment is not argued in the brief. This motion may be disposed of, however, as was a similar motion in the recent case of Washington v. State, ante, p. 218, 210 S. W. 2d 307. It may be said here as was said there: “Appellant is in no position to complain of the selection of any juror, because appellant was not required to take any juror he did not desire. Every juror accepted on the trial jury in the case was accepted by appellant” as he did not exhaust his challenges.

Appellant has been married three times, and all of his marriages proved infelicitous. His last marriage was to the daughter of the woman he was charged with having murdered. He lived in that home with MS' wife and her mother, who had married one Sherman Barker, and with Mrs. Barker’s (nee Chansley’s) two sons. It appears that a large part of appellant’s earnings were devoted to the support of the family thus constituted.

An illicit relation arose and existed between appellant’s wife and Clyde Adams, of which all the family were aware. Appellant was employed as a railroad section hand and had taken out a group insurance policy for $1,000, payable to his wife. He conceived the idea that a conspiracy existed to kill him in order that the insurance might be collected, and for Adams to marry his widow. Upon this question appellant asked an instruction reading as follows:

“You are instructed if you find from the testimony that the deceased, Nancy Chansley, Clyde Adams and Columbus Chansley, together with Ruby Jones conspired to bring about the separation of the defendant and Ruby Jones and the marriage of Ruby Jones and Clyde Adams and the death of the defendant, Robert Jones, if necessary in order to collect his insurance and that in doing this Clyde Adams, Columbus Chansley and Nancy Chansley were killed then you should find the defendant not guilty.”

This instruction was properly refused for two reasons. First, no such conspiracy was shown, and second, it would have been no defense if true.

Appellant not only killed his mother-in-law, but he also killed Columbus Chansley, his brother-in-law, and Clyde Adams, his wife’s paramour. All three were shot with a thirty-eight caliber Colt pistol, which appellant testified he had bought from Sherman Barker, his wife’s stepfather. Barker identified the pistol which appellant admittedly had employed and testified that he had “missed it” from his home,

After appellant had been arrested he signed a written confession which contained among others the following recital, “I made up my mind this morning when I got out of bed about four a. m., that I was going to get shed of them, that is Clyde Adams, Columbus Chansley, Nancy Chansley, and my wife, Ruby. ’ ’

Before admitting this confession in evidence, the court properly had a preliminary hearing in chambers as to whether the confession had been freely and voluntarily made. The testimony which is incorporated in the record was amply sufficient to warrant the admission of the confession in evidence, but the instructions directed the jury to determine whether the confession had been voluntarily made, and to disregard it unless it was found to have been voluntary.

There were five cartridges in the pistol which appellant used. With these he shot Clyde Adams twice, and Columbus Chansley twice. He shot Mrs. Chansley with the remaining cartridge after which he beat her over the head with the pistol. His counsel summarizes his testimony in the following language which we copy literally:

“The sum and substance of his statements were: He went to the home of Nancy Chansley, his estranged wife’s mother, about ten o’clock, October 31, 1947. He went there at the urgent request of his wife, Ruhy Jones, who had agreed to go to the show with him. But to his surprise Ruby was mad and spoke abusive words to him; that she and her mother had a secret conference; that he started to catch a way back to his work, but that he went down into a pasture where he was attacked by Clyde Adams and Columbus Chansley. He shot them' from the front and started home. Nancy Chansley attacked him with a large knife. He shot her, but due to the slight wound she was not stopped and he had to hit her with the revolver, then she dropped the knife and they made friends, so to speak. She was not seriously hurt and walked with him out of the pasture and about halfway to the main road. They sat down and talked their troubles over. He says that they agreed that the wounded woman should tell that a car hit her and that when she should come to his home they would marry or live together. ’ ’

The court of its own motion ordered appellant sent to the State Hospital for Nervous Diseases for examination as to his sanity, and the superintendent of that institution, with another physician also employed there, testified that appellant was sane, although his mentality was that of an eleven-year-old child. A young lady who is an instructor in psychology in one of the state schools testified that she examined appellant and that the tests she gave him showed the mentality .of a child only six and a half years old, and certain other testimony was to the effect that appellant’s mentality was that of a child not over ten years old. Upon this, and other testimony, two defenses were interposed, first that appellant was not guilty because of lack of mentality, and second, that he killed Mrs. Chansley in his necessary self-defense.

Before the trial, a motion was filed that the State be required to furnish appellant’s counsel a copy of appellant’s confession which was offered in evidence, hut the request was denied. We see no reason why this request was not granted, in fact we think it should have been, but we cannot say that this was such prejudicial error as calls for the reversal of the judgment. Copying the confession would have furnished no evidence that it was not freely and voluntarily made.

Photographs of the dead bodies of Clyde Adams and Columbus Chansley were taken a few hours after they were killed, and these photographs were offered in evidence over appellant’s objection, it being insisted that their gruesomeness tended to prejudice the jury against appellant, and proved no fact which was denied. There had been no mutilation of the bodies, and the testimony on the part of the state was to the effect that the bodies had not been moved and that both men were lying where they had fallen. In overruling the objection to the admission of the photographs, the court said:

“In view of the defense interposed here, that of self-defense, and for the further fact that Mr. Hickman (the sheriff) says he was present when the pictures were taken and that the bodies were in the same position as they were when he first saw them and shown to him by the defendant, Jones, the Court holds them admissible. The Court doesn’t feel that there is anything present in the pictures themselves which would have a tendency to inflame or create any bias in the minds of the jury. ’ ’

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Bluebook (online)
213 S.W.2d 974, 213 Ark. 863, 1948 Ark. LEXIS 546, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jones-v-state-ark-1948.