Jones v. State

174 So. 546, 178 Miss. 636, 1937 Miss. LEXIS 258
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedMay 24, 1937
DocketNo. 32550.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 174 So. 546 (Jones 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
Jones v. State, 174 So. 546, 178 Miss. 636, 1937 Miss. LEXIS 258 (Mich. 1937).

Opinions

Ethridge, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

Robert Jones, appellant, was indicted at the September, 1936, term of the circuit court of Sunflower county for the murder of one George Dodd, was tried, convicted and sentenced to be hanged, and appeals to this court.

The killing occurred, after dark, outside the Baird store in the town of Baird, Miss. It appears that appellant had been drinking and cursing in and around the store on the evening in question, and that he had a pistol; *640 that the deceased, George Dodd, who seems to have been the manager of the plantation upon which the appellant worked, went out to where the appellant was and demanded that he surrender his pistol, and that three shots were fired, two from the appellant’s pistol, a Smith & Wesson special, and one from the pistol of George Dodd, which was a Colt pistol, both being .38 caliber, but having a difference in the character and size of the bullets. It seems that just prior to the shooting some one had called the appellant out of the store and that they had gone a few feet from the end of the store when George Dodd walked out and the other party retreated behind the store. None of the witnesses testified to hearing the statement alleged to have been made by George Dodd that appellant surrender his pistol, and ■these witnesses said that the first thing that attracted their attention was the shooting. The bullet which killed Dodd 'entered his left front side, ranged down four or five inches, and then came out through his right side under his right shoulder blade. The bullet was found near where the body fell, and was a .38 Smith & Wesson bullet sightly battered. Appellant was wounded in the leg, and, after the shots were fired, he picked up the pistol of the deceased, and carried it, with his own, into the store and turned both over to Mr. Baird. Appellant was then placed under arrest, and, while being carried to jail, the deputy sheriff asked appellant why he killed Dodd, and appellant stated that he did not know unless he was scared. The deputy sheriff testified that he had twenty years’ experience in the use of firearms, and that there was a difference in the bullets of the two pistols, and that the bullet found was from a Smith & Wesson pistol.

The appellant, in his own behalf, testified as follows, that while he had been drinking he was not drunk, and that while he had cursed he was not mad, that he was trying to shame his nephew who was in a fuss with another party, and that John Allen called him out, and *641 that Mr. Dodd came out and said, “Give me that gun” and that appellant said, “Oh, Mr. Dodd, I am not doing anything wrong;” that Mr. Dodd said, “Are you going to give it to me,” and appellant said, “Yes sir.” Appellant then testified that, “He lifted liis hand through here (indicating) and got it right here (indicating) and I said ‘Oh, Mr. Dodd,’ and he stuck it in my stomach like that (indicating) and that was when I got shot through the leg, and I jumped, and being easy on the trigger just like that (indicating) and I fell and when I fell that is how it was. ’ ’ Here the jury was taken into a room to view appellant’s leg, and when the jury returned, the appellant was further examined as follows;

“Q. Now Robert, where did that bullet go in? A. Right there (indicating).

“Q. "Where did it come out? A. It come out right there (indicating).

“Q. What was it you did when Mr. Dodd cocked his pistol? A. I said, ‘Oh, Mr. Dodd, yes, I will give it to you. ’ He asked me was I going to give it to him, and he pulled it out and headed it into me, and I pushed it down and I jumped when the pistol fired, I imagine my pistol fired too fast, I don’t remember. The only thing I remember was I was falling.”

On cross-examination he said, in answer to questions, as follows:

“Q. You had a .38 Smith & Wesson special? A. Yes sir. . . .

“Q. When Mr. Dodd fell; you picked up his pistol? A. I don’t remember. When he shot the smoke blinded me from seeing. . . .

“Q. You and he (John Allen) were just back of the coal house? A. I was about eight feet behind or beyond the corner of the coal house, I imagine about that distance.

“Q. Mr. Dodd fell right opposite the corner of the coal house, didn’t he? Isn’t that where all the blood *642 was? A. Lawyer Niell, I doesn’t know.' When I got up, I got up trying to go in the store.

“Q. Mr. Dodd came down there and put a gun on you and told you to give him the pistol? A. Tes sir.

“Q. You had that pistol out up there prior to that time? A. No sir.

“Q. You never had it out? A. No sir.

“Q. How did Mr. Dodd know you had a pistol? A. I suppose somebody in the family told him.

‘ ‘ Q. How did they know ? A. My family knowed I had it.

“Q. He told you to give him that pistol? A. Yes sir.

“Q. When you came out with it ... he didn’t shoot? A. No sir.

“Q. He was falling, or were you falling, which was it? A. When he stuck it to me, I said, ‘Oh, Mr. Dodd,’ and I jumped, my pistol being very easy when he shot ‘bum,’ I was scared.

“Q. You were so scared you shot him twice? A. I was falling on the ground.

“Ql. What is your height? A. Six feet four inches.

“Q. What was Mr. Dodd’s height? A. I couldn’t say. ...

“Q. Explain how, if you were falling when you hit him, your bullet hit him under the arm here and came out under the shoulder blade in the back? Can you explain that? How did that bullet get down there nearly four inches unless you were standing perfectly straight when you shot him? A. We was standing.

“Q.. Were you standing straight? A. Yes sir, I was standing straight.

“Q. Then you were not falling when you shot him, if you were standing straight? ... A. I don’t remember the first shot. I didn’t know I had fired the first time.

“Q, Were you drunk? A. No sir, I wasn’t drunk.

*643 “Q. Had yon been drinking? A. Yes sir I had a drink, but Mr. Dodd give me that. . . .

“Q. He was standing np, as yon were and the position he was in yon were tall enough to shoot him so the bullet ranged just as the witnesses testified? A. Yes sir, I was standing up.

“Q. Your height and his height, that made the bullet range just as these witnesses testified? A. That is as near right as I can say.

“Q. Now, isn’t it a fact that you had your pistol in your bosom and didn’t you tell Mr. Wes Watkins and, others that you had it in your bosom? A. Yes sir, I had it in my bosom when I was fixing to get in the wagon.

“Q. Did you take it out of your bosom and put it in your pocket at the time you saw Mr. Dodd coming? A. No change.

‘ ‘ Q. Did. you change it from your bosom from the wagon until you got to the corner of the coal house? A. No sir. That was done at the wagon.

“,Q.

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Related

Nicolaou v. State
534 So. 2d 168 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1988)
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230 So. 2d 217 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1970)
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25 So. 2d 470 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1946)

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Bluebook (online)
174 So. 546, 178 Miss. 636, 1937 Miss. LEXIS 258, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jones-v-state-miss-1937.