Lee v. State

174 So. 85, 179 Miss. 122, 1937 Miss. LEXIS 14
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedMay 10, 1937
DocketNo. 32711.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 174 So. 85 (Lee 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
Lee v. State, 174 So. 85, 179 Miss. 122, 1937 Miss. LEXIS 14 (Mich. 1937).

Opinion

Ethridge, P. J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

Appellant, J. L. Lee, jointly with John Lantrip, was indicted in the circuit court of Calhoun county on a charge of murdering one Ellis Sledge. Upon a separate trial, Lee was convicted and sentenced to serve a life term in the State Penitentiary, from which he prosecutes this appeal.

The testimony is voluminous, and will not be set out in detail. The killing of Ellis Sledge by J. L. Lee occurred at night on September 13, 1935, about 2:30 or 3 A. M. The testimony is conflicting, that in support of the State’s theory being to the effect that a number of witnesses heard a series of shots in rapid succession near the Lee home in the town of Bruce, and one witness, Prentiss Kincaid, claimed to have been an eyewitness, testified that he was traveling along the highway from Calhoun City through Bruce, and saw two men shooting into a-car occupied by Ellis Sledge; that he recognized Lee, but did not know the other party. This witness was contradicted both by statements made outside the court, and by the impeachment of his character for truth and veracity.

The testimony for the appellant is substantially as follows: At about 2:30 or 3 at night two shots were fired *129 from a shotgun into the home of J. L. Lee, one .striking near a window in a room occupied that night by John Lantrip. The appellant, his wife, daughter, and another lady, were occupying rooms back of the room shot into. Immediately upon the shooting, Lee arose, took his pistol and went out in front, saw a car proceeding north which he recognized, and which stopped in front of Sledge’s home, which was near Lee’s home. Lee’s son and daughter-in-law lived nearby; heard the shooting; got up and saw this car proceeding north and saw it stop at the home of Sledge. Lee then went into his home, put on his clothes, loaded his gun with buckshot, and took it and a flashlight and went out into the road, and asked his son to keep an eye on the car then in front of Sledge’s home. Presently the car was turned and came back South. In the meantime, Lee had crossed the highway in front of his house, and as the car approached he flagged it with his flash-light, but instead of stopping, the car was speeded up, and Lee. called out, “Stop Sledge,” and as the car was .not stopped, .Lee fired into the casing on the wheel puncturing it and causing the car to stop. Thereupon, Lee went to the right-hand side of the car, and saw Sledge therein armed with a shotgun, which he drew, and Lee pushed this shotgun to one side and it was discharged, and Lee fired several shots into Sledge’s body. Lee, who was a marshall of the town of Bruce, then sent for the mayor, who came to the scene, as did several other parties, and an ambulance was sent for to take Sledge -to a hospital, but he died before reaching it. The mayor took charge gnd refused to let -the car be moved. ' It -was examined the following morning, and it -was shown that the casing on the rear .wheel was punctured, and there were bullet holes in the front of the car, just below the windshield.

A physician sent for immediately after the shooting, testified that there were wounds on deceased’s arm and breast, and also in his side just above his hip. There *130 was also testimony to the effect that the forehead of the deceased was bruised, but the undertaker said there were no wounds nor bruises on his head.

The lady who was in Lee’s home, Mrs. Ellender, was offered as a witness, but her testimony was excluded. It was to the effect that she heard the shots fired into Lee’s home; that Lee ran out with his pistol, and.after-wards returned to the house, put on his clothes, took his flash-light and gun and went out again; that she heard Lee call to Sledge to stop, and heard the shots, but she did not see any of the shooting.

The appellant offered Drew Cannon as a witness, and he testified that prior to the killing which occurred in September,-1935, he and Lee served a search warrant on Sledge, and that during # the progress of the search he had a pump gun in his hand which the witness took from him, and that Sledge, with a vile epithet, said that, “if Lon Lee pokes his head around here I intend to kill him — I intend to shoot his head off.” On objection, this statement was excluded as being too remote, and because it was not communicated to the appellant.

Appellant then offered Jess Collins, who testified that in the spring of 1935, he went to Sledge with a purpose of trying to sell him a ham, and heard him say that if he could get Lee killed for $100 he would pay $25 on it, This testimony was excluded by the court on the State’s objection that there was no threat on the part of the deceased and was too remote.

Another witness testified that he had a talk with Sledge at his café in February or March, 1935, and that Sledge asked this witness, since he had been boosting for the new judge, if he would go to court and try to get the judge to hold up Sledge’s fine. This witness told Sledge that he would be glad to do so, but that Morris was the man to do that, and that Sledge then said, “He stuck me once and I have no confidence in him. ... If I can get it held up for six months they may be prosecuting me for killing Lon Lee, and will not be prosecuting *131 me for having a liqnor joint.” This witness said that he later told appellant what Sledge had said. This testimony was given out of the hearing of the jury, and on objection, the court held that only the threat was com-, petent.

The appellant sought to impeach the witness, Kin-; caid, by the testimony of E. A. Stafford, a deputy sheriff, who said he lived 15 miles northwest of Pontotoc; that he knew, and had known for about eight years, the witness, Prentiss Kincaid, and that his reputation for truth and veracity was bad, and that he would not believe him on oath. On cross-examination he testified that it had been two or three months since he had heard Kincaid’s reputation for truth and veracity discussed. This testimony was, by the court, ruled out, because the witness did not know Kincaid’s reputation in the community to which he went after leaving the community where he was known by Stafford.

The testimony as to the witness, Kincaid, is vital, he having claimed to be an eyewitness to the killing, .and if the impeaching evidence was believed by the jury, there might have been a different verdict. "VVe think the court below should have permitted this impeaching evidence to go to the jury, although the witness was unable to say what Kincaid’s reputation was in the community into which he had moved, some six months before. In Norwood & Butterfield Co. v. Andrews, 71 Miss. 641, 16 So. 262, it was held that it is competent to show the bad character of a witness for truth and veracity in a neighborhood where he had lived for many years, and from which he had moved two years before. That was a much longer period than the one in the case at bar, as Kincaid, as stated, had been away from the community in which he had lived for some time only about six months.

For the State, the court below granted the following instruction: “The court charges the jury, for the State, that even though you may believe that the deceased shot *132

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75 So. 2d 647 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1954)

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Bluebook (online)
174 So. 85, 179 Miss. 122, 1937 Miss. LEXIS 14, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lee-v-state-miss-1937.