Levells v. State

32 Ark. 585
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedNovember 15, 1877
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 32 Ark. 585 (Levells 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
Levells v. State, 32 Ark. 585 (Ark. 1877).

Opinion

Harrison, J.:

Jacob Levells was tried in the Pulaski Circuit Court for the murder of Robert Swan. He was found guilty of murder in the first degree. He filed a motion for a new trial; his motion was ''overruled, and he was sentenced to be hanged. He prayed and obtained an appeal to this court.

The indictment contained two counts, which charged the offense to have been committed by shooting, with a shot gun, and were substantially the same.

The evidence on the part of the State was, in substance, as follows:

Robert Carden testified : That the defendant lived with him on the Baldwin place in Pulaski County, and Robert Swan, the deceased, on the same place, but on the part occupied by Mr. Whitlow. That he was told on Sunday, the third day of June, 3877, about sundown, that the defendant had been cut by the deceased, and he went to his house to see him. He found him lying on a pallet in the yard, with a gash in his cheek extending from theitemple to the throat, ánd was bleeding. The next day, Monday, he came to witness’ house about 30 o’clock in the forenoon, and told him about the cutting, and the witness told him to get out a warrant for Swan. He said he did not want to go to law, and said something about fixing it up himself, and said in the conversation if he had shot Swan and had not killed him, he would have beaten him to death. He also said that he had been told that Swan threatened to kill him.

The defendant did not work Monday or Tuesday. On Tuesday afternoon, abóut sundown, he came through the witness’ yard with a gun on his shoulder, and going in the direction of Swan’s house. In about four or five minutes he heard a gun fire, two shots in succession, and a screaming by women, and he ran to the place. He found Swan down, and the defendant was in the lane, about fifteen yards from him. He came towards Swan, excited, and said with an oath something about stamping his body. The witness told him to go away, that he had already done his work, and he said “the God damned son of a bitch was going to take my life, and now I have got him. Swan was taken to his house; he never spoke; he had one gun-shot wound in the breast ranging around from the side to the front, and another in the abdomen, from which he died a few minutes after he was taken to the house. The witness, after Swan died, saw the defendant standing in the lane and told him Swan was dead. The-defendant said, “that’s what I aimed to do.”

Richard Smith testified that he went hunting in the afternoon of the day the deceased was killed, and upon his return he found the defendant at his house. The defendant said he would like to kill a bird or a rabbit, and asked to borrow the witness’ gun, and he loaned it to him; one barrel was loaded and witness let him have powder and shot, and he loaded the other and started off. That was about an hour by sun. Swan was setting out tobacco plants just back of his house, and about fifteen or eighteen feet from the-lane, and his house was about thirty steps from witness’ house,, across the lane. About dark the witness heard a gun fire and looked up and saw the defendant running through Swan’s gate- . into his yard, with the gun, and saw Swan running up the fence towards the corn field. The defendant threw down the gun and picked up a hoe that Swan had thrown down and pursued him. The witness ran after them. When Swan had run about fifty yards he stopped and held up his hands and said to the defendant: “Please, Jake.” The defendant struck him with the hoe, and the handle broke, and he snatched up a piece of the handle and struck him with that. Swan was shot in the left side. The gun was picked up by the witness, both barrels were empty.

Nancy Kinsloe testified : That she saw the defendant coming down the lane, about twenty-five feet from the gate, with the gun. 'Swan was about twelve feet from him setting out tobacco plants. The defendant put the gun through, the fence and shot at him.

Louis Lindsay testified substantially the same as Richard Smith.

Henry Levells testified for the defendant, that he went to see the defendant, who is his son, the evening after he was cut, and ■stayed there that night. That Swan came there next morning and came into the house with both hands in his pockets, and sat down with his hands in his pockets by the side of the bed on which the defendant was lying, and he said to the defendant, “I said I would kill you before the rising and setting of another sun, and I meant it when I said itthat as he went out he said,, “Í believe Fll go; Fll fix you yet, Jake; Pll kill you yet, damned if I don’t,” and that no one else was there when Swan 'was there.

The State then introduced Alexander Whitlow, who testified that he had a conversation with the defendant on Monday evening in which he told him Swan was willing to compromise the matter, and asked him what he was going to do about it, and the defendant said he was not going to law about it; that Swan and himself coul.d not live on the same place. The witness advised him to take out a warrant, but he said he did not want the law, and would-attend to-the matter himself.

It also introduced Amos Henderson, who testified that he went to the defendant’s house Monday morning whilst Swan and Henry Levells were there, but heard no conversation. He also testified that he had a conversation with the defendant after the shooting, and in answer to a remark that he made, that Swan had told him they had compromised the difficulty, the defendant said: “We did not. Swan came to my house Monday to compromise it, and I told him to go away, I would not.”

The defendant excepted to Whitlow’s testimony and a part of' .Henderson’s because not offered until after the defendant had produced his evidence and was not in contradiction or rebuttal of it.

The testimony of Henderson does not seem liable to the objection, for it was in contradiction of that of Henry Levells.

The testimony of Whitlow would have, been more properly offered before the evidence of the defendant was adduced, but its-admission at the time when offered was within the sound discretion of the'court, which, without some showing to ihe .contrary, we must presume was properly and judiciously exercised.

He also excepted to the following instruction given to the jury, at the instance of the State:

“No previous assault upon the defendant by the deceased would, in itself, justify the killing of the deceased; and unless at the time of the killing, the defendant had reasonable ground to believe and did believe that such killing was necessary to protect himself from immediate danger of death or great bodily harm at the hands of the deceased; or if, notwithstanding the previous difficulty, the defendant, at the time of the killing, was actuated by motives of revenge, and not self-defense, the killing was not justifiable.”

And he excepted to the refusal of the court to give certain instructions asked by him, which we do not deem necessary to set out. They were predicated upon the assumption that the evidence disclosed such facts and circumstances as indicated a necessity on the part of the defendant to kill the deceased, in order to preserve his own life, or to escape great bodily injury, or were sufficient to cause-him to believe that such necessity existed.

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Bluebook (online)
32 Ark. 585, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/levells-v-state-ark-1877.