Long v. State

141 So. 591, 163 Miss. 535, 1932 Miss. LEXIS 71
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedMay 9, 1932
DocketNo. 29884.
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 141 So. 591 (Long 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
Long v. State, 141 So. 591, 163 Miss. 535, 1932 Miss. LEXIS 71 (Mich. 1932).

Opinion

Ethridge, P. J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The appellant, J. J. Long* Jr., was indicted at the November, 1931, term of the circuit court of Leflore county, Mississippi, for the murder of Elmer Stowers, and convicted of manslaughter, and sentenced to five years in the penitentiary, from which he appeals.

The appellant says that he was engaged in farming and-lived alone, being a single man; that, prior to the killing, Stowers' approached Long in a barber shop and asked him what he was going to do Tuesday night, to which Long replied “nothing, why,” and Stowers stated that he wanted to bring out some girls and some liquor, and that Long told him to go ahead. On the night of the killing, Tuesday, Elmer Stowers, with his friend Ben Kinney, brought two young women and some liquor to Long’s residence; being driven to the place and accompanied by an Italian, Pustici, called in the record “the dago.” Prior to reaching Long’s house, the parties had procured some coca cola and had drunk some liquor. Apparently, Long had forgotten the date, for when they arrived at his house he was preparing to retire; it being then a few minutes before ten p. m. After entering Long’s residence, the parties and the appellant drank more liquor; the appellant drinking more than the others. They listened to the radio and danced some, and the appellant then fixed a room for Kinney and one of the young women, and they went into this room and went,to bed. Long had taken his pistol from under the pillow at the time of preparing this bed and laid it on a dresser *544 in the room. Later, Long made efforts to date the other woman, who seemed to have been Stowers’ friend, and she rejected his propositions. They then returned to- the living room and had a game of cards, the appellant in the meantime having become very drunk, as had also others of the party. Kinney and the woman with him bad gotten, up and returned to the living room, and the women expressed desires to go home as it was then approaching one o’clock. The appellant had returned to the bedroom where he left his pistol, procured same, and the keys to the car operated by Rustici, and he and Rustici went into the bathroom near the living room where most of the parties were, after having agreed that they would not let the girls leave until they submitted to their wishes. The appellant then went into the living room with the pistol and stated to one of the women that nobody could leave until they got ready for them to leave, and asked which she was going to bed with, he or the dago. Some one motioned the negro servant who was present waiting on the appellant to take the pistol away from the appellant, and the negro ap-proached, but the appellant pushed him away, and the negro did not secure the pistol. The deceased, Stowers, then requested Long, the appellant, to put away the pistol, which he did not do. Stowers then stated to Long, “You have a gun, and I haven’t anything, but I have more nerve than you have,” and took a step toward Long, and Long then fired the pistol killing Stowers practically instantly. Rustici, at the time this shooting took place, was in the bathroom vomiting, and did not hear anything, or know what had happened until he was told. After the first shot was fired, killing Stowers, the appellant turned the gun away and fired a second shot into the floor.

After the shooting, Rustici, Kinney, and the two women left. The negro servant and the appellant, Long, then got the deceased into a car and carried his dead *545 body to Itta Bena, to the home of appellant’s brother-in-law, who put the appellant to bed, and phoned1 for the sheriff. The sheriff came out that night and got the appellant up and started an investigation of the matter. The appellant partially told the sheriff how it happened, but stated that he did not then care to talk about it as he was very drunk. The sheriff was introduced as a witness, and this testimony was objected to. The sheriff, after putting- Long back to bed, went to Long’s residence to investigate the situation there, and found Long’s pistol on the dresser with two empty chambers, and the pistol was cocked over another loaded cartridge.

There is but little conflict in the version of the different witnesses as to what transpired. It appeared that Long and Stowers, both unmarried men, had been friends for about five years, and their relations were intimate. Long testified that he did not remember anything that happened between the time he and the young woman returned to the room after they had been on the gallery where he made the propositions to her, and the time of the killing; that he had only two glimpses of things that happened in the interim. The killing, as stated, occurred about one-thirty a. m. and there must have been an hour or an hour and a half time in which he -was pretty well intoxicated. Some witnesses testified that he knew what he was doing, and others that he was very drunk. Long himself testified that he did not know anything, except that he remembered seeing Kinney and one of the young women in bed, and remembered some one vomiting in the bathroom.

The appellant’s defense was that he killed Stowers unintentionally, that it was an accident, that there had been no words between them, and that they had been strong friends for a long while; and the contention here is that the evidence is insufficient to sustain a verdict of manslaughter, and that the court refused to submit the theory of accidental killing to the jury. That one of the *546 jurors was related to one of the prosecuting attorneys is contended, and that this was not known to the defendant until the motion was made to quash the panel prior to the verdict, and also that the district attorney stated in his closing argument that it was his deliberate judgment that the killing was manslaughter under the evidence in the case.

We think the evidence was ample to support the verdict of manslaughter. Indeed, we think the jury reached the correct conclusion in finding the verdict of manslaughter, although there is evidence to support a verdict of murder, which, if acted upon, might be affirmed.

There is no theory of accident which can be reasonably entertained upon the proof in this case. Section 989, Code of 1930, provides that:

“The killing of any human being by the act, procurement, or omission of another shall be excusable:

“ (a) When committed by accident and misfortune, in lawfully correcting a child or servant, or in doing any other lawful act by lawful means, with usual and ordinary caution, and without any unlawful intent;

“(b) When committed by accident and misfortune, in the heat of passion, upon any sudden and sufficient provocation;

“(c) When committed upon any sudden combat, without undue advantage being taken, and without any dangerous weapon being used, and not done in a cruel or unusual manner.”

Whether the appellant intended to fire the gun or not, it was fired unlawfully if he pointed the gun at the deceased. He was clearly not doing a lawful act, and his conduct was not lawful in what he was doing at the time, and throughout the whole proceeding. The statutes of the state make it a crime to point a gun at another, except in the discharge of official duty or in necessary self-defense. The pointing of the gun in the case at bar was.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
141 So. 591, 163 Miss. 535, 1932 Miss. LEXIS 71, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/long-v-state-miss-1932.