M. W. Holloway v. Clay E. McElroy Warden

632 F.2d 605
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedJanuary 12, 1981
Docket79-3325
StatusPublished
Cited by124 cases

This text of 632 F.2d 605 (M. W. Holloway v. Clay E. McElroy Warden) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
M. W. Holloway v. Clay E. McElroy Warden, 632 F.2d 605 (5th Cir. 1981).

Opinion

RANDALL, Circuit Judge:

On May 1,1975, a jury in the Crisp County, Georgia, Superior Court convicted M. W. Holloway of voluntary manslaughter for the March 18, 1975, shooting of Joe Crumbley. At trial, Holloway had admitted the shooting, but had claimed self-defense. He was sentenced to twenty years. His conviction was affirmed on direct appeal in the Georgia courts, and the denial of his subsequent petition for habeas corpus in the state courts was affirmed by the Georgia Supreme Court. He then petitioned the federal district court below for a writ of habeas corpus. That court granted habeas relief, Holloway v. McElroy, 474 F.Supp. 1363 (M.D.Ga.1979), and the State of Georgia brings this appeal.

*608 We are presented with two questions: First, was the burden of persuasion on one or more elements of the crime of voluntary manslaughter impermissibly shifted to Holloway in violation of his due process rights under the United States Constitution? Second, should the standard so recently announced by the United States Supreme Court in Jackson v. Virginia, 443 U.S. 307, 99 S.Ct. 2781, 61 L.Ed.2d 560 (1979), be applied in determining the sufficiency of the evidence upon which he was convicted, and if so, was that evidence insufficient under the Jackson standard?

For the reasons set out below, and with some qualifications, we answer these questions in the affirmative. We therefore affirm the action of the district court below in granting habeas corpus relief.

I. FACTUAL BACKGROUND LEADING TO THIS APPEAL

A. The Trial

Holloway was tried on a charge of malice murder, but was found guilty only of voluntary manslaughter. The prosecution’s theory at trial was that Holloway deliberately, intentionally, and maliciously shot Joe Crumbley while Crumbley was sitting in his pickup truck at Holloway’s father’s farm-near Cordele, Georgia; Holloway then, according to the prosecution’s theory, attempted to alter the evidence at the scene to make it consistent with a story of self-defense. Holloway has consistently maintained that he shot Crumbley in legitimate self-defense as Crumbley came at him with a knife after the two men had scuffled. The chief evidence to support the State’s theory was a series of inconsistencies between Holloway’s version of the events as related at the trial and in interviews with police officers immediately after the shooting. For reasons that will become obvious later in this opinion, we proceed to sketch the evidence presented by both sides at Holloway’s trial on April 30-May 1, 1975; additional detail is provided in the accompanying footnotes. 1

1. The prosecution’s case-in-chief.-The prosecution’s first key witness was Deputy Sheriff Andrew Martin. Martin testified that he had driven to Holloway’s father’s farm at about 3:00 p. m. on the day of the shooting to answer a report of trouble. Holloway led Martin to Crumbley’s body, which lay just inside the doorway of the Holloway house. In response to Martin’s questioning, Holloway explained that the shooting had occurred after an argument and fight between Crumbley and himself. Crumbley had started the fight in a drunken rage, and when Holloway withdrew the house, Crumbley pursued him with a knife. Holloway claimed that he had been forced to shoot in self-defense as Crumbley threatened him with the knife after following Holloway into the house. 2 The physical *609 evidence at the scene was consistent in most respects with Holloway’s account of the events. 3 The two respects in which the physical evidence was inconsistent with Holloway’s version of events, as told to Martin on the scene, had to do with the location of Crumbley’s coat at the time of the shooting and the ownership of a spread with which the body was covered. Holloway told Martin that Crumbley had taken off his own hat and jacket early in the fight. Other evidence at the trial showed that Crumbley had been wearing the jacket when the fatal shot was fired. Crumbley’s body was covered with a spread when Martin arrived on the scene; there was testimony that the spread came from Crumbley’s pickup truck rather than from the Holloway house, as Holloway claimed. 4 Subsequent investigation positively confirmed that the gun Holloway turned over to Martin had been the one used in the shooting, and that the shooting had been the cause of Crumbley’s death. 5

The other key witness was Georgia Bureau of Investigation Agent Jim Baker, who described two interviews he had conducted with Holloway after the shooting. 6 In the initial interview, Holloway told a *610 story very similar to that which he told Martin. 7 When confronted with a discrepancy in his story with regard to when Crumbley took off his jacket, Holloway this time said that Crumbley took off the jacket as he came into the house. 8 Holloway told Baker that he had fired from a kneeling position as Crumbley loomed over him with the knife; he fired several times. After an autopsy on Crumbley’s body indicated that the bullet’s trajectory ranged downward at a forty-five degree angle from the left shoulder into the right chest space, Baker again questioned Holloway as to the position from which he fired the shots, and Holloway again confirmed that he had begun firing while on his knees. 9 Though Baker investigated with some care, he could find no other evidence inconsistent with Holloway’s claim of self-defense. 10

*611 2. The defendant’s case-in-chief-The defense primarily relied upon M. W. Holloway’s own testimony. 11 Holloway contended that Crumbley had started a fight with him after cursing him and accusing him of trying to shoot Crumbley in a previous incident that involved Crumbley’s unauthorized fishing at a pond on the Holloway property. 12 After the men fought in the yard outside the Holloway house for a while, Holloway broke free and retreated to the house. But Crumbley followed him, brandishing a hunting knife 13 and ignoring Holloway’s warnings. Holloway was forced to shoot to save his own life. 14 After the *612 shooting, he covered Crumbley’s body with a spread that he claimed belonged to him; he then summoned the police. 15

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Bluebook (online)
632 F.2d 605, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/m-w-holloway-v-clay-e-mcelroy-warden-ca5-1981.