McGinnis v. State

31 Ga. 236
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedAugust 15, 1860
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 31 Ga. 236 (McGinnis v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McGinnis v. State, 31 Ga. 236 (Ga. 1860).

Opinion

By the Court.

Uumpicin, J.,

delivering the opinion.

We do not deem it necessary or proper to discuss, separately and at length, all the grounds taken in this writ of error.

The defendant has been tried and convicted as principal, in the second degree, for the murder of Claiborn Vaughan, one Isaac Freeland having been condemned and executed as the actual perpetrator of the deed.

To better understand the questions of law in the case, it is well to consider, first, whether the verdict is contrary to the evidence. I will state the testimony briefly, omitting all minor facts and circumstances which do not materially affect the case:

. In August, 1858, there was a gathering in Forsyth county, at a place called Wild-Cat Court Ground. Amongst the crowd, thus assembled, there appears to have been some half dozen South Carolinians, and they constituted what is called in the evidence, the Buise crowd. The accused belonged to what was designated as the Freeland crowd. Claiborn Vaughan, the man killed, was a South Carolinian. The defendant and one Abraham Buise had had a fight late that evening, in which McGinnis got the best of it. Indeed his whole conduct, on that occasion, was that of the bravado and the bully; and notwithstanding Isaac Freeland acted a more prominent part than McGinnis in the subsequent scene of the tragedy, yet it was not so in the beginning, for at the Court Ground, and up to the time of the departure of the Buise party, the conduct of Isaac Freeland was rather that of a peacemaker than .otherwise.

It is important to ascertain the feelings of McGinnis toward the Buise crowd. For although there appears to have been no personal ill-will entertained by him toward Claiborn Vaughan, still the proof demonstrates that his hostility extended, to the whole of that crowd. In the course of the altercations and scuffles between Abraham Buise and himself, it was agreed that they should drink together and drop their quarrels;, and yet while in the act of drinking, McGinnis continued to repeat, “drink your damned Carolina liquor;” [259]*259and this is the first development of the enmity toward that party, as such. Again: when Abraham Buise refused another fight with him, and was about leaving, McGinnis said, “If you don’t leave I will kill the last damned South Carolinian that is of you.” Here the spirit of the partisan had got the mastery over all personal likes and dislikes; and this is no new phase of human nature — with all associations it is enacted daily before our eyes. The Democrat and the American will each forget, in a day, the friendship of a long lifetime, so soon as his party blood is boiling. After such a declaration or threat as that just quoted, it is needless to invoke the former difficulties between ’ McGinnis and some of the Freeland" crowd, or the kindly relations which had subsisted, down to the morning of that fatal day, between himself and Claibom Vaughan.

The Buise party left, all in the right direction for their respective homes. Abraham Buise turned out of the main road to a spring to get a drink of water, while these, McGinnis and the opposite party, started in the same direction, but g-oing directly from their respective homes. They began to curse the Buise party, telling them “they had better go home, for that they were all run from their county for stealing or forgery, or some other damned meanness.” Old man Buise replied to McGinnis, “that he was a damned old penitentiary convict.” And from this response, we gather that McGinnis was the spokesman and leader of his gang.

The Buise crowd proceeded some seventy-five or one hundred yards and halted, one of them returning to get the shot-bag he had left at the spring, and old man Buise’s bridle. The Freeland crowd went back to the Court Ground. Soon they were observed coming back with a torchlight, shouting and singing like drunken men: “Walk, Tom Walker, walk away, we’ll make the damned South Carolinians walk away.” The Buise party set off and got' some quarter of a mile ahead. The pursuing party, after momentarily halting, some forty yards distant, approached them rapidly. One of the witnesses testifies that it was McGinnis who exhibited a wound upon his head and asked several if they had stricken him. But the weight of the evidence is, that it was Isaac Freeland who made this inquiry. When Isaac Freeland interrogated old Wm. Buise about the matter, he struck him one or two blows with his stick, when he, and most of his crowd fled and concealed themselves.

[260]*260The pursuing party had passed Claiborn Vaughan upon his horse in the road, and after the affair between Isaac Freeland and Wm. Buise, the former returned to where Claiborn Vaughan was, and addressing him as Wiley Vaughan — who was -in the company — he said: “Is this Wiley Vaughan, the rascal who struck me with a stick?” Claiborn Vaughan replied : “I am not Wiley Vaughan, but Claiborn Vaughan.” Isaac Freeland said: “You are a damned South Carolinian, and with that crowd.” Claiborn Vaughan answered: “I am a South Carolinian, and with that crowd, but took no part in their fighting scrape.” Isaac Freeland retorted: “We take in all South Carolinians,” or “it is South Carolina blood we are after.” Both expressions may have been used.

I Ahd now the fatal catastrophe ensued; Claiborn Vaughan was stricken down; whether he was dismounted at the time, or was knocked off his horse, is not certain. And now the shout of. encouragement was heard: “hurrah, Freeland! hurrah, Freeland!” Claiborn Vaughan cried: “Boys, I’m murdered.” Next, “murder, murder,” the last wail in a choking voice, as his life-blood was fast ebbing out to glut the vengeance of an infuriated mob ! Isaac Freeland, with a callousness without a parallel, said: “are you dead, God damn you, old man,” or “old fellow!” McGinnis was there all this time.

After Isaac Freeland had left his victim, McGinnis being near, some noise was heard like scuffling or, as one of the witnesses described it, as if some one was knocking or kicking the body of another. When McGinnis joined his crowd, and the question was. asked if there was not some fighting back there where Claiborn Vaughan was murdered, he replied, “no, there was nothing wrong,” or “nothing the matter.” The last sight seen of Claiborn Vaughan that night, he was on his all-fours.

For the sake of our common humanity, I shall assume, in this opinion, although there is strong testimony to the contrary, that after the brutal butchery of the unoffending man, by Isaac Freeland, that no more violence was inflicted upon his person. He was stabbed in thirteen places; the jugular vein being almost cut asunder, and done, probably, with the knife of Isaac Freeland, while his helpless and imploring victim was prostrate on his back, and his butcher [261]*261a-straddle of him. The wounds upon the body of the deceased, as well as the blood upon the pantaloons of Isaac Freeland, justify the foregoing supposition. There could be no motive for stamping one even thus pierced and hacked to pieces, except as we would a slaughtered swine or beef-cattle, to drain the last drop of blood from the body.

So much for the evidence in this case. In the opinion of this Court, it fully authorized the finding of the jury, that the defendant was present aiding and abetting in this horrible homicide. If it be asked what motive had McGinnis in aiding and abetting in killing Claiborn Vaughan, I reply, what motive had Isaac Freeland for killing him? Did the Court err in the administration of the law in this case?

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Bluebook (online)
31 Ga. 236, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcginnis-v-state-ga-1860.