McGraw v. State

42 S.W.2d 373, 184 Ark. 342, 1931 Ark. LEXIS 187
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedOctober 12, 1931
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 42 S.W.2d 373 (McGraw 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
McGraw v. State, 42 S.W.2d 373, 184 Ark. 342, 1931 Ark. LEXIS 187 (Ark. 1931).

Opinion

Hart, C.. J.

Jerry MoGraw prosecutes this appeal to reverse a judgment of conviction against him for murder in the first degree upon a verdict fixing his punishment at'life imprisonment in the State penitentiary.

The first assignment of error is that the evidence is not legally sufficient to sustain the verdict.

According to the testimony of Clark Fulton, he lived at Jacksonville, Pulaski County, Arkansas, about 175. yards from the home of Jerry MoGraw. Between six-thirty and seven o’clock one morning, his children cried out that Jerry’s house was on fire. He at once started towards the house and saw Jerry before he got there. He went to the kitchen door, and there was no fire in the kitchen; but the ‘living room next to it had been consumed when he got there. The door from the kitchen to the living room was shut. He then said, “Let’s pull this window open and see where the woman is.” They pushed a window of the front room open, and the flames came out. Jerry did not ask them to help him get his wife out, and they did not hear her cry for help.

According to the testimony of Clayton Carradine, who lived back of the home of the defendant, he first saw smoke coming out of the defendant’s house, and called to him two or three times. When he got to the defendant’s house, he didn’t have on any shoes or hat. He did not at that time say anything about his wife being in the house. They found both the front and back doors of the front room locked. The back door led into the kitchen. He did not hear Jerry’s wife making any cries for help. He lived about thirty yards from the defendant’s house, and the front room where the body of .Jerry’s wife was found, was all on fire when he got there. Jerry was ont at the back of the house, and his hair was singed. He was fixing to go over there when he saw Jerry come out of the house. When he got there, no one could have gone in the front room of the house.

According to the testimony of Bertha Neely, she lived across a vacant lot from the defendant’s house and heard the defendant and his wife come home early in the morning before daylight before the fire. She heard them talking, but couldn’t understand what Jerry had to say. She recognized their voices, and heard Jerry’s wife say, “You did, you did; you know damn well you did.”

According to the testimony of T. W. Littlejohn, he went to Jerry’s house while it was burning, and was among the first to get there. He never at any time heard Jerry make any cry for help to get his wife out of the burning house. A few days later he passed there and examined the locks on the front and back doors, and both doors were locked.

Other witnesses testified about examining the doors and finding them locked after the fire.

According to the testimony of S. E. Thompson, those who found the body put some water on the fire around it. The body was lying across the foot of the bed on the left side with the head of the body to the west. The bed was sitting with its head to the south. The overhead joists of the room had fallen. It seems that one joist missed the foot of the bed, and the other fell somewhere about the middle of the bed, almost right across it. In throwing water over the overhead joists before they burned to ashes, it charred them and left a black place. The skull of the defendant’s wife was washed off and showed that it had been cracked in over the right eye. It seemed as if the skull was mashed in there. The lower limbs were burned to the knees. The biggest part of the clothing1 had been burned up.

According to the testimony of Balph Graham, he examined the head of the defendant’s wife, and there was a cracked place with five or six spangles running out from the cracked place like you would crack an egg. Witness showed on his own head about where the hole or cracked place was, and said that it was about the size of a half-dollar.

Jerry McGraw was a witness for himself. According to his testimony, his house burned down about seven o’clock in the morning* of the 25th day of March, 1931. His clothes and about $80 in money were burned up. He did not set fire to the house. He and his wife returned from a card party at a neighbor’s house about two o’clock in the morning*. He had been living with his wife thirteen years, and did not quarrel with her on the morning* in question. He did not have any insurance on his wife’s life nor upon his household goods which were burned up. His arm was burned while he was runing out of the house. He tried to get his wife out of the house but some burning paper fell on them, and his wife jerked loose from him and ran back in the front room. Witness had gotten up early in the morning and had built a fire in the heater in the front room, and had gone back to bed. The roof of the front room was falling in when he woke up again. He denied shooting in the wall close to his wife’s head on an occasion about eighty days before the fire. On cross-examination, he was asked if he had not done this in the presence of Bertha Neely, and at the same time told his wife that he ought to kill her, and answered that he had not. On cross-examination, he admitted that he had killed the stepfather of his wife, and had been sentenced to eight years in the penitentiary for murder in the second degree on account of it. He denied having had any argument with his wife on the morning* that the house was burned. He admitted that the front door was locked which was their usual custom at night, but denied that there was any lock on the door between the front room and the ldtchen. His wife was asleep when he woke up and discovered the fire. After his wife jerked loose from him and ran back into the front room, he went out of the back door.

Another witness testified that he examined the defendant right after the fire, and saw where some of his hair had been burned off, and that he had a little scar1 on his neck.

Bertha Neely, in rebuttal, testified that just before Christmas preceding the burning of the house, she was at the home of the defendant and saw him shoot a hole through the wall of the house right by his wife’s head, and that he said that he ought to shoot her brains out. She denied that she was intoxicated at the time, but said that the defendant and his wife were both intoxicated.

We have made a rather full abstract of the testimony because the conviction was had and a life sentence imposed upon circumstantial evidence; and counsel for the defendant earnestly insist that a verdict of murder in the first degree is not supported by the evidence.

To warrant a conviction of murder in the first degree, the jury must be satisfied beyond a reasonable doubt that the killing was willful, deliberate, malicious, and premeditated. McAdams v. State, 25 Ark. 405; and Weldon v. State, 168 Ark. 534, 270 S. W. 968.

The proof, however, need not be express or positive. It may be deduced from all the facts and circumstances attending the killing; and if the jury can reasonably infer from all the evidence the existence of the elements of murder in the first degree, as above set forth, it will be sufficient. Miller v. State, 94 Ark. 538, 128 S. W. 353; Davidson v. State, 108 Ark. 191, 158 S. W. 1103; Owens v. State, 120 Ark. 563, 179 S. W. 1014; Tillman v. State, 112 Ark. 236, 166 S. W. 582; and Sneed v. State, 159 Ark. 65, 255 S. W. 895.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Freeman v. State
385 S.W.2d 156 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1964)
Reynolds v. State
246 S.W.2d 724 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1952)
Gaines v. State
186 S.W.2d 154 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1945)
State v. Justice
71 P.2d 798 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1937)
Crow v. State
79 S.W.2d 75 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1935)
Shank v. State
189 Ark. 243 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1934)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
42 S.W.2d 373, 184 Ark. 342, 1931 Ark. LEXIS 187, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcgraw-v-state-ark-1931.