McMurtrey v. State

74 So. 2d 528, 37 Ala. App. 656, 1954 Ala. App. LEXIS 432
CourtAlabama Court of Appeals
DecidedAugust 31, 1954
Docket3 Div. 978
StatusPublished
Cited by34 cases

This text of 74 So. 2d 528 (McMurtrey v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alabama Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McMurtrey v. State, 74 So. 2d 528, 37 Ala. App. 656, 1954 Ala. App. LEXIS 432 (Ala. Ct. App. 1954).

Opinion

HARWOOD, Judge.

This appellant has been adjudged guilty of manslaughter in the first degree under an indictment charging him with murder in the second degree of Harvey Ray Kennedy.

The evidence shows that the appellant had known the deceased in a rather casual way for about twenty-five years.

In addition to his regular job the appellant operated a fish bait business in Montgomery. About 6:30 A.M. on 19 September 1953 the deceased, who had been drinking, arrived at the fish bait place. He requested appellant to drive him to a nearby bootlegger’s, which appellant did. There they had several drinks and departed with a half pint of liquor which they consumed at appellant’s establishment.

This called for a renewed supply and appellant and deceased started in search of more liquor in appellant’s pick-up truck. About 9 :C0 A.M.. they arrived at the house of a negro woman named Tennessee Owens in Lowndes County. There they got out of the truck and sat on the porch of the house. According to appellant they obtained and drank more whiskey. According to Tennessee Owens, and Mose Hunter, a negro man who was present, no liquor was obtained or drunk at this place. In any event the deceased was drunk, and sat with his head drooped on his chest, slobbering down his shirt front.

After awhile appellant and deceased left, supposedly to return to Montgomery. Actually they proceeded only about a quarter of a mile from Tennessee’s house where the truck was parked. Mose Hunter observed the pair sitting in the truck about 2:00 P.M. later in the day.

Shortly after this appellant returned to Tennessee’s house alone in his truck. He made arrangements for Tennessee to cook him some food, and he and Mose Hunter started to a store to purchase some supplies.

According to Hunter, the appellant stated to him as they neared the place where the truck had been parked: “Mose, the old son of a bitch may be dead.”

When they arrived at the place where the deceased was lying the appellant suggested they get out and see if he was dead. When this examination revealed that the deceased was apparently dead Hunter immediately returned on foot to Tennessee’s house. The appellant returned in his truck, arriving at the same time as Hunter. There he announced to Tennessee that “that old son of a bitch is dead as a door nail, and I didn’t do anything to him either.”

Hunter suggested calling “the law,” but appellant said he was in no condition to meet the law, got in his truck and left.

Appellant was taken into custody at his home in Montgomery about midnight that night.

Mr. W. L. Sowell, Assistant State Toxicologist, appeared as a witness for the State.

Mr. Sowell testified that he performed an autopsy on Kennedy’s body on the night of 19 September 1953, being the day on which Kennedy died.

*658 The portions of Mr. Sowell’s testimony-pertinent to this review are as follows:

“On the posterior side of the neck, that’s the back neck, on the left side, just back of the left ear, there was a hemorrhagic area approximately two to two and a half inches long and one to one and a half inches wide, the left jaw or cheek was swollen approximately about an inch or an inch and a half thick. The bruised area on the jaw was approximately two and a half inches long and one and a half inches wide, that’s the left jaw. Just back of the left ear and one half inch from the bottom of the-ear, there was a three-quarter inch abrasion or tear in the skin. It was not a laceration or smooth cut, it was torn. The tissue underneath that was hemorrhagic, ón the. back of the shoulder were two small hemorrhagic aereas approximately six inches from the top of the shoulder, those areas were approximately one inch in diameter. On the forehead, in the center of the forehead there was a small abrasion approximately one half inch in diameter. That was about two inches above the horizontal line of the eye brow. The left eye was contused or hemorrhagic. The scalp was removed from the skullcap and three * * *
* * * * * *
“And then the scalp was removed, by myself, from the skullcap. The underside of the scalp showed the presence of three hemorrhagic areas on top of the head, right along the top of the head there were three of them, approximately two inches long and an inch to an inch and a half wide, and they were right on the mid-line and right on top ■ of the head. And then the skullcap was removed and the brain examined. The brain was congested, now when I say congested that means that there was loose blood in the tissue of the brain tissue itself, it’s just the same as a bruise, there’s just a little hemorrhage in there — and when you hear of congestion of the brain it means that there is some loose blood got into the tissue of the brain tissue. Then the ■abdominal and thoracic cavity, that’s the chest and the stomach were opened and the organs therein examined. Each of the organs appeared to be normal with the exception of the heart. The heart was cynotic. Now, when you say cynotic that means that it is a light blue color, and that light blue color means absence of blood. And on sectioning the heart one of the coronary arteries was observed to be occluded. The condition of the heart from that occluded area on the coronary down to the apex or the bottom of the heart there .was cynotic, that is it didn’t have any blood in that portion of the muscle. Now let me go a little further, the coronary arteries are arteries that leave the large blood vessel .that goes over the body just above the heart and they feed the heart itself .because the heart has, the muscle of the-heart has.to be fed just the same as any other tissue over the body.”
******
“Q. Now, Mr. Sowell, I want to ask you in your experience as a toxicologist and your experience in making autopsies with reference to people who have had wounds of the nature of which-this man had, in all of your experience, what in your opinion was the cause of death of' Harvey Ray Kennedy? A. The terminal 'end or the thing that actually caused it at the last was coronary occlusion. Now let me go a little further here, when I say coronary 'occlusion that means that the coronary has occluded or closed up. There is a nerve that goes directly from the brain to the heart and it’s known as the vagus nerve, and when that vagus nerve is stimulated' the heart automatically stops. The brain was congested and the area of the brain from which the vagus nerve arrives was congested which showed an interference with the vagus nerve or stimulation of the vagus nerve to the heart. There are other nerves that control the blood vessels, they either will dilate them, open them up or either con *659 strict them, and if any of the brain is damaged which controls the constriction 'of the blood vessel, then that area will send out an impulse to the . vessels and will constrict them; and that’s what there was in this case, a constricted coronary artery, it’s just blocked, just the same as if you’d drive a peg in your well pipe, that’s what it means — it just closes it up—
“Q.

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Bluebook (online)
74 So. 2d 528, 37 Ala. App. 656, 1954 Ala. App. LEXIS 432, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcmurtrey-v-state-alactapp-1954.