McNeal v. State

76 So. 625, 115 Miss. 678
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 15, 1917
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 76 So. 625 (McNeal 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
McNeal v. State, 76 So. 625, 115 Miss. 678 (Mich. 1917).

Opinion

Sykes, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The appellant, Frank McNeal, was indicted for the murder of one Will Williams, and convicted of manslaughter, in the circuit court of Winston county. He was sentenced to serve a term of eighteen years in the penitentiary, from which sentence and judgment this appeal is prosecuted. There are a great many errors assigned as cause for reversal, but our view of the case only renders it necessary for us to notice those below mentioned.

One of the grounds assigned for a new trial in the motion therefor, and assigned here as error, is that the verdict of the jury was contrary to the law and the evidence. In considering this ground it is necessary for us to review, somewhat in detail, the material testimony in the case.

The undisputed testimony is that Bob Albritton had hidden a quart bottle containing about a pint and a half of alcohol in a field, and on the Sunday morning of the tragedy Albritton borrowed from the appellant a mule and then got the deceased, Will Williams, to accompany him in a search for this bottle. When they found it Albritton and Williams took several drinks, and then went to the house of McNeal to return the mule. Williams rode the mule, and Albritton walked with him. On arrival at McNeal’s [686]*686house, Albritton took a seat upon the gallery, where there were several women, among them Mrs. McNeal, wife of appellant, Mrs. Albritton, wife of Bob Albritton, and her daughter, and Mrs. Johnson, a sister of McNeal. McNeal and Williams went to the lot together to put up the mule. The women having noticed that both Williams and Albritton were drinking heavily, if not then drunk, one of them, Mrs. Johnson, asked Albritton at that time to get Williams away from the house, as they were afraid of him. On the arrival of Williams and Albritton at the house, McNeal was there with the women, making preparation to take his sister, Mrs. Johnson, to her home. Albritton persuaded Williams to leave at that time, and these two proceeded to Albritton’s house, which was about two hundred yards from that of McNeal. Shortly thereafter, Albritton and Williams returned to McNeal’s house. They both seemed to be more under the influence of drink than on the first visit. The testimony shows Williams was staggering at the time.

The uncontradicted testimony here shows that Williams, over the protest of the women, and especially of Mrs. McNeal, entered the house, and in doing so pushed Mrs. McNeal forcibly away from the door of the room in which was McNeal. The testimony is somewhat contradictory as to whether or not Williams cursed and abused the women and McNeal while he was in the room. The witnesses who were in the room at the time he was there testified that he was cursing and generally boisterous in the room. The other witnesses testify that they did not hear him cursing while in the room. Mrs. Johnson went out to where Albritton was, and asked him a second time to see if he could not get Williams away from the house. Albritton and his wife and a Mr. Sullivan got Williams and persuadéd him to leave the house. Mrs. Albritton proceeded down the road some distance with him, and testified that Williams told her he would not return to McNeal’s house if she would go on away. She then left Williams and the men who were with him and returned to the house. Mr. Sullivan also soon left Albritton and Williams [687]*687and returned to the house. Williams and Albritton then went to an old house about a quarter of a mile away from the McNeal house. The view between these two houses is obstructed. While Williams was in the room with. McNeal, the uncontradictéd testimony shows that McNeal was shaving, and that he tried to persuade Williams to leave and not disturb the women.

The testimony is somewhat conflicting as to when the defendant, McNeal, first got his pistol. The testimony of some of the women is that when they saw Albritton and Williams returning to the house a second time, upon the suggestion of some of them Mrs. McNeal hid the pistol, as they felt there might be some trouble at that time, and then later on she gave the pistol to McNeal. McNeal’s testimony is that at that time he put the pistol in his pocket to prevent" Williams from getting it in case he became violent. The three women witnesses, Mrs. Albritton, Miss Albritton, and Mrs. Johnson, testified that shortly after Williams and Albritton had entered this old house they heard Williams cursing very loudly, and stating that he was going back to McNeal’s house and violate the chastity of all of the women there. This fact is contradicted to a certain extent by the testimony of Bob Albritton, one of the state’s witnesses. Albritton was with Williams at this time. He states that Williams cursed and abused him, but at no time did he hear him threaten to return to McNeal’s house, as testified to by the above witnesses in the case. The testimony of this witness, however, in our opinion, is not entitled to very much credence. An affidavit had been made against him for the murder of this same man. All the testimony in the case shows that he was drinking very heavily, if not completely drunk, during all •of the' disturbance. His testimony is negative all the way through. Pacts that he should have known had he been lober he showed an uncertainty about in all his testimony.

The testimony of the defendant, McNeal, corroborated by all of the three women witnesses in the case, one of whom (Mrs. Albritton) testified for the state, is to the effect that when the women heard these .threats of Wil[688]*688liams to return to the house, they requested McNeal to go down and see if he could not get Williams to go away. In pursuance of this request, McNeal went to where Williams was. - His testimony is that he met Williams and Albritton returning to the house a short distance from the old house where they had been. The testimony of Albritton is that McNeal came to the old house where they were. McNeal’s testimony is that after meeting them he persuaded Williams to return to the old house. While they were in this house, the uncontradicted testimony shows that Williams and Albritton engaged in a fuss, and Williams threw some of the alcohol in Albritton’s face, and Albritton finally left. Shortly after this Williams and McNeal left the house, and Albritton joined them on the road in a few minutes, and he and Williams engaged in a fight in which Williams knocked Albritton down and kicked him, and Albritton then retreated rather hurriedly to the home of McNeal.

When McNeal and Williams came into view of the women at the McNeal house, all of their testimony and that of Sullivan’s, which corroborates that of the defendant, is that Williams, with his left hand, had hold of McNeal’s right arm; that Williams was cursing, saying that he was going to McNeal’s house and carry out his threat against the chastity of the women there; that when they reached a distance of about fifty or sixty yards from the house, McNeal hollered to the women to run and get away from the house. When he did this some of the witnesses testify that they saw Williams, with his right hand, choke McNeal. Others did not see the choking, but all testify that Williams reiterated his intention of going to the house for the heinous purpose above stated, and then, while throwing his right hand to the hip pocket, cursed McNeal and told him that he would shoot him. At this time they testify that McNeal, with his left hand, drew his pistol from his right hip pocket, and shot Williams. The shot entered the right breast. Williams then dropped McNeal’s arm and McNeal retreated by backing away from Williams.

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Bluebook (online)
76 So. 625, 115 Miss. 678, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcneal-v-state-miss-1917.