Miller v. State

677 So. 2d 726, 1996 WL 317019
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedJune 13, 1996
Docket92-KA-01107-SCT
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 677 So. 2d 726 (Miller 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
Miller v. State, 677 So. 2d 726, 1996 WL 317019 (Mich. 1996).

Opinion

677 So.2d 726 (1996)

Henry C. MILLER
v.
STATE of Mississippi.

No. 92-KA-01107-SCT.

Supreme Court of Mississippi.

June 13, 1996.

Kent E. Smith, Webb Deaton Balducci Smith & Faulks, Oxford, for Appellant.

Michael C. Moore, Attorney General, Jeffrey A. Klingfuss, Sp. Asst. Attorney General, Jackson, for Appellee.

En Banc.

SULLIVAN, Presiding Justice, for the court:

Henry C. Miller was granted an out-of-time appeal of his January 25, 1985, conviction of murder and sentence of life imprisonment. Miller was convicted of the June 22, 1984, shooting death of his wife by a jury of the Circuit Court of Tishomingo County, Mississippi. At trial, Miller asked for and was denied a jury instruction on accident or misfortune. Finding the trial court erred in refusing such an instruction, we reverse and remand for a new trial on the merits.[1]

STATEMENT OF FACTS

Sometime between 11:00 p.m. and midnight on Friday, June 22, 1984, Henry C. Miller (Miller) and his girlfriend, Edith Critchett (Critchett), returned to the Little Creek Motel, in Iuka, Mississippi, where they were living together. The two had been to Cherokee, Alabama, drinking and celebrating Critchett's birthday which had been earlier in the week. After pulling into the motel parking lot and parking in front of the door to their room, Miller got out of the truck to unlock the door while Critchett stayed in the truck. At that time Miller's wife, Mary Ann Miller (Mary), from whom he was separated, appeared with their three young children. Mary pulled Critchett out of the truck. Miller separated the two women. From here the testimony differs.

EDITH CRITCHETT

Critchett testified that Miller became angry with Mary for pulling Critchett out of the truck and made Mary apologize. When asked what she was doing there, Mary stated that she thought Miller might want to see his children. Miller told Mary to just leave the children, the oldest of whom was five years old, with him. Critchett had never met Mary or the children before that night.

*727 Critchett testified that at that point Miller opened the door to their room and everyone went inside. Critchett and the three children sat on the bed and Mary sat on the couch. Critchett stated that Miller became angry with Mary. He asked her why she came back and would not just leave him alone. Critchett told Mary that she should not have pulled her out of the truck. At that point Miller became really angry, yelling and hitting Mary while she was sitting on the couch. Mary put up her hands to protect her face, but Miller continued to hit her. Miller then removed a gun from a drawer. Critchett testified that at this point Miller:

walked back over to her [Mary] and he was loading it and unloading it and he fired the first shot and I tried to stop him, I told him no, not to do that, I said that she wasn't worth it, the type of person she was and he wouldn't listen to me, he pushed me back on the bed and I don't quite remember what he said, you know, but he didn't want me involved and I tried to stop him but he wouldn't listen to me and the kids were yelling, no, daddy, no, daddy and kept saying that and then finally he shot and she just tilted her head over and he left. He said that he had to get out of there, he had to leave and so he left.

Critchett stated that when Miller shot Mary in the head, Mary was sitting on the couch and was not threatening Miller in any way. After Miller left, Critchett took the children out of the room and got a neighbor. The neighbor called an ambulance and the police. When the police arrived, Critchett was put in a police car and taken to jail where she stayed until she was released the next afternoon.

On cross-examination, Critchett admitted making three separate statements to police before being released. The first two differed significantly from her trial testimony in that she stated that she did not enter the hotel room with Miller and Mary, but stayed outside and did not witness the shooting. She also admitted telling police in her first two statements that she only heard one gunshot instead the two testified to at trial. Critchett testified that she lied in the first two statements to protect Miller and because she was afraid of Miller and thought to stay in his good graces by lying about what she saw. Later she decided to do something for Mary and the children and so she told the truth about being in the room at the time of the shooting. It was after giving this third statement that Critchett was released from jail. However, the time frame is unclear and there is no evidence that the changed statement and her release were related.

After being released from jail Critchett returned to the same room at the Little Creek Motel where the murder had occurred and continued to live there. Critchett stated that after the shooting Miller moved in with his sister. He did continue to visit Critchett occasionally and at one point they rented a larger room and lived together for about a week. Critchett and Miller then had an argument and he moved out permanently.

HENRY C. MILLER

Miller admitted shooting his wife, but stated it was an accident. On the night of the shooting it had been at least a month since Miller had seen Mary and he had not seen his children since January, five months earlier. Miller stated that he had tried to reconcile with Mary a month before the shooting, but she wanted a divorce and so he agreed. A week later Miller moved in with Critchett.

Miller stated that on the night of the shooting he and Critchett parked in front of their room and he got out of the truck. Mary and the children were there and Mary pulled Critchett out of the truck. Miller testified that after he separated Mary and Critchett, he, Mary and the children went inside the motel room while Critchett stayed outside. Miller stated that he had Mary's state income tax check and they went in the room so he could get it for her and so they could talk. He stated that Critchett stayed outside because Mary was upset and was trying to get her hands on Critchett.

Once inside the room, the children sat on the bed and Mary sat down on the couch. Miller stated that his gun was lying on top of the nightstand beside the bed, not in the drawer as Critchett testified. Miller testified that he went to get the income tax check out of a drawer and when he turned around *728 Mary lunged for the gun. Miller beat her to it and they fought over the gun and it discharged once, striking Mary. On cross-examination Miller described the shooting, stating:

Well, she went for the gun and I went for the gun and we both had got to it at about the same time and I got ahold of it and it was in a holster and somehow or another it got out of the holster and the hammer on the gun was cocked and it went off and it shot her and she fell onto the couch and fell over.

Miller stated that he had been drinking heavily and everything happened so fast he could not remember exactly how it all happened. Miller testified that after the gun went off he could not think straight, so he just turned around and left, leaving his wife bleeding and his children screaming.

Miller was arrested at his sister's house, several hours after the shooting. He gave a written statement to police around 10:30 a.m. the next morning. That statement varied from his trial testimony in one significant detail. In the written statement he made no mention of a struggle over the gun. The statement read, in part:

After we got in my room it started again.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
677 So. 2d 726, 1996 WL 317019, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/miller-v-state-miss-1996.