Motley v. State

165 So. 296, 174 Miss. 568, 1936 Miss. LEXIS 197
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 13, 1936
DocketNo. 31917.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 165 So. 296 (Motley 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
Motley v. State, 165 So. 296, 174 Miss. 568, 1936 Miss. LEXIS 197 (Mich. 1936).

Opinion

*572 Ethridge, P. J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The appellant, Howell Motley, was indicted for the murder of his father, Lee Motley, at the August, 1934, term of the circuit court of Newton county; placed on trial at the March, 1935, term of the court on said indictment; convicted of murder; and sentenced to serve a life term in the state penitentiary, from which judgment this appeal is prosecuted.

The deceased was killed with a shotgun at the home of his son, who lived near him.

According to the appellant and his wife, the deceased came to their home, made a demand for money alleged by him to be due to him by his son, and they had a conversation in which the son offered to pay some money and to give some corn, although he claimed not to owe the debt, but said he would do so to save trouble. The relation between the father and son had been strained due to the *573 fact that some time prior to the killing the father was arrested and taken to the insane hospital at Meridian, and the sheriff and his deputy being unable to overpower him, solicited the aid of the appellant, and because of this the deceased cursed his son, calling him a vile epithet, and said he would kill him if it was the last thing he did. This testimony was ruled out by the court below, apparently on the ground that it was too remote from the cause.

The appellant tendered two physicians, the present and past superintendents of the East Mississippi Insane Hospital, to prove that Lee Motley was insane, and the character of his insanity as shown by the records of that institution. Dr. Welch, the present superintendent, was not at the institution when Lee Motley was there, and had not made any examination of him, but he was the custodian of the records there, and was offered to prove the records, which was ruled out by the court. Dr. Hoye, the past superintendent, was then offered to show that the records were made under his snperintendency, and to show that they were properly made, and what they contained. In the absence of the jury he was examined and stated that Lee Motley was afflicted with paranoia, and that his form of insanity rendered persons dangerous, and that when a person was so afflicted he could not get an idea once entertained out of his mind.

It was shown by the testimony of the appellant that after his father returned from the insane hospital he went over to see him, and that his father directed his attention to the bullet holes made in the walls by the sheriff’s pistol when he shot the deceased in arresting him, and his father grew very angry, and the appellant left, and that some little time before the killing the appellant was passing his father’s house when he called him, and they had some words, and he asked his father to quit calling him to stop when he was passing, and his father said it was a public road and he would stop him when he damned *574 please. The appellant offered his mother, the wife of the deceased, to prove by her that his father, Lee Motley, had stated to her, and she had communicated to the son, Howell Motley, that if he did not pay his father the sum claimed the father would kill him, which statement was, by the court, ruled out as being’ a privileged communication.

The appellant also, as stated, introduced his wife, who' testified .that on the occasion she was at the deceased’s house, he made some threat against her husband that, unless he paid him some money the deceased claimed was due him, the deceased would kill her husband.

There were two witnesses, tenants on the farm of the deceased, who testified for the state that they saw the deceased going to the home of his son on the day of the killing, and he stated he was going there to collect some money that was due the deceased, and he gave them some directions about work they were to do; that when the deceased reached his son’s house', they had some apparent conversation near the steps which they could not hear; that the deceased started toward the house and the appellant went into the house and procured a gun, and while the deceased was approaching his son’s house with hands up and nothing in them, the gun was fired when the deceased was some distance from the house.

The appellant testified, and was supported by his wife, who testified to the same effect, that his father came to the house and they had some conversation about an alleged debt which the appellant claimed he did not owe his father, but offered to pay some money and to give his father some corn to settle the claim, not being able to pay the full amount in money; that the deceased said he would go into the house and get his son’s gun and kill him and his wife and baby; that he (the appellant) went into his house and procured his gun, and as his father was approaching him, the appellant warned him to stop, which the father refused to do; and that appellant fired to pre *575 vent his father going into the house. The appellant also stated that his father was a very strong man physically, having, as he expressed it, the strength of two men, and was a more powerful man than the son, who offered to prove what happened at the time the sheriff and deputy arrested his father, hut was not permitted to do so. Counsel asked him if he had ever seen his father, Lee Motley, engage in any physical contest, and that was ruled out upon the theory that it would inject into the trial the transaction at the time of the arrest.

We are of the opinion that the court below erred in excluding the testimony as to what occurred at the time of Lee Motley’s arrest when he was to be committed to the insane hospital, and in ruling out the testimony of Drs. Welch and Hoye so far as the records of the insane hospital were concerned, and as to their expert testimony as to the nature and character of the mental disease with which Lee Motley was afflicted. Insofar as these physicians were concerned, it does not appear that either of them conducted a personal examination of, or had any personal communication with, the deceased while he was in the institution.

By article 4, chapter 108, Code 1930- (section 4568 et soq.), the East Mississippi Insane Hospital at Meridian was created, and its board of trustees are thereby required to visit it in January and July of each year, and at each visitation carefully examine the hospital register containing the diagnosis of the case of each patient made by the superintendent or under his direction when the patient was admitted. They are also required to call up•on the superintendent as to information about each patient, as to sex, age, and the county from which patient came. It is also provided in said article that every lunatic residing in this state, who shall not have been brought into this state insane within five years, shall be admitted into the hospital free of charge. By section 1536, Code 1930, communications made to a physician by *576 a patient under his charge are held to he privileged.

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Bluebook (online)
165 So. 296, 174 Miss. 568, 1936 Miss. LEXIS 197, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/motley-v-state-miss-1936.