Neathery v. People

81 N.E. 16, 227 Ill. 110, 1907 Ill. LEXIS 3350
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedApril 18, 1907
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 81 N.E. 16 (Neathery v. People) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Neathery v. People, 81 N.E. 16, 227 Ill. 110, 1907 Ill. LEXIS 3350 (Ill. 1907).

Opinion

Mr. Cheje Justice Scott

delivered the opinion of the court:

At the August term, 1906, of the circuit court of Fayette county, Charles Neathery, the plaintiff in error, was found guilty of manslaughter under an indictment charging him with murder, and his punishment was fixed by the verdict of the jury at imprisonment in the penitentiary for a term of six years. After overruling a motion for a new trial and a motion in arrest of judgment the court rendered judgment on the verdict and sentenced Neathery to imprisonment in the penitentiary at Chester for a term of six years. The cause has been brought to this court by writ of error.

Plaintiff in error admitted that on the night of January 31, 1906, he shot and killed Curtis Kirk, but endeavored to show that in so doing he acted in self-defense. The greater portion of the evidence was directed to determining whether plaintiff in error was, under the law of self-defense, justified in shooting the deceased.

The attorneys who file the brief for defendant in error state that they are not satisfied with the abstract filed by plaintiff in error, but they have not filed a further abstract. Under these circumstances the abstract on file will be regarded as sufficient to enable us to consider and determine the errors assigned. (Rule 14, 204 Ill. 13.)

Neathery and Kirk were, at the time of the killing, each about nineteen years of age. Kirk, however, was somewhat taller and from twenty to thirty pounds heavier than Neathery. They had' not been on friendly terms with each other for several weeks. According to the testimony of Neathery, the first trouble between them occurred while they were attending church. Neathery was sitting with his cousin, a girl twelve years of age. Kirk was sitting immediately behind them. The latter amused himself by pulling the girl’s hair. Neathery told him not to do that, in response to which Kirk said, “God damn you, if you will go out of the house we will settle it.” Some time thereafter, and a week or two before the shooting, the witness Wilson heard Neathery, in talking with Kirk over the telephone, say to him that he (Neathery) was enough for him (Kirk) any time or place.

The most serious altercation between the two, however, before that which resulted in Kirk’s death, occurred about a week before the shooting, at a place known as Greer’s corner. Neathery arrived at the comer before Kirk, and was standing on the east side of the road, near the fence, talking with two boys, when Kirk rode up on a horse. He stopped on the west side of the road, and, after talking to some friends, said, “I want to see this fellow over here,” and rode over to plaintiff in error. The witnesses who were present at this time differ as to what was thereafter said by the respective parties. The great weight of the evidence is to the effect that Kirk, after dismounting from his horse and removing his overcoat, first addressed plaintiff in error, saying, “I heard you was going to whip me.” Neathery replied, “I heard you said you was going to whip me the first time you met me.” Kirk said it was a lie, and remarked, “Maybe you think I can’t whip you,” to which Neathery replied, “I don’t know whether you can or not.” Thereupon Kirk drew back his fist as though he intended to hit Neathery, but did not strike him. Plaintiff in error walked over to his father, who was standing in the road, and asked him for a knife. Kirk did not follow him. The father refused to let Neathery have a knife and asked Kirk to go home, saying that they did not want any trouble there. Kirk said, “By God, this is a public highway, and I would like to see you malee me.” A few minutes later, however, he mounted his horse and rode off, inviting plaintiff in error down the road. Plaintiff in error refused to follow Kirk, saying he did not want to fight but that he (Neathery) would see him some other time, to which Kirk replied, “Yes, by God, I will see you, and see you proper.” On the same day Kirk asked John Alexander to tell plaintiff in error that if he ever caught plaintiff in error out he was going to “whip hell out of him.” Alexander delivered the message.

On the night of January 31, 1906, the plaintiff in error, with his cousin, the young girl mentioned above, attended revival services at Hurricane church, in Fayette county. He arrived at the church about seven o’clock. After his cousin had gone into the building he met Andrew Walker, a boy nineteen years of age, outside the church, and the two went across the road from the church to a well to get a drink. While at the well plaintiff in error showed Walker a revolver, and told him that he and Kirk had been having a little trouble, and said, “I am not afraid of him.” Walker said, “I wouldn’t use a gun until I had to,” and defendant replied, “I wouldn’t either.”

The entrance to the church was on the north side of the building. The pulpit was on the south side. An aisle led from the entrance to the pulpit, and wooden seats with straight backs extended east and west on each side of the aisle to the walls of the church. Plaintiff in error and Walker entered the church and took seats on the east side of the aisle, near the entrance. A few minutes later Kirk and Charles Henderson came in and took seats immediately in front of them. A short time thereafter Neathery asked Walker to go outside with him to see whether his horse, which he had driven that night and had tied to a hitch-rack near the church, was all right. Shortly after Neathery and Walker had gone out Kirk told Henderson that • Neathery had rubbed against him as he went out, and that if he (Kirk) didn’t go out Neathery would think he was afraid of him. Kirk and Henderson then left the church. They stopped just outside the door long enough to put on their overcoats. In the meantime Neathery and Walker had gone around the north-west corner of the church and had met Charles Pugsley and Alex Blankenship, and these four were standing on the west side of the church, a few feet south of the north-west corner, when Kirk and Henderson came out of the church. The two latter walked out a few feet north of the church and saw the other four boys standing west of the church. Kirk and Henderson then turned and walked' towards the north-west corner of'the church, and when they had reached a point about ten feet distant from the other boys, Kirk said, “Boys, you needn’t be putting things in your pockets,” or words to that effect. Someone replied that they were not putting anything in their pockets. Kirk then asked Pugsley if he didn’t give Neathery a gun. Pugsley answered that he did not. Pie then asked Neathery if Pugsley gave him a gun, and Neathery answered that he did not. Kirk then said to plaintiff in error, “I heard you was going to whip me.” Neathery replied, “No, I didn’t say so; I heard you was going to give me a whipping.” Kirk replied, “I didn’t say I was going to whip you; I said I could whip you.” Neathery said, “That is what the other fellows told me,” and Kirk responded, “You tell the other fellows they are God damn liars, and if you say it you are one too.” Kirk then advanced towards Neathery, who was standing close to the west wall of the church, and the latter put his right hand in or upon his hip pocket. Kirk told plaintiff in error to take his hand out of his pocket, or to put up that gun, and Neathery replied that he did not have to. Kirk walked up, saying he would slap Neathery openhanded, or would slap him through the wall, and caught Neathery by the shoulder or around his neck with his left arm and pushed him up against the side of the building.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
81 N.E. 16, 227 Ill. 110, 1907 Ill. LEXIS 3350, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/neathery-v-people-ill-1907.