Page v. State

44 So. 2d 459, 208 Miss. 347, 1950 Miss. LEXIS 254
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 13, 1950
DocketNo 37333
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 44 So. 2d 459 (Page 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
Page v. State, 44 So. 2d 459, 208 Miss. 347, 1950 Miss. LEXIS 254 (Mich. 1950).

Opinion

*352 Lée, J.

The appellant, John Davis Page, was convicted of the murder of his wife, Annie Bell Page, the jury fixing his punishment at imprisonment in the penitentiary for life. Prom a judgment in accordance with the verdict of the jury, he appeals.

Page lived with his wife several miles from DeKalb. Between three and four o’clock in the afternoon on Christmas Day, 1948, he went to the office of Dr. Y. M. Creekmore in the town of DeKalb to get the doctor to 'attend his wife, explaining that she had fallen on the doorsteps and cut a place on the front part of her head. The doctor smélled a strong odor of whiskey, and was of. the opinion that Page had been drinking. The doctor told Page that he had another call to make. Thereupon, Page said his wife was in pretty bad shape, and at his insistence, the doctor decided to go on to her then. Page rode in the doctor’s car out to the house.

*353 Upon arrival, the doctor made an examination of the injured woman, which disclosed the following: Annie Bell Page was lying on the bed, in a cold, clammy sweat. One eye was open and the other closed. Her pulse was weak, respiration was bad, and she was getting her breath just once in a while. Blood was all over her face and head. There was a cut across the top of her head, and the woman was in a dying condition. The doctor told Page that his wife was dying, and was in such condition that he could do nothing for her. On being thus informed, Page became somewhat excited, and asked the doctor about whether she should be taken to the hospital. The doctor advised him that, if she were then at the hospital, probably something could be done; but she might die before she could be taken. Page then left to procure someone for this purpose.

The doctor remained at the house thirty or forty minutes, and during this interval, made observations about the house. The window by the bed on which the woman was lying had been covered by a blanket. The bed, the quilts thereon, the floor beneath, and other parts of the room were bloody. There was lots of fresh blood over the floor in the adjoining room and in the kitchen. An effort had been made to wash it up with water. He did not see any blood on the doorsteps, and the wounded woman was not dressed to go anywhere. Page procured a white man, Mr. Marion Warren, to make the trip to the hospital, but when he came in a truck, the doctor explained that such a vehicle would not do at all.

Mr. Warren went to town and informed Sheriff Craig about the matter, and the sheriff went forthwith to the scene. Upon arrival, he saw Page a few steps in front of the south door, and his father, Will Page, was also there. Several others were in the house. The sheriff found the injured woman in the same condition as described by Dr. Creekmore. In addition, he observed that the covering over the window next to the bed was a *354 blanket, with splotches of blood on it. He found blood all over the kitchen — some had been washed up, but the floor was wet, and the water was still under the house. There were splotches of blood on the wall where someone had tried to wash it off. There at the scene, the sheriff asked Page if he knew anything about it, and Page told him that he whipped his wife the night before with a broom. Thereupon .the sheriff observed a broom with two pieces broken off the handle, and asked Page if that was the broom used. Page replied that it was; that the reason it was broken was that, in whipping his wife, he struck it against a rafter, which caused the break. The sheriff retained the broom, arrested Page, and took him to jail.

As the woman was not dead when the sheriff left, when he got back to DeKalb later, he sent Dr. J. L. Hazey to see about her. When the doctor saw the woman about eight o’clock that evening, she was dead. He found a large tear, four to five inches in the left frontal. area, with a fracture of the skull beneath, and brain substance oozing out. There was a depression, with the skull battered in and open, and with the white bone showing. The undertaker found two soft places and twenty-three bruises, and said the bruises appeared to have been made by an instrument like a poker or limb.

On the morning of Christmas day, Kid Townsend went to Page’s house about 9:15. Page was sitting by a heater which had a fire in it, and his wife was lying in the bed with the cover over her. He saw no blanket over the window. Everything was neat, and there was nothing-unusual. He saw nothing wrong with Annie Bell Page— she talked some. Joe Townsend and Dick Whitsey came up. Page had some whiskey and wine, and all of them took a drink. He was at the home about thirty minutes. To like effect was the evidence of Joe Townsend, who stayed at Page’s house for about an hour. Neither did Adrian Taylor observe anything unusual, or see any *355 covering over the window. When he first arrived at the home, the woman was lying in the bed. But when - he went ont of the house for a few minutes and came back, Annie Bell Page was behind the heater, and told him that she was kind of sick, but not enough to go to a doctor. Later when he went back after twelve o’clock, Page came to the door, partly opened it, and told his companion, Eugene Cherry, that-the friend, whom they were looking for, had gone.

About two o’clock in the afternoon, Page went to the home of Lena Odom, about a quarter of a mile away, and asked Luverta Townsend who was present, to lend him some money. He also made a like request of Otis C. Wilson, his brother-in-law, but without success. -Page then went home, where he stayed a few minutes, came back, and called his brother-in-law out, and they left on a truck going toward DeKalb. Page was seen coming back with Dr. Creekmore. Of like effect was the'evidence of Luverta Townsend, who said that no mention of any kind was made by Page about his wife.

Otis C. Wilson, Page’s brother-in-law, corroborated the statements of Lena Odom and Luverta Townsend. He related that on the first trip, about 2:30 that afternoon, Page told Wilson that he might want Wilson to take him somewhere. After this, Page went home, stayed a few minutes, came back, called Wilson out and asked Wilson to take him to town to get a doctor for his wife; .that she drank about a one-fifth of wine, fell out of the door and cut her head. He told no one else about this incident. After they had driven about two and one-half miles, Page appeared to be excited and told Wilson, “You better kind of drive up, she is pretty serious”. Wilson put Page off at the door of Dr. Creekmore’s office.

Buster Powell was at Page’s home between three and four o’clock that afternoon. He saw the condition detailed by both Dr. Creekmore and the sheriff. In addition, he heard Page’s sister say to him there at the *356 scene, “John Davis (Page), you have killed your wife, and if I was in your shape, I would take my own gun and shoot myself”. To which accusation, Page said nothing.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
44 So. 2d 459, 208 Miss. 347, 1950 Miss. LEXIS 254, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/page-v-state-miss-1950.