People v. Stallworth

111 N.W.2d 742, 364 Mich. 528
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 30, 1961
DocketDocket 45, Calendar 48,716
StatusPublished
Cited by45 cases

This text of 111 N.W.2d 742 (People v. Stallworth) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People v. Stallworth, 111 N.W.2d 742, 364 Mich. 528 (Mich. 1961).

Opinion

*530 Edwards, J.

In the last of a series of drunken attacks upon his wife, George Stallworth suffered a. knife wound in the lower abdomen. Four days later,, on July 30,1959, he died from the effects of the knife wound. His wife was charged with his murder.

After trial before a jury in Calhoun circuit court where she pleaded self-defense, the wife, Patricia Stallworth, was found guilty of manslaughter and was sentenced to the Detroit house of correction for 10 to 15 years. The circuit judge heard and denied a motion for a new trial.

On appeal to this Court, appellant claims error in the denial of the motion for new trial. She asserts that the jury verdict was against the great weight of the evidence, and that certain testimony bearing on her husband’s reputation for violence was erroneously excluded.

Some recital of the events preceding George Stall-worth’s death are essential to our deciding the case.

George and Patricia Stallworth were man and wife — Patricia Stallworth was 19 years old and George was 26. Patricia had a young daughter by a previous marriage who lived with them in Albion, Michigan.

On the afternoon of July 25th, the day before he was wounded, George Stallworth had been drinking. At his mother’s home a verbal altercation between the couple ended with George assaulting Patricia by bending her over a fence and choking her. Stall-worth’s mother succeeded in getting him to desist. After this affair, Patricia Stallworth armed herself with George’s knife and carried it with her. A neighbor, Margie Alexander, with whom she left her daughter for that night, testified that she saw the knife and cautioned her. ' To this, Mrs. Stallworth replied, “If he messes with me, I’m going to kill him.”

*531 Subsequently on that same evening, the Stallworths were at a place called the Sportsman’s Club, in Albion. Here Patricia asked him for some money and George replied by threatening to knock her through the window. They left the Sportsman’s Club and went to the Oak Grove Country Club outside of Jackson. At this club, George Stallworth struck Patricia and was asked to stop by an officer of the club.

The couple left the cluh and as Patricia was about to get into a car George knocked her down, blacking her eye, and then threw her on the ground and sat on her, beating her with his fists. Patricia got the knife out of her purse and opened it, whereupon George grabbed that wrist. Eventually, a bystander took the knife away and gave it to George who got up and departed.

Patricia was taken home by bystanders and shortly after her arrival there George arrived.

It appears that by this time it was in the vicinity of 6 a.m. on Sunday morning. The next altercation (which in the end proved to be the fatal one) then started, with George telling his wife to get out, that he was all through with her, and with her answering that she wouldn’t — that it was as much her home as his. George then threatened to and started to throw her out, when she grabbed a paring knife from the kitchen table.

Mrs. Stallworth’s version at the trial of what happened next follows:

“A. Well, as I said yesterday, I got my left hand behind me on the door knob, and I got the door open once and he taken his foot and kicked it shut, and at that time he had ahold of my right hand with his left hand, and his — the right side of his body was pressed against me — on my left side. And his head was right up about here. So that made my head — my vision slant towards that way. And as I remember, his *532 left — the left side of his body was not — within close range of me and at that time I remember thrusting my hand forward. But as I thrust it forward, I didn’t feel any pressure on the knife. At the time he swung around, he had the back of his body completely up against me, and he still had ahold of my right arm. At that time he had my right arm with both of his hands and he was twisting my wrist trying to get the knife out of my hand. * * *
“A. As I said, after I had thrusted the knife at him, I don’t remember feeling any pressure on the knife whatsoever. He swung the back part of his body around up against me, and he had both of his hands around my wrist twisting, trying to get the knife. I remember him saying — he never made the statement I cut him — I remember him saying I cut at him, and he said he was going to kill me.”

The version upon which the prosecutor relies principally is that of a neighbor who lived in an adjoining apartment. Margie Alexander testified:

“A. And he said to her, ‘Pat, you get out.’
“Q. He says to Pat what?
“A. She getting out.
“Q. She getting out or you’re getting out?
“A. Pat, you’re getting out.
“Q. Then what happened?
“A. I heard footsteps hack and forth upstairs. When he come back down I could hear footsteps down and he said — she said to George — she said, ‘You have hit me once before, you have blackened my eye and don’t you hit me again.’ A few minutes I heard her scream. She cried. She said, ‘You hit me again.’ He said, ‘Pat, you get out.’ Then I heard tussling. * * *
“Q. Then what did you hear?
“A. Then I heard them coming out the door— tussling out the door. * * *
“Q. What did you do?
“A. I stood up and looked out the window after I heard them coming out the door.
*533 “Q. Tell the ladies and gentlemen of the jury what you saw out the window.
“A. Well, I saw Pat and George out there. He was pushing her with his arms up around her — pushing her, telling her to get out — to get out now, Pat, get out now. She said, ‘Turn me loose.’ She was pushing his hand away and she let her hand down and he got away — walked away from her — walked back from her door, and she came a long step to my door and they were looking at each other real funny. * * *
“Q. (By Mr. Moore continuing): Now Mrs. Alexander—
“A. Yes.
“Q. Could you see the hands of George Stallworth?
“A. Yes, I could.
“Q. Did he have anything in his hand?
“A. No, I didn’t see anything again.
“Q. If he had of had, would you have seen it?
“A. I couldn’t see it once.

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Bluebook (online)
111 N.W.2d 742, 364 Mich. 528, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-stallworth-mich-1961.