Perkins v. State

135 So. 357, 160 Miss. 720, 1931 Miss. LEXIS 230
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedJune 15, 1931
DocketNo. 29429.
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 135 So. 357 (Perkins 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
Perkins v. State, 135 So. 357, 160 Miss. 720, 1931 Miss. LEXIS 230 (Mich. 1931).

Opinions

*724 Smith,, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The appellant was convicted of murder and sentenced to be hung.

■The evidence for the state discloses that John G. Harbin, who was sixty-three years of age and in good health, lived alone on a small farm in a one-story four-room house. The appellant, his servant and tenant, lived about three hundred yards therefrom. One of Harbin’s customs was to read at night, sitting in a chair leaning against the side of-his bed. About ten o’clock one night, his house was discovered by a passerby to be on fire. Several of his neighbors reached the scene shortly thereafter, but the house was too far consumed for the fire to be checked. An odor of burning flesh came from the house, and, when the walls thereof had fallen sufficiently therefor, a human skeleton was seen “with some flesh on the frame of the body” lying across the springs of a bed, and, after the fire had reached a stage to so permit, parts of a skull and other bones, which an undertaker then present said were human bones, were re *725 moved from the bed springs. One of the bones still contained portions of burnt flesh. The position of the bones indicated that the body was lying crosswise on the bed springs, the position of which corresponded to the position of the bed in which Harbin slept. Harbin’s spectacle case, key ring, and keys were found near the bed springs. Harbin was last seen at his house on the afternoon of the day preceding the night the house was burned.

A witness who lived a short distance from Harbin stated that he arrived at the burning house about ten o’clock that night, and called Perkins, who answered from his (Perkins’) house, and, on being asked if he knew Harbin’s house was burning, answered, “Yes.”

One of Harbin’s children, a son, lived about twelve miles from Harbin’s resident, and several parties, one of whom was the appellant, while the house was burning, went in Harbin’s automobile to this son’s residence and told him that the house was burning. The appellant, according to the evidence of his companions, requested to be allowed to get out of the automobile before reaching Harbin’s son’s house, stating they were driving,too fast. They declined to stop for that purpose, and said that they were not driving fast. This the appellant denied.

A few days after the burning of Harbin’s residence, the appellant was arrested and carried to Memphis where a daughter of Harbin lived, and was there turned over to the police, who seemed to have advised Harbin’s daughter that there was no case against the appellant. The appellant was released, returned to Mississippi, lived for a short while with Harbin’s son, and then moved some miles away to a farm owned by a Mr. Bridgforth, where his wife then was.

Some months after the burning of the house, the sheriff, accompanied by a deputy and two detectives, who had been employed by members of Harbin’s family to ascertain by whom he had been killed, went at night to the appellant’s residence at the Bridgforth farm and *726 arrested him. He then denied, according to the sheriff, that he was Perkins, and said that his name was Smith.

A written confession by the appellant was then offered in evidence, but, on objection thereto on the ground that it has not been shown to be free and voluntary, the following evidence was introduced by the state:

About ten o’clock a. m., several days after his arrest, the appellant, then in jail, sent for the sheriff, and confessed to him that he killed Harbin. The sheriff asked him if he was willing for this confession to be reduced to writing and then sign and swear to it. To this the appellant agreed, and about two o’clock p. m., on the same day he was carried by the sheriff and several deputies from the jail to the sheriff’s office, where he dictated a confession to a stenographer without being, in any way, coerced into so doing. After the confession had been reduced to long hand, it was signed and sworn to by him before the chancery clerk. The appellant was handcuffed while being carried to and from jail, but not while in the sheriff’s office while the confession was being made. The sheriff and his deputies were armed with pistols, but the appellant was in no way menaced therewith.

At the conclusion of this evidence, counsel for the appellant again objected to the introduction of the confession, whereupon the court said: “If this is all your proof, I am ready to rule on its admissibility. If you have further proof, I will hear it.”

No evidence was offered by counsel for the appellant, and the objection to the admission of the confession was overruled.

The confession was then introduced, and reads as follows :

“Plernando, Miss., June 14, 1930. This 14th day of June, 1930, I do make this statement of my own free will that on the night of July 11, 1929, between eight and nine o’clock, I did kill Mr. John Harbin by crushing *727 his skull with an axe while he was seated in a chair in his living room, at Mr. Harbin’s home near Lake Cormorant. After I knocked Mr. Harbin in the head with an axe, I robbed him of his pistol. Got two cans of gas out of the side room and poured over the house and lighted match and ran home across the road where I lived in front of Mr. Harbin’s. The reason I killed Mr. Harbin, Mr. Harbin had been fooling with my wife, and I had asked him to quit and he wouldn’t do it, and I was afraid of him and this was the only time I had a chance to get even with him. I was alone and done all of this work myself.

“[Signed] Oscar Perkins.”

The chancery clerk was then introduced and testified as follows:

“A. Mr. Campbell came to my office and said ‘I want you to take an affidavit. ’ I walked in the office and Mr. Campbell and about five or six others were in the office, and Mrs. Jewell Entriken had written out a confession f'or them by this negro, Oscar Perkins. I first read the confession over to Oscar, and I said to Oscar, ‘Is that a fact-’ and he said ‘that is just the way it happened.’ I said, ‘all right, sign this.’ He signed the confession and it was witnessed by half a dozen of them and then it was said they wanted him to swear to it.

“Q. -Who said that? A. Mr. Campbell. I then said to Oscar, ‘Oscar, before you swear to this let me read this over to you again.’ I read it over to him again. I said, ‘ Oscar, before you sign this let me tell you. If you sign this it may break your neck. I want to know if you are signing this voluntarily and of your own accord, and nobody making you sign it. If it is not true, don’t sign it.’ He said, ‘It is exactly the way it happened. ’ He signed it. ’ ’

The sheriff said that the appellant also told him that “’Mr. Harbin 'was sitting’ leaning back against the bed . and that he knocked him in the head with an J J axe.

*728 The state then rested its case.

The appellant testified in his own behalf. He denied having killed Harbin or burnt the house, and said that he did not, but that his wife did, tell the sheriff, when he was arrested, that their name was Smith.

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Bluebook (online)
135 So. 357, 160 Miss. 720, 1931 Miss. LEXIS 230, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/perkins-v-state-miss-1931.