Perry v. State

30 S.E. 903, 102 Ga. 365, 1897 Ga. LEXIS 509
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedJuly 21, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by37 cases

This text of 30 S.E. 903 (Perry v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Perry v. State, 30 S.E. 903, 102 Ga. 365, 1897 Ga. LEXIS 509 (Ga. 1897).

Opinions

Lumpkin, P. J.

On Monday, March 8th, 1897, H. S. Perry, with a pistol, inflicted upon N. B. Lanier wounds from which he subsequently died. Perry was indicted for murder, and the facts of the case, as established at the trial, are as follows: Lanier had for some time been a boarder at a house occupied by Perry and his wife on Piedmont avenue, in the city of Atlanta, which, for convenience, will hereinafter be designated as “Perry’s house.” The relations existing between Lanier and Perry had been quite intimate and friendly. It was the habit of Lanier to address Perry as “Uncle Steve,” and there was no hostility or ill-will between them prior to Friday, March 5th. Lanier slept that night in Perry’s house, and took both his breakfast and his dinner there on the following day. In the afternoon he received from Perry a written communication in these words:

[369]*369“I write you this note to inform you I am aware of the manner in which you have destroyed, my happiness by coming in between me and my wife. Now, you low-down, black-hearted, deceitful scoundrel, I will give you from the time you receive this note until (9) nine o’clock to-night to leave this city. And I mean for you not to stop where I will ever see or hear tell of you again. If you fail to do either of these requests, when I lay eyes on you, you may be prepared to risk the consequence that will follow, you damned, low-down rascal.”

Lanier left the city that night, went to the home of an uncle at Kirkwood, named John Peters, and remained there until the following Monday morning. On Sunday, while at his unr cle’s home, he wrote and sent to Perry a letter which was found on the person of the latter after he shot and mortally wounded Lanier. That letter was as follows:

“It is very humiliating to mee; that is, to think of the pass. I do not understand, why you have written mee such a noat; I do not know why it is that you want to take my life from mee. I am not guilty of the charges of death. I have tried to make peas with you, but if it is your desire to shoot mee down like I was a dog, I can stand to see my body riddle. Uncle Steve, you may wish to shoot mee down, but let me say before my God that you had better shoot some others down before me, although that is not my business. I will say as to myself I will never bother you any more. I have always loved you and have tried to get you to think well of me. Uncle Steve, there is another day after death. . You have asked mee to leave the City at once. Could you have the heart to deprive mee of my home and to go where I have got no mother, no money, no friends? I have not don anything to be shot down for.. I do not wish to leave the City. If I do, it will disgrace you and myself. I well know I have told your wife some things that I should not have told, but it was for your good and not for mine, so I was lead into this. Uncle Steve, I have suffered two deaths every since I received that noat. Why did you write that noat? You could have come to the Store and shot mee down than to send that noat, for the respect that I have for you I would rather be dead than to live. [370]*370God knows my heart, I do not understand. I thought to myself this is a dream. Would to God it was. So I will bid you farewell until we meet again, so good bye untill death.

“P. S. Pleas do not shoot me unless you think you can kill mee dead on the spot. I dont wish to suffer, for I have done nothing to leave the City for, and I had rather be shot with an innocent heart than with a guilty one. So good bye.”

Perry began on Saturday night a search for Lanier, and continued it until Sunday night. During Sunday he went to the place of John Peters, looking for Lanier, but stopped at the gate and did not enter the house. The next morning, Lanier left this house, intending to go to his father’s. In pursuance of this purpose, he took a train of the Georgia railroad at Decatur. Perry was already on this train, having taken it in Atlanta. He was still in quest of Lanier, and was armed with two (and probably three) concealed pistols. It so happened that Lanier entered the car in which Perry was riding. The latter seized Lanier’s arm and led him into another car, remarking: “I want to talk with you, and when I get through with you, death will be your portion.” Lanier then said: “Uncle Steve, don’t shoot me like I was a dog.” Perry made no reply to this. At that moment he had Lanier’s right hand in his left, and a man named E. D. Peters had hold of Perry’s right arm. Perry asked Peters: “Have you got anything to do with this?” Peters said, “No, sir”; and thereupon Perry released his hold of Lanier and began to search Peters to ascertain whether or not he was armed. Lanier immediately ran and jumped from the train, which was just then leaving Ingleside. Perry pursued him and chased him up the railroad, firing at him three times as he ran, none of the shots, however, taking effect upon Lanier, who continued to run until he reached and took refuge in the house of one B. 0. Fusselle. Several men then appeared upon the scene, and after some conversation had taken place, in the course of which Perry charged that Lanier had committed an outrage upon his wife and declared that he wanted him arrested, both of them were taken into custody and searched. Lanier submitted readily to the arrest. Perry made a slight protest against being arrested, [371]*371but did not offer serious resistance. A small pistol which he had made no attempt to use was taken from the • person of Lanier, and one pistol was taken from the person of Perry. Lanier was then tied, and he and Perry placed in a wagon and carried to the court-house in Decatur. Nothing of special importance occurred on the way. When the court-house was reached, Lanier was taken into the building, and Perry, whose movements were apparently unrestrained by any one, came along behind him. As they were thus proceeding, all of the persons just referred to being in the court-house, Perry shot Lanier from his rear with a large pistol. Lanier fell instantly to the floor, and Perry, rushing up to him, fired a second shot into him while he was down. Perry then declared that he had accomplished what he came to do, and offered to submit to an arrest, Lanier died from the wounds thus inflicted upon him.

The facts above set forth were conclusively proved at the trial. Indeed, they were not contested. The only defense which Perry attempted to set up was embodied in his statement to the jury. In substance, that statement was as follows: On the night of Friday, March 5, he found his wife weeping and complaining of feeling badly, but in response to his importunities she refused to disclose to him the cause of her unhappiness. The next day, Saturday, March 6, about half past two in the afternoon, she said to him: “Mr. Lanier has treated me in a manner that will ruin our future happiness.” She broke down at this point, and would tell Perry nothing more. He left his house under the impression that Lanier had made his wife an improper proposal or insulted her slightly about something. That night, however, she further informed him that Lanier, under the pretense of getting 'her to pour some oil in his ear, which he said was aching, had on Friday afternoon enticed her into his room; that, at ■the point of a pistol, he had then committed a rape upon her, .and had threatened to kill both her and her husband if she •ever told him of this outrage. She assigned this threat as her reason for not sooner telling her husband all that had occurred. As soon as he learned from her the full extent of Lanier’s conduct, he began to search for him, but was unable [372]

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Bluebook (online)
30 S.E. 903, 102 Ga. 365, 1897 Ga. LEXIS 509, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/perry-v-state-ga-1897.