Pharr v. State

465 So. 2d 294
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 5, 1984
Docket55015
StatusPublished
Cited by82 cases

This text of 465 So. 2d 294 (Pharr 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
Pharr v. State, 465 So. 2d 294 (Mich. 1984).

Opinion

465 So.2d 294 (1984)

Milton V. PHARR
v.
STATE of Mississippi.

No. 55015.

Supreme Court of Mississippi.

December 5, 1984.

*296 Thomas H. Comer, Jr., Comer & Jenkins, Booneville, for appellant.

Edwin Lloyd Pittman, Atty. Gen. by Henry C. Clay, III, Sp. Asst. Atty. Gen., Jackson, for appellee.

En Banc.

ROBERTSON, Justice, for the Court:

I.

Headlighting deer is a sorry form of human behavior made unlawful by the wildlife conservation laws of this state. The deer, usually a doe, hit with the blinding light stands stupified and is slaughtered. In addition to his unsportsmanlike conduct, the poacher operates at night and endangers others each time he fires. He is of Snopesean genre.

Milton V. Pharr stands convicted of headlighting deer and other related offenses. His sentences include time and fines and suspension of his privilege to hunt. We affirm.

II.

A.

Prior to the date in question, officials of the State Department of Wildlife Conservation had been receiving complaints of "headlighting" in the Riverbend area in rural northern Leflore County, Mississippi. In the early morning hours of February 21, 1982, Robert Neely and Wardell Pittman, both officers of the Wildlife Conservation Department, went to this area to establish separate stake-outs.

At approximately 3:00 a.m. Officer Neely received a radio call from Officer Pittman to the effect that Pittman had heard gunshots. Neely got out of his truck. He could hear a vehicle on a public gravel road. Two or three minutes later Neely observed a slow-moving pick-up truck approaching from the east. A spotlight, coming from the truck, was being shined out over the fields on both sides of the road. According to Neely, "It was working both sides of that road there, working fields and woods". After the truck passed Neely, he followed it, his lights off.

The truck passed the Minter City Gin, turned south and ultimately reached and turned onto State Highway No. 8. At that *297 point Neely cut on his headlights and his "blue light". The truck stopped, but when Neely stopped and got out, the suspects took off again. Neely gave chase, ultimately forcing the suspect truck off the road.

In the truck Officer Neely found

(1) four men, including Milton V. Pharr, the Defendant below and Appellant here;

(2) two dead deer, both still warm and with blood running from their bodies;

(3) a Q-beam spotlight;

(4) a seven millimeter Magnum rifle, three spent shell casings and other ammunition; and

(5) one hand flashlight.

Blood was on the tailgate of the truck and on the bumper.

On this date, February 21, 1982, deer hunting was illegal.[1] The property on which the suspect vehicle was operating while Officer Neely observed it was known as Annapeg Plantation owned by the Stainback family. The property was posted with signs at the entrances to the property and along the roads three to every mile. These posted signs had been in place more than three months prior to the incident in question.

B.

Milton V. Pharr and his three companions were in due course charged with eight game and hunting law violations, misdemeanors all.[2] All were brought to trial before the County Court of Leflore County and convicted.

Pharr and two of the others then appealed to the Circuit Court of Leflore County where, on March 28, 1983, they were afforded consolidated trials de novo. That same day the jury found all three, including Pharr, guilty

(a) on three counts of headlighting deer in violation of Miss. Code Ann. § 49-7-95 (Supp. 1983), for which each has been sentenced to 30 days imprisonment, fined $1,000 on each count, and stripped of all hunting privileges for the next twelve months;

(b) on one count of trespassing in violation of Miss. Code Ann. § 97-17-93 (Supp. 1983), for which each has been fined $250; and

(c) upon two counts of possession of deer out-of-season in violation of Miss. Code Ann. § 49-7-37 (Supp. 1983), for which each has been fined $50 on each count.

Following the usual post-trial motions, Pharr has appealed[3] to this Court where his fundamental complaints are that the evidence does not support his convictions and that in any event the state is doubling up on him, turning what is a single set of events into six separate charges and convictions and ultimately sentences. For the reasons described below, we reject all of Pharr's assignments of error and affirm.

III.

A.

Our law is the witness and external deposit of the values and culture of our society.[4] Hunting and the outdoors have supplied much of that culture. They have informed our values and generated an ethical *298 code of their own, much of which has been enacted within the wildlife conservation laws of this state.

Our Presiding Justice Roy Noble Lee understands these truths. In Strong v. Bostick, 420 So.2d 1356, 1364 (Miss. 1982), he included himself among the many men who

feel that a person who has never seen squirrels jump from limb to limb in the deep swamp on a frosty Fall morning; or has never heard a wild turkey gobble in April or seen him strut during mating season; or has never watched a deer bound through the woods and fields, or heard a pack of hounds run a fox, or tree a coon (raccoon); or has never hunted the rabbit, or flushed a covey of quail ahead of a pointed bird dog; or has never angled for bass or caught bream on a light line and rod, or taken catfish from a trotline and limb hook; has never lived. 420 So.2d at 1364 [Emphasis added]

Moreover, Justice Lee has reminded us that

Present generations owe posterity the obligation to protect and conserve wildlife, a valuable and essential natural resource, in order that future generations may have game and fish for their enjoyment, pleasure and benefit.
420 So.2d at 1364.

In fulfillment of that obligation, our legislature has made the sort of conduct with which we are here concerned unlawful. Yet, more than the public policy of wild game conservation is served by this legislation. We here enforce the positive law's embodiment of the ethics of the hunt.

With insight and sensitivity, our most literate hunter, speaking of his short story, "The Bear", has said pursuit is the essence of the hunt, but

not only to pursue but to overtake and then have the compassion not to destroy, to catch, to touch, and then let go because then tomorrow you can pursue again. If you destroy it, what you caught, then it's gone, it's finished. And that to me is sometimes the greater part of valor ..., not to destroy what you have pursued. The pursuit's the thing, not the reward, not the gain."[5]

The thrill of the chase, the fair and honorable pursuit and not the kill undergird the ethics of the hunter.

This case concerned the slaughter of doe at night. As we review today's facts, we recall that old Ike McCaslin en route to deer camp in the Delta once said

The only fighting anywhere that ever had anything of God's blessing on it has been when men fought to protect does and fawns.[6]

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Atwood v. Tullos
312 F. Supp. 3d 553 (S.D. Mississippi, 2018)
Justin Crockett v. State of Mississippi
212 So. 3d 763 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 2017)
Vance Drummer v. State of Mississippi
167 So. 3d 1180 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 2015)
Triplett v. State
145 So. 3d 1256 (Court of Appeals of Mississippi, 2014)
Ferguson v. State
136 So. 3d 438 (Court of Appeals of Mississippi, 2013)
Jennings v. State
127 So. 3d 263 (Court of Appeals of Mississippi, 2013)
Long v. State
33 So. 3d 1122 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 2010)
Barnes v. State
30 So. 3d 313 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 2010)
Carolyn Marie Barnes v. State of Mississippi
Mississippi Supreme Court, 2008
Davis v. State
995 So. 2d 767 (Court of Appeals of Mississippi, 2008)
Robinson v. State
967 So. 2d 695 (Court of Appeals of Mississippi, 2007)
Hodgin v. State
964 So. 2d 492 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 2007)
Ross v. State
954 So. 2d 968 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 2007)
Kendrick Graves v. State of Mississippi
Mississippi Supreme Court, 2006
Smith v. State
925 So. 2d 825 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 2006)
Weathersby v. State
919 So. 2d 1146 (Court of Appeals of Mississippi, 2005)
Dilworth v. State
909 So. 2d 731 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 2005)
Tissus Horton v. State of Mississippi
Mississippi Supreme Court, 2003
Kimble Peter Smith v. State of Mississippi
Mississippi Supreme Court, 2003
In Re Boundaries of City of Hattiesburg
840 So. 2d 69 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 2003)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
465 So. 2d 294, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pharr-v-state-miss-1984.