Pittman v. State

1954 OK CR 72, 272 P.2d 458, 1954 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 153
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma
DecidedJune 2, 1954
DocketA-11996
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 1954 OK CR 72 (Pittman v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pittman v. State, 1954 OK CR 72, 272 P.2d 458, 1954 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 153 (Okla. Ct. App. 1954).

Opinion

JONES, Judge.

The defendant Lee Pittman was charged by an information filed in the District Court of Custer County with the crime of assault and battery with intent to kill his wife, Inez Pittman; was tried, convicted and in accordance with the verdict of the jury was sentenced to serve five years imprisonment in the penitentiary and has appealed.

Two assignments of error are presented in the brief of defendant, to-wit: (1) The trial court erred in giving instructions numbered seven and eight, pertaining to the law of self-defense. (2) The trial court erred in admitting in evidence the transcript of the testimony of Edna Weil, taken at the preliminary examination.

The undisputed evidence showed that on December 5, 1952, defendant’s wife, Inez Pittman, was sitting at a booth in Stack’s Bar in Clinton with one Pat Bradford about 9:00 p. m. Defendant entered the bar, pulled his pistol, shot and killed Bradford and then fired four shots into the body of his wife, causing her serious personal injuries from which she later recovered.

The instructions to which objection was made at the trial were as follows:

“In this case, the defendant, in support of his plea of not guilty, claims as a justification of the alleged assault, that he acted in self-defense of his person, and you are instructed that under the law, before a person can justify such alleged assault upon the plea that he acted in self-defense, there must not only have existed at the time of the alleged assault reasonable ground to apprehend a design on the part of the assaulted person to either take the life of the defendant or to do him some great bodily injury, but in addition thereto it must reasonably have appeared to the defendant that there was at the time imminent danger of such design being carried out.
“You are further instructed that any person, who, without having sought a difficulty and without having wilfully provoked it, or voluntarily entered into it, is assaulted or threatened with an immediate assault by another with such means and under such circumstances as would cause a reasonable man in like situation to believe that he was in danger of being killed or of receiving great bodily injury at the hands of the other, has the right for the preservation *460 of-,his own - safety, to .use -such force qnd violence upon his assailant as would reasonably appear to the person assaulted to be necessary, to avert the threatened danger, even if it involved the 'taking Of human life.
“And, in such case, if the assaulted person is in a place where he has a right to be, and'the danger is not of his own seeking or wilfully provoked by him he is not required to flee from it, but he may ’resist it with adequate and necessary force until he is safe.”'

It is contended by ’ defendant’s counsel 'that the above instructions were erroneous for the reason there was no contention that 'defendant at the time he fired the shots at 'Inez Pittman was defending himself against her, but that ' in exercising self-defense against Bradford he accidentally shot her. Complaint is made fhat in the two instructions which' were given, the jury was advised that there must have existed at the time of the assault reasonable ground to apprehend a design on the part of the assaulted person (who in this case was Inez Pittman) to either take the life of defendant or to do him some great bodily harm. There would .have been substantial merit to this contention if the proof of the defendant had shown that the defendant, while shooting at Pat Brahford in his own necessary 1 self-defense, had accidentally shot his wife, an. innocent bystander.

In Dean William L. Burdick’s excellent treatise on the Law of Crime, Volume' Two, 'page' 1^3, he states that it is excusable homicide “where one in lawful defense of self * *■ * accidentally kills softie third person.” ’

In Caraway v. State, 98 Tex.Cr.R. 119, 263 S.W. 1063, it was held:

' < “Where accused, in shooting at J., 'unintentionally killed M., accused’s guilt or innocence depended on whether the act of firing at J. was culpable or justifiable.”

In Pinder v. State, 27 Fla. 370, 8 So. 837, 838, it was held: .

.. “Where it ip deducible from the evir dence .that the killing of the deceased .by the .defendant was wholly unintentional, and accidentally brought about by the excusable or justifiable defense of himself against impending danger from a third party, it is error for the court to charge the jury that, in order' to avail himself of the plea of self-defense, ‘it is necessary that the defendant should have perpetrated the act under the well-grounded belief, justified by the surroundings, that it was necessary to take the life of the “person slain” in order to save his own life,’ etc.
“If the killing of the party intended to be killed would, under all the circumstances, have been excusable or justifiable homicide upon the theory of self-defense, then the unintended killing of a by-stander by a random shot, fired in the proper and prudent exercise of such self-defense, is also excusable or justifiable.”

See also 6 C.J.S., Assault and Battery, § 92, page 944.

It becomes necessary, then, to summarize the' evidence, both of the State and the defendant, to see whether there was any proof that defendant was acting in his own •necessary self-defense when he fired the shots at Inez Pittman or whether there is any evidence that he was firing at Pat Bradford in his own necessary self-defense and accidentally and unintentionally injured his wife.

The proof'of .the State showed that the defendant, aged 60, married Inez Pittman after the parties had only been acquainted for three days. This marriage occurred in 19S0, and there were 29 years difference in the ages of the parties. Their married life w;as a turbulent one. On two occasions the ‘wife left the husband and on one of these 'occasions she lived with her father and mother at Coweta for four and á half months before returning to live with de-fendant. , •

The defendant and Mrs. Pittman operated a beer tavern in Clinton. , Mrs. Pittman would occasionally become intoxicated and ’the proof is conclusive that she associated with other men than defendant.

On the evening of the shooting, the proof of, the State showed that Pat Bradford had *461 gone to Stack’s Bar early In the evening and that about 40 .minute's after he had arrived at the bar, Mrs. Pittman came. to the bar and sat down in the same booth but across the table from Bradford. A few minutes later, defendant entered and, according to two disinterested eye witnesses, he walked back to the rest room, turned, and walked back toward the front of the tavern and when he came to the booth where Bradford and Mrs. Pittman were sitting, he shot Bradford, who slumped and fell dead out of the booth onto the floor. Then defendant turned and fired four or five times at Mrs. Pittman. Mrs. Pittman was yelling during the time that defendant was doing the shooting, “No, Lee, No!”

After defendant had finished shooting, he walked from the tavern and was arrested several minutes later at his place of business.

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Bluebook (online)
1954 OK CR 72, 272 P.2d 458, 1954 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 153, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pittman-v-state-oklacrimapp-1954.