Powell v. State

1936 OK CR 103, 63 P.2d 113, 60 Okla. Crim. 267, 1936 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 107
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma
DecidedSeptember 10, 1936
DocketNo. A-9032.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 1936 OK CR 103 (Powell 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
Powell v. State, 1936 OK CR 103, 63 P.2d 113, 60 Okla. Crim. 267, 1936 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 107 (Okla. Ct. App. 1936).

Opinion

DAVENPORT, J.

The plaintiff in error was convicted in the district court of Tulsa county of murder and sentenced to life imprisonment. Motion for new triai ivas filed, and the record properly saved, and the defendant appeals.

The deceased and defendant were both negroes; they met at the home of Frankie Kelly; the defendant, his wife, and a negro by the name of Will Lawson went to the Kelly home prior to the time the deceased and a man by the name of Thomas came; when Thomas and Harry Golds-by came the other parties were all in the front room talking; Thomas and Goldsby came to the back door and knocked, and were admitted to the kitchen by Frankie Kelly who was cooking something in the kitchen-; when Goldsby came in he told Frankie he was hungry and she gave him something to eat; Goldsby took a bottle of gin from his pocket and put it on the table and wanted them to have a drink; Frankie called the other parties in the front room to- come and have a drink; Mary Johnson, the common-law wife of the defendant Hardy Powell, was in the room, and it was claimed by some of the witnesses that Harry Goldsby went in and got Mary and Frankie by the hand and pulled them into the kitchen for the purpose of having a drink; when they went into the kitchen the defendant in this case went into the middle door or somewhere near there, and claimed that the deceased Avas acting improperly toward his wife and using cuss words, and that he reprimanded him, and asked him to not use cuss words any more in the presence of the women, and the deceased applied some kind of a vile name or *269 epithet to him, and that Mary Johnson got between the deceased and the defendant and kindly pushed him and told him not to do anything, and the defendant put his hand back toward his hip pocket, and was finally pushed back into the east room and the door between the two rooms was closed; immediately thereafter Frankie claims the door was partly opened and she claims to' have seen the muzzle of a pistol.

The testimony further shows that the deceased was the one who opened the door between the two rooms, and in the meantime before the door was opened the deceased hád picked up from the cabinet what the witnesses call a tack hammer. The proof shows the tack hammer was in the possession of the prosecution but was not introduced in evidence. No one gives the size of the hammer. The deceased started into the room where the defendant was, and as he got to the door or just into the room where the defendant was the defendant shot him, from the effects of which he died. The pistol fell out of the defendant’s hand and fired again but did no one an injury, the defendant contending that deceased, when he opened the door and started in the room where he was, knocked the pistol out of his hand.

The testimony of the state witnesses and the defendant’s is not in harmony, but in substance it is practically the same. It seems to have been a meeting of a bunch of negroes, all of whom had been drinking, and the deceased put the bottle of gin on the table and all of them took another drink; and from the action of the deceased and the remarks made in the presence of Mary Johnson and Frankie Kelly he aroused the anger of the defendant;

The state witness Frankie Kelly testified when the defendant was in the living room' with the door closed *270 the deceased was pecking around with the tack hammer; Frankie says she knew the deceased was mad. Thomas thought the deceased was singing some kind of a song. All of the testimony of both the state and the defendant, and of the eyewitnesses for the state, shows that something transpired between the defendant and the deceased in the kitchen that caused the wife of the defendant tO' anticipate there was going to be trouble, and she pushed her husband, back in the living room and closed the door. The witnesses are not in harmony as to what caused the defendant to go back into the living room from the kitchen where the deceased was with the hammer, but they all admit the door was closed, and when the door was opened they all admit the deceased had started through the door when the defendant fired the shot.

Several witnesses were called by the defendant to show his previous good character for being a peaceable, law-abiding citizen. The defendant contends in his testimony that the deceased knocked the pistol out of his hand. The deceased and the defendant had never had any trouble before. The foregoing, is the substance of the testimony offered by the state and the defendant.

The defendant assigned a number of reasons why this case should be reversed, and argues most of them together. His first argument is, that the verdict is contrary to- the evidence, and is not supported by the evidence.

The killing is admitted by the defendant, but the defendant insists that it was a justifiable killing and that the defendant should be acquitted. The instructions of the court are not complained of, except the defendant offered some special instructions that were refused by the court, but an examination of the record clearly shows that the court covered all of the questions fully in its' *271 instructions, therefore it was not error to refuse to give the special instructions requested by the defendant.

In presenting his argument and analyzing the same the defendant takes the position that he was not the aggressor in this trouble; that when he spoke to the deceased about the language he was using in the presence of the women the deceased used a violent and profane epithet, and picked up a hammer, designated as a tack hammer, and started toward the defendant. The defendant admits he reached back and threw the safety catch off his pistol; that the common-law wife of the defendant, Mary Johnson, got in between the deceased and defendant and told him not to do anything,, and gradually pushed him back until he was in the living room and the door was closed between the two rooms.

Frankie Kelly, a witness for the state, and all the other witnesses admit the door was closed or partly closed, and Frankie says when she looked toward the door it was open or partly open and she saw the muzzle of a pistol; at that time, or just before that time, she knew the deceased was mad; that he had picked up a hammer and was pecking around on a cabinet.

All through the record the hammer is spoken of as a tack hammer. Just what a tack hammer is, is not shown by the record, nor is the size of this hammer shown. The record does show the hammer was in possession of the state but was not introduced in evidence. This court will take judicial notice that tack hammers are of various sizes, there are small and large tack hammers, as well as small and large tacks. Under the evidence as to the tack hammer the court cannot say whether or not this hammer was a dangerous weapon. As the defendant had no knowledge of the size of the hammer, and only saw the hammer *272 when the deceased started toward him with it, the question to> he decided is, how would it appear to the defendant situated as he was, and did he believe it was such a weapon that the deceased might do him bodily harm or kill him. Hammers properly wielded are dangerous weapons, and in the hands of a drunken negro no one can tell what injuries might be inflicted by the use of one.

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Related

State v. McConville
349 P.2d 114 (Idaho Supreme Court, 1960)
Presnell v. State
1957 OK CR 1 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma, 1957)
Dowell v. State
1952 OK CR 75 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma, 1952)
Kurn v. Campbell
1941 OK 81 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1941)
State v. Walters
102 P.2d 284 (Idaho Supreme Court, 1940)
Morris v. State
1937 OK CR 138 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma, 1937)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1936 OK CR 103, 63 P.2d 113, 60 Okla. Crim. 267, 1936 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 107, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/powell-v-state-oklacrimapp-1936.