Prather v. State

1943 OK CR 54, 137 P.2d 249, 76 Okla. Crim. 385, 1943 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 106
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma
DecidedApril 28, 1943
DocketNo. A-10189.
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 1943 OK CR 54 (Prather 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
Prather v. State, 1943 OK CR 54, 137 P.2d 249, 76 Okla. Crim. 385, 1943 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 106 (Okla. Ct. App. 1943).

Opinion

JONES, P. J.

This is an appeal from a conviction for murder with the sentence of death in the district court of Pittsburg- county.

The charge of murder of Warden Jess Dunn filed against the defendant, Hiram Prather, is an outgrowth of an attempt on the part of four long-term convicts to *387 escape from the State Penitentiary, which attempt resulted in the death of Warden Jess Dunn, Deputy Sheriff Tab Ford and three of the four convicts. The defendant, Hiram Prather, was the only convict who survived.

The facts established by the proof of the state show that about 10 a.m. on Sunday morning, August 10, 1941, Warden Jess Dunn was in the prison yard at the State Penitentiary with one J. H. Fentriss, who had been employed by the State Board of Public Affairs to install a communication and public address system at the Penitentiary. Warden Dunn and Fentriss were in the yard making a check to determine where to install the communication equipment when they were seized from behind by four convicts, three of them armed with sharp dirk knives and one of them with a razor. The knives and razor were held a.t the throats of both Dunn and Fentriss, their hands were tied behind them, and with a convict on each side of them Warden Dunn and Fentriss were marched to the first of two east gates of the Penitentiary. A few minutes’ controversy there occurred before the guards at the tower in charge of the first gate would open the gate to allow the four convicts and the two kidnapped men to pass. It was only after one of the convicts, holding a sharp knife to the breast of Warden Dunn, had commenced pressing the knife toward the heart of the warden to where blood was streaming out of the wound and showing on the warden’s shirt, that the guard in charge of the gate opened the same to allow them to pass. A short distance from the first east, gate was a second gate which formed the outer boundary of the prison walls. Another argument with the guards at this gate occurred which finally resulted in the guards lowering a pistol and a 30-30 Winchester rifle which were seized by the convicts. After passing through the outer gate the convicts, together with *388 their hostages, seized an automobile and commenced to flee.

During the period of time which had been taken by the arguments with the tower guards, the officers of Pitts-burg county had been notified and Deputy Sheriffs Bill Alexander, Bob Pollock and Tab Ford drove to the Penitentiary. They arrived shortly after the convicts had fled and immediately commenced pursuit. The convicts took a road from the Penitentiary which led to a barrier where the road was being repaired. When • they reached this barrier they turned their car and started back. Deputy Sheriff Alexander saw them approaching and blocked the road with his automobile, forcing the convict car to1 stop. A gun battle ensued between Deputy Sheriff Alexander, armed with a rifle, and the convicts, resulting in the deaths of the parties hereinbefore mentioned. The defendant Prather, together with convicts Beavers and Anderson, attempted to flee from the car after it stopped and take refuge in a ditch adjacent to the road. After Alexander had killed Beavers and Anderson, Prather came out of the ditch with his hands in the air and surrendered. Warden Dunn and convict McGee were both dead in the front seat of the automobile. The proof showed that Warden Dunn had been shot three times in the back of the head, close to the right ear, by one of the convicts armed with a pistol.

The testimony of all of the witnesses was to the effect that the man who’ sa.t on the right side of the rear seat was the one who fired the shots that killed Warden Dunn and the proof showed that the defendant was the convict who sat at this position.

In this connection the witness Fentriss testified that he was sitting in the middle of the back seat. He further testified as follows:

*389 “Q. (By Mr. Hulsey, counsel for defendant) Do you say and tell this jury that Prather, the defendant, was the man that was sitting at your right? A. Yes, sir. Q. Did you see him with a gun? A. Yes, sir. Q. What kind of gun? A. Pistol.”

He further testified that when the shooting commenced he rolled over to the bottom of the car and did not actually see the shots fire that killed the warden.

Officer Alexander also testified that the convict, on the right-hand side of the rear seat Avas armed Avith a pistol and fired the first shot.

None of the three bullets fired into the head of the Avarden emerged, but tAvo of them were removed and a ballistic expert testified that he fired a test bullet from the pistol used by the convicts and that this test bullet, Avhen compared with the two bullets removed from the head of Warden Dunn, shoAved conclusively that they had all been fired from the same gun.

It is apparently undisputed that Warden Dunn Avas killed by a pistol in the hands of one of the convicts, but it was the contention of the defendant that the shots Avhich killed the Avarden were fired by conAdct McGee and not the accused. This contention is not based on any testimony of the defendant, as no evidence was offered in his behalf, but- is based AAdiolly upon a discrepancy appearing in the testimony of one of the state’s witnesses, Avho said that the convict Avho did the shooting had on Avhat is described as weed-row clothes, which were blue denim with small stripes, while the testimony of the Deputy Warden showed that the defendant Hiram Prather had been Avorking in the mess hall and Avas dressed in white.

Another physical fact, however, disputing the claim of defendant that Roy McGee fired the fatal shots at the *390 warden, was the fact that McGee was sitting in the front seat with the warden and was found slumped over dead against the warden after the shooting had ended. The fact that the warden was shot in the hack of the head, close to the right ear, makes it practically physically" impossible for the convict McGee to have fired the fatal shots.

But irrespective as to which of the convicts actually fired the shot which killed the warden, they were all equally guilty of murder for the reason that they were jointly engaged in a conspiracy to commit a felony and the killing arose out of the commission of that felony, making all of the joint participants equally guilty of murder under the law.

In the brief of the defendant two contentions are presented: First, the admission in evidence of a written confession allegedly given by the defendant but which was never signed by him. Second, the punishment was excessive under the facts.

The statement in question is one given by the defendant in the warden’s office at the State Penitentiary a few hours after the attempted escape, in the presence of the county attorney, two deputy Avar dens and the county attorney’s stenographer who took stenographic notes' of a conversation had between the county attorney and the defendant. When the county attorney’s reporter took the witness stand to testify concerning this incident, she swore that she took accurate stenographic notes of all the questions asked by the county attorney and the answers given by the defendant, and that subsequently she correctly transcribed her stenographic notes of said proceeding.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1943 OK CR 54, 137 P.2d 249, 76 Okla. Crim. 385, 1943 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 106, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/prather-v-state-oklacrimapp-1943.