Pruitt v. State

139 So. 861, 163 Miss. 47, 1932 Miss. LEXIS 16
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 7, 1932
DocketNo. 29750.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 139 So. 861 (Pruitt 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
Pruitt v. State, 139 So. 861, 163 Miss. 47, 1932 Miss. LEXIS 16 (Mich. 1932).

Opinions

McGowen, J„

delivered the opinion of the court.

On an indictment for murder, the appellant, Ervin Pruitt, was tried before a jury of Lauderdale county, found guilty, and sentenced to be hanged.

The indictment is in words and figures as follows:

“Indictment.

‘‘ The State of Mississippi, Lauderdale County.

“In the circuit court of Lauderdale County, at the August term in the year of Our Lord Nineteen Hundred and Thirty-one. The grand jury for the state of Mississippi, taken from the body of good and lawful men of Lauderdale county, in the state of Mississippi, impaneled, sworn and charged to inquire in and for said county, in the state aforesaid, in the name and by the authority of the state of Mississippi, upon their oath present: that Ervin Pruitt in said county on the-day of August, A. D. 1931, did unlawfully, wilfully and feloniously with malice aforethought kill and murder one James Walton Williamson, a human being, contrary to the form of the statute in such case made and provided and against the peace and dignity of the state of Mississippi.

“District Attorney.

“No. 3605

“Indictment filed this the August 13, 1931

*60 “M. L. Rush, Clerk.

“Recorded August 13, 1931.

“M. L. Rush, Clerk.”

The record shows that the appellant was taken into custody on a writ styled “3605.”

The judgment of the court below has the following recitals :

“State of Mississippi v. Ervin Pruitt.

“3605

“This day came the district attorney, who prosecutes for the state of Mississippi, and comes the defendant in his own proper person and by counsel, and being arraigned at the bar on a charge of murder, the same being an indictment preferred by the grand jury of this term of court, the said defendant then and there in open court and in the presence of his counsel entered a plea of not guilty to said charge. . . .”

No objection whatsoever was urged to the indictment in the court below.

Frank Williamson and his wife, -Luella Williamson, are white people living about three-fourths of a mile from Lauderdale county in Kemper county. They had been married fourteen years. She had four children, three of whom were white, and one, mulatto, the deceased, who was alleged to have been poisoned.

On Thursday, February —, 1931, the baby, aged about three or four months, died.from poison administered to it by the mother. The lethal dose was given to the child on that afternoon, and the physician, being called as quickly as possible, found it in a dying condition and directed that it be sent to a hospital in Meridian. Frank and Luella Williamson and two other witnesses carried the child from the Williamson home. One of the witnesses testified that the child died about twelve miles from the Kemper county line at or near Suqualena. Several witnesses testified that the baby was a mulatto. Dr. Pruitt testified that the baby was a mulatto, a negro baby.

*61 Oil the evening of the murder, Warren and his wife, the parents of Luella Williamson, heard that there was some trouble about the race of Luella’s baby, and went to the home of Prank Williamson to see it for the purpose of being convinced. Warren testified that the baby was a negro; that he did not examine it in the house, but that it was brought out to him by its mother, and that there did not appear to be anvfhing wrong with it except a bad cold, and it did not appear to be in any pain. After looking at the baby out at the barn, where Warren and his wife and Prank Williamson were, Warren turned to leave and walked down to his car saying as he left, “My God, Luella!” While her husband, father, and •mother were talking at the car, they heard Luella Williamson screaming in the house; returned to the house, and found the baby suffering intensely with its mouth, throat, tongue, and lips badly burned. Theretofore, Warren had a talk with the husband, Prank Williamson, and on telling Williamson that it was said they had a negro baby there, Williamson said it was a lie. Warren said the baby’s mouth was black on the inside and it was not in that condition a few minutes before, and that the baby was not suffering until he returned after hearing the woman scream.

Dr. Pruitt testified, stating that he told Williamson, when he visited his home in company with a committee and on that occasion saw the baby, that the community objected to his raising the baby with the other children in the home, and that Mrs. Williamson did not hear this conversation. That Williamson informed Dr. Pruitt that he did not feel disposed to conform to the demand of the committee. The doctor told him that, if it was his baby, -it was his duty to stick to it. The physician also testified that he was called back the next day professionally and found the child’s mouth had been burned with some kind of caustic poison.

Several physicians testified that, if strychnine had been *62 used, the child would not have lived more than forty-five minutes, and that it could not have been strychnine, but was some kind of caustic poison.

Luella Williamson testified as to the baby in question that the appellant, Ervin Pruitt, was its father, and pointed him out in the courtroom. She testified that she was at-home at night in bed with the baby, and that Ervin Pruitt came into the room and “throwed his gun on me and said that he was going to kill me, and so he had some stuff there and he told me if I did not give the stuff to the baby that he was going to kill me and all the family and he told me that if I did not, he — he said that he was just going to kill all of us right then.” He further told her that people were talking about it. She said she gave the stuff which the appellant gave her to the baby on the afternoon of the visit of her father and mother. She said the substance given her was a white powder wrapped up in a blue piece of paper, and that Ervin Pruitt told her it was strychnine.

On cross-examination she declined to say what night it was that Ervin Pruitt had this conversation with her, but, being asked the question several times, she said she thought it was the night before, but reiterated that she did not know, and could not say as to the exact night he was there.

There was evidence by witnesses who said that on one occasion one of the witnesses was near the home of Prank Williamson and saw the appellant go into the house where Luella Williamson was, and that he remained there for a long time. Another occasion was testified to when a witness went to the home of Prank Williamson for the purpose of buying “homebrew” and found the negro, Ervin Pruitt, on the front porch with Luella Williamson and her children, and that when the witness expressed some doubt as to leaving her there with the negro in the absence of her husband, she said that it was all right. That the negro then called her to show him the chickens he was go *63 ing to buy. Appellant elicited these statements from the witness.

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Related

Crenshaw v. State
520 So. 2d 131 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1988)
Jones v. State
356 So. 2d 1182 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1978)
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Boutwell v. State
144 So. 479 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1932)

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Bluebook (online)
139 So. 861, 163 Miss. 47, 1932 Miss. LEXIS 16, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pruitt-v-state-miss-1932.