Relf v. State

1929 OK CR 345, 280 P. 851, 44 Okla. Crim. 239, 1929 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 75
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma
DecidedAugust 31, 1929
DocketNo. A-6796.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 1929 OK CR 345 (Relf 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
Relf v. State, 1929 OK CR 345, 280 P. 851, 44 Okla. Crim. 239, 1929 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 75 (Okla. Ct. App. 1929).

Opinion

CHAPPELL, J.

The plaintiff in error, Stiles Relf, hereinafter referred to as the defendant, was convicted in the district court of Oklahoma county of the crime of *241 murder and his punishment fixed at imprisonment in the state penitentiary for life.

This killing occurred in the town of Luther, on the 21st day of March, 1927. The defendant is a negro, and Joe Winters, the person killed, was also a negro. It appears that some negroes, who lived in or near the town of Luther, were engaged in a crap game in a room of a building that belonged to a negyo by the name of Jackson. This building was located on a street running north and south, the building facing east, and the crap game took place on the ground floor of the building in the front room. The crap game progressed until about 12:30 or 1 o’clock in the morning. The parties had been drinking considerably, and shortly before the crap game broke up a white man by the name of Will Higdon, who appears to have been section foreman for the Frisco Railroad at Luther, joined the game, and just a short time before the game broke up it appears that Higdon and a negro by the name of George Diggs had a little spat, the result of Higdon calling Diggs “a nigger,” but it appears that Diggs and Higdon made up their differences and that the defendant assisted in making friends between the two. After the game broke up, this defendant and Higdon left together and went to the house of a Mexican by the name of Carbajals looking for something to drink. Failing to get anything to drink there, according to the testimony of Higdon, he and the defendant, went over to the defendant’s house and proceeded to drink some beer, and the defendant insisted on going back to the crap game and shooting the fellows up. Higdon says that he demurred to this, but that the defendant got his shotgun and compelled him to walk ahead of him down to the building where the crap game had been taking place. It appears that as soon as they got down to the building, while there *242 was no crap game in progress, four or five negroes, including the deceased, were standing around the table where the crap game had taken place eating some barbecue. Higdon says that when the defendant got even with the front door, he saw him raise his shotgun and point it at the door (the upper part of the door being glass), and that he (Higdon) started to run away in a northeasterly direction towards his home, and immediately heard a shotgun fired, but did not look to see what became of the defendant. The deceased was killed by being shot in the head and neck with a shotgun loaded apparently with No. 6 shot. George Diggs, another negro who was there, also received a shotgun wound in the face, which wound proved not to be fatal. When the shotgun was fired, the lamp that was burning in the building immediately went out, and it was impossible for those in the building to see who fired the shot.

There is a sharp conflict between the testimony of Will Higdon and that of the defendant in this case. The testimony- of each practically coincides up until the time they left the house of Carbajals. After that time, the defendant testifies that Higdon, as soon as he came out of the house of Carbajals, fired a pistol shot and asked the defendant to go down there and help him blow those negroes up, -but the defendant insists that he refused and went home and went to bed, and that Higdon did not go home with him and that they had not been drinking; that Higdon was drunk and that he saw him go off: in a northerly direction towards the place Avhere the deceased was killed; that some time after he and Higdon stopped by Carbajals’ house, and after he had gone to bed, the shotgun was fired, and that he did not have anything to do with it. In this story the defendant is corroborated by the testimony of his wife.

*243 When the defendant was first arrested, lie told the officers that he went home at 8 o’clock and went to bed and was not out of the house again during the night. Later, when confronted in the county attorney’s office by the witness Low, he admitted that he. was back at the place where the homicide was committed and left-there at about 12:30, instead of 8 o’clock, as he had previously stated.

The defendant first contends that the trial court erred in permitting the county attorney to repeatedly ask incompetent, irrelevant, and immaterial questions, and that the county attorney was thereby guilty of misconduct, prejudicial to the substantial rights of the defendant. This court has held that it is prejudicial error for the county attorney to repeatedly ask questions which have for their purpose the getting before the jury of incompetent, irrelevant, and immaterial evidence, and for the county attorney to take an exception to the ruling of the trial judge in sustaining objections to such questions.

On the other hand, this court has held, in the case of Hendricks et al. v. State, 23 Okla. Cr. 19, 212 Pac. 330:

“The fact that the county attorney asked some questions which may have called for incompetent testimony is not prejudicial error, where the trial judge promptly sustained objections and no incompetent evidence was permitted to go to the jury, and there was no such repeated asking of these questions and exceptions to the ruling of the trial judge by the county attorney that amounted to prejudicial misconduct.”

In the case at bar defendant’s counsel in his brief has called the court’s attention to only two instances wherein it is claimed the county attorney attempted to elicit incompetent evidence after the trial judge had ruled- *244 that such evidence was not admissible. The first question complained of was as follows:

“Q. Now, counsel asked you if you had any opinion or conception of who fired that shot. Will you just tell this jury in your own opinion who did fire it?
“Mr. Withington: I object to that as calling for a conclusion of the witness.
“The Court: Sustained.”

It appears from the record that the reason for the asking of this question by the county attorney was because defendant’s counsel had asked the witness if he had any opinion or conception of who fired the shot. In a second instance pointed out by defendant, the county attorney was cross-examining the defendant as to a certain transaction which the defendant had previously stated took place at his house when he first told his story to the county attorney at his office the next day. The state was trying to show that the statement then made to the county attorney was inconsistent with the testimony then being given by the defendant, in which the defendant testified that he went to his house to get some wood and failed to say anything about having gotten whisky at that time. These questions were being asked for the purpose of impeaching the testimony of the defendant, by showing that his testimony was materially different to his voluntary statement made to the county attorney. This record does not disclose the repeated asking of incompetent questions on the part of the county attorney, and the repeated exceptions to the rulings of the tidal judge in sustaining objections to such incompetent questions, such as was held to be reversible error in the case of Pickrell v. State, 5 Okla. Cr. 391, 116 Pac.

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Related

White v. State
1976 OK CR 235 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma, 1976)
Thompson v. State
1975 OK CR 204 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma, 1975)
Allen v. State
1971 OK CR 443 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma, 1971)
Brown v. State
1971 OK CR 257 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma, 1971)
Wing v. State
1955 OK CR 29 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma, 1955)
Gee v. State
1932 OK CR 120 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma, 1932)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1929 OK CR 345, 280 P. 851, 44 Okla. Crim. 239, 1929 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 75, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/relf-v-state-oklacrimapp-1929.