Roberts v. State

50 So. 2d 356, 210 Miss. 777, 1951 Miss. LEXIS 313
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 12, 1951
Docket37720
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 50 So. 2d 356 (Roberts 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
Roberts v. State, 50 So. 2d 356, 210 Miss. 777, 1951 Miss. LEXIS 313 (Mich. 1951).

Opinion

*782 Roberds, J.

Appellant was convicted of the murder of his five year old granddaughter, Mary Louise Iiill, and sentenced to death. He made a confession of the crime. That was introduced against him. His main contention on this appeal is the confession was not admissible as evidence. He says it was not competent as evidence, first because when he made it he was being illegally detained in jail and had not been charged with this crime, and, second, because the evidence aliunde the confession, is not sufficient to show that Mary Louise came to her death through a criminal agency rather than from natural or accidental causes. We will consider and decide these two main contentions in the order stated.

The confession was made October 29, 1949, and was in the form of questions by the officers and answers by Roberts, taken down by a stenographer at the time and transcribed and then read over to and signed by Roberts in the presence of Dr. W. Douglas Hudgins, Pastor of the First Baptist Church of Jackson, Miss.; J. D. Holden, chief of police; E. L. Browne, of the detective force; and S. B. Barnes, of the police force of Jackson, all of whom signed their names as witnesses to the confession. This is the confession:

“I, Houston Roberts, make the following statement to Detectives Browne and Barnes of the Jackson Police Department relative to poisoning my little grandaughter, Mary Louise Hill, age 5, by giving her poison in capsules on or about June 26th., 1949 and she passed away at the Baptist Hospital on July 16, 1949. I make this statement of my own free will and accord without any *783 threats or promises being made to me to cause me to make such statement.
“Q. Mr. Roberts you are charged with the murder of your little granddaughter, Mary Louise Hill, age 5 by putting poison in some capsules and giving her some of them, this taking place on or about June 26, 1949, and she passed away at the Baptist Hospital on July 16, 1949. Mr. Roberts are you guilty of this crime, and if so will you tell us about it?' A. Yes sir I did this and I will tell you all about it.
“One day during the week of June 19, 1949, Mrs. Ruby Pace came to my home at 641 S. Gallatin Street and brought a white pill box containing twelve Phenobarbatol tablets and in this box she also had some powder from poison that I think was arsenic of lead. We then went in my room and closed the door, and cleaned out one end of the twelve capsules and put the poison in the end we had cleaned out, and left the Phenobarbatol in the other end of the capsule and then put the capsules back together. We then put them in the dresser drawer. Mrs. Pace stayed around there for a while and then went back home. Then the following Sunday, which was June 26,1949,1 gave Mary Louise Hill four of the poison capsules. Then on July 5, 1949, the day before she was carried to the hospital I gave her the other eight capsules containing poison. At the time I gave her the eight capsules she went to sleep and the next morning we carried her to the Baptist Hospital and she stayed there until she passed away on July 16, 1949.
“Q. Mr. Roberts did Mary Louise tell her mother that you gave her a pill? A. Yes.
“Q. Mr. Roberts where were you when you gave Mary Louise the first capsule? A. I was in the kitchen.
“Q. Did your daughter, Mrs. Gladys Hill ask you at the time if you gave Mary Louise a pill? A. Yes sir she did and I told her no.
*784 "Q. Mr. Roberts, do you have any idea where Mrs. Pace got this poison? A. Not unless she bought it at Gates Drug Store on N. Farish Street.
‘ ‘ Q. Where did Mrs. Pace get the phenobarbatol tablets that she had the poison in the box with? A. At Gates Drug Store on Farish Street.
"Q. Who was at the hospital at the time Mary Louise Hill passed away?' A. I was.
"Q. Did you call your daughter and tell her about Mary Louise Hill’s death? A. Yes sir.
" Q. Did the nurse or doctor suggest to you anything about performing an autopsy on Mary Louise after she died, to determine what caused her death? A. The nurse asked me if I wanted an autopsy performed and I told her we did not want one performed.
"Q. Mr. Roberts how much insurance did you have on Mary Louise Hill? A. We had eight hundred and eighty dollars.
"Q. Who was this insurance payable to? A. Mrs. Gladys Hill, my daughter.
"Q. How much money was collected on this policy ? A. Six hundred and thirty dollars.
"Q. Was this money paid in cash or cheeks?' A. In checks.
"Q. Who got the checks cashed? A. I did.
"Q. Who got the six hundred and thirty dollars? A. I got the six hundred dollars and my daughter, Mrs. Hill, got the balance.
"Q. What did you do with this six hundred dollars? A- Ruby Pace got one hundred and fifty dollars of it and I paid bills with the rest.
"Q. Mr. Roberts have you told us the truth about this case? A. Yes sir.
"Q. Can you read and write? A. I can’t read but I can write my name.
"Q. Mr. Roberts after this statement is read to you and you find it to be just as you told it to us and the way *785 it happened, will yon sign it as being true and correct? A. Yes, sir.
Signed Houston Roberts
(11:42 A. M.)
Witnesses: s/W. Douglas Hudgins
s/J. D. Holden
s/E. L. Browne
s/S. B. Barnes”

We will relate the circumstances leading up to and existing at the time the confession was made and then set out the applicable law. These are the circumstances:

Appellant was residing with his daughter, Mrs. Hill, then divorced from her husband, at 641 S. Gallatin St., in Jackson, Mississippi. They were there operating a rooming and boarding house. Mrs. Hill had two little girls — Mary Louise, born July 10, 1944, and Shirley Ann, born October 23, 1945. They were, of course, granddaughters of appellant. Mary Louise died July 16,1949, and the body was interred in Hopewell Cemetery in Jeff Davis County, Mississippi. Roberts and Mrs. Hill continued to reside at 641 S. Gallatin Street. Shirley Ann became ill in October 1949, and was carried to' St. Dominies Hospital in Jackson. To this time it is not shown that any suspicion rested upon appellant bringing about the death of Mary Louise. However, on October 18th, 1949, after Shirley Ann had been carried to the hospital, the officers received information which brought them to the conclusion that appellant had attempted to poison Shirley Ann. On October 21, 1949, officers Barnes and Browne and Dr.

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Bluebook (online)
50 So. 2d 356, 210 Miss. 777, 1951 Miss. LEXIS 313, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/roberts-v-state-miss-1951.