Scaife v. State

182 S.W.2d 679, 207 Ark. 664, 1944 Ark. LEXIS 720
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedOctober 2, 1944
Docket4364
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 182 S.W.2d 679 (Scaife v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Scaife v. State, 182 S.W.2d 679, 207 Ark. 664, 1944 Ark. LEXIS 720 (Ark. 1944).

Opinion

Griffin Smith, Chief Justice.

Hal Scaife, 25 years of age, killed his wife and her mother by cutting and stabbing them with a hunting knife. When tried on a charge of having murdered Mrs. Scaife his plea of self-defense was partially disregarded by the jury when it returned a verdict of murder in the second degree. Prom the Court’s judgment of ten years in the penitentiary the defendant has appealed.

Assignments 1, 2, 3, and 4 relate to evidence; 5 and 6 question instructions given and refused, while 7 complains of the Court’s refusal to grant a new trial on the ground of newly-discovered evidence.

After receiving limited training at Great Lakes Naval Station, Scaife was assigned to the Naval Training Station at Millington, Tennessee, near Memphis. His wife remained at Marvell with her mother, Mrs. Susie Davis. Peggy Carey, whose chastity is assailed, moved into the home with appellant’s wife and mother-in-law. This arrangement was contrary to Scaife’s wishes, as expressed to his wife. It is alleged that Peggy entertained men at appellant’s home. Relations between husband and wife grew strained — so much so, appellant testified, that he counseled with a navy chaplain who advised that Mrs. Scaife and their two children be brought to Memphis. The churchman agreed to assist in finding an apartment as near Millington as practicable.

Appellant testified that, with this solution of marital difficulties in view, he procured.leave and went to Marvell, to present the proposal to Mrs. Scaife. She declined to discuss the matter, or to have anything to do with him. Mrs. Scaife refused to prepare appellant's supper, and also rejected his invitation to attend a picture show. He asserts that she left before he had completed his meal and went alone to the show, although he followed and occupied an adjoining seat. Instead of showing interest in her husband, Mrs. Scaife carried on conversations “with a man immediately across the aisle from her,” and finally left the theater unaccompanied.

Appellant, following, returned home for the purpose (as he expressed it) of completing plans to take the family to Memphis. When he entered the building Mrs. Scaife was seated in a chair in the living room with the baby on her lap. Appellant says that as he stood facing his wife, Mrs. Davis entered from an adjoining room armed with a single-barrel bolt-action shotgun. This she handed to Mrs. Scaife. When appellant attempted to dis,arm Mrs. Scaife he was assailed by Mrs. Davis, who “jumped astride my back,’’ pinning appellant’s arms to his side. It is insisted that the three-way conflict progressed from room to room, with Mrs. Scaife holding on to the gunstock, appellant clinging to the barrel, and Mrs. Davis maintaining her position astride the distraught appellant whose arms were firmly held 'to his side by the force of the mother-in-law’s advantageous position. As the scene shifted the contestants entered the northeast room. There, in the drawer of a small chest, appellant had left a hunting knife. When opportunity afforded, appellant released his hold on the gun barrel, and (we quote verbatim) “. . . reached down and opened the top Of the chest, securing his knife with which he intended to inflict upon his mother-in-law — who was still astride his back and still pinning his arms to his side — just enough pain to canse her to relax, with the intention of securing the gun from his wife. It seems that when this was done the fight was renewed with much vigor by these two women, and in the scuffle both women were cut and received wounds from which they later died. ’ ’ 1

In spite of fatal injuries, the women fled to the adjoining home of Mrs. Daisy Middleton, where they collapsed. Mrs. Middleton had previously heard a disturbance “like someone running back and forth through the rooms.” She had also heard screaming. Mrs. Davis exclaimed, “He is after us.” Mrs. Scaife’s comment was, “He is killing us.” And again, “He will kill my baby.” Mrs. Scaife then collapsed, but was not unconscious.

Mrs. Davis died shortly after reaching the Middleton home. There is testimony that Mrs. Scaife kept “pulling at her side where her intestines were coming out”; that she immediately asked for a doctor, who came within ten or fifteen minutes, and that Mrs. Davis was dead when the doctor arrived, or died soon thereafter.

At the Middleton home appellant talked with Dr. Hosey as the latter administered to Mrs. Scaife. While the physician was attempting to relieve Mrs. Scaife with morphine hypodermically injected, appellant began asking his dying wife if she intended to give him a divorce. She replied, “Make him leave me alone; I don’t feel well.” The doctor then told the injured woman she was going to die, and remarked to appellant, “You will get your divorce in a few minutes.” Appellant got down on his knees and attempted to kiss his wife, or caress her cheeks, while she protested. When appellant asked his wife if she still wanted a divorce she said, “Hal, you are the one who wanted the divorce.”

Mrs. Scaife was placed in an ambulance to be sent to a Helena hospital, but died before reaching the city.

Objection is that testimony was admitted relating to statements by the injured women before appellant reached the Middleton house, or while he was not present. There is, however, substantial evidence that Dr. Hosey, who lived only eight or ten blocks from the scene, responded to calls within ten or fifteen minutes, and that appellant’s victims were dying, and must have known how seriously they were wounded. Their declarations and actions were in a sense spontaneous, made in consequence of emotional impulses flowing directly from the transaction which resulted so quickly in death, and without the intervention of any period of repose during which the mind could be presumed to have formulated a self-serving purpose at variance with the facts.

In Carr v. State, 43 Ark. 99, it was said that, circumstances and declarations contemporaneous with the main fact under consideration, or so nearly related to it as to illustrate its character and the state of mind, sentiment

and disposition of the actors, are parts of the res gestae. They are regarded as verbal facts indicating a present purpose and intention, and therefore admitted in proof “as any other material facts.” It was then said, in respect of declarations, etc. that “. . . they need not be strictly coincident as to time, if they are generated by an' excited feeling which extends without break or let down from the moment of the event they illustrate; but they must stand in immediate causal relation to the act and become part, either of the action immediately preceding it, of of action which it immediately precedes.”

It was said in Walker v. State, 138 Ark. 517, 212 S. W. 319, that “Res gestae are the acts talking for themselves; not what people say when talking about the act, and the words must' stand in immediate causal relation to the act, unbroken by interposition of voluntary, individual wariness seeking to manufacture evidence for itself. ’ ’

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Related

Turner v. State
527 S.W.2d 580 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1975)
Scaife v. State
196 S.W.2d 902 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1946)

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Bluebook (online)
182 S.W.2d 679, 207 Ark. 664, 1944 Ark. LEXIS 720, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/scaife-v-state-ark-1944.