Schwartz v. State

12 So. 2d 157, 194 Miss. 315, 1943 Miss. LEXIS 66
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 8, 1943
DocketNo. 35026.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 12 So. 2d 157 (Schwartz 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
Schwartz v. State, 12 So. 2d 157, 194 Miss. 315, 1943 Miss. LEXIS 66 (Mich. 1943).

Opinion

Smith, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The appellant was convicted of an assault and battery with intent to kill and murder. One of his complaints is that the evidence is insufficient to support the verdict, because of which the court below either should have granted his request for a directed verdict of not guilty, or, after his conviction, should have set the verdict aside and granted him a new trial.

The evidence for the state discloses that the appellant is secretary of a labor union in Meridian, Mississippi, known as the International Alliance of Theatrical Stage Employees and Moving Picture Machine Operators, which is affiliated with the American Federation of Labor. He is an operator of a motion picture machine, and was employed as such by a picture show in Meridian. In January, 1941, Royal and Pruitt began operating a motion picture theater, known as the “Royal.” No union labor was employed therein. On being requested by the appellant, in behalf of his union, to employ only union labor in the operation of this motion picture show, Royal and Pruitt declined, whereupon, under the supervision of the appellant, the Royal Theater was picketed for about a month for the purpose of coercing Royal and Pruitt into complying with the labor union’s request. The method of this picketing was that several people would parade on the sidewalk in front of the theater, each carrying a sign containing the words “Royal Theater unfair to organized labor. ’ ’ This picketing was continuous, the persons doing the picketing being shifted every few hours. The appellant directed the picketing, taking his turn in participating therein, and when not himself engaged in picketing this theater, spent considerable, time each day in a café across the street therefrom looking toward the theater. Another method adopted by the appellant for ascer *323 taining whether the picketing had lessened the patronage of the theater was to have one of the employees of this café, or some other person, to bny tickets to the theater, at intervals, during the day with money supplied by the appellant, the tickets being numbered serially, thereby disclosing the number of tickets sold between the first and last serial numbers. The appellant also complained to an agent of the State Tax Commission that Royal and Pruitt were not collecting the sales tax due on the theater tickets that were being sold, and requested him to take some action in the matter.

Shortly after the picketing began, and at intervals for three or four weeks, bombs exploded in the theater, one of these being a “stink” bomb and the others tear-gas bombs. Nobody was injured thereby, but all of the patrons then in the theater were greatly inconvenienced. After this had been going on for about a month, a bomb, designated as a “fire” bomb, exploded in the theater while a picture was being shown therein, seriously injuring several persons, among whom was Mrs. Morton Sansan on whom, the indictment alleges, the assault and battery was committed. This bomb, referred to as a “homemade contraption,” was fastened to a leg of one of the chairs in the theater, contained an electric battery, and was timed to explode by means of a watch attached to it. The appellant had sufficient knowledge of electric wiring to make emergency repairs on motion picture machines. Immediately after the explosion of this bomb the appellant was arrested, and the bombing and picketing of the theater ceased.

Three days before the last bomb exploded in the theater, the appellant was engaged in a heated conversation, with Mrs. Lucile L. Terry, at a filling station, about the bombing and picketing of this theater, which acts Mrs. Terry seems to have been condemning and the appellant defending. B. L. Thomas joined the group at this time and took part in the conversation. What then occurred can best be told in Mrs. Terry’s language: “And it came *324 up in some way about tear bombs. I just don’t remember exactly, but we had been discussing the picketing of that Royal Theatre in quite — well, pretty hotly, Leo and myself. So Mr. Thomas asked Leo (the appellant) if he thought tear bombé would hurt anybody and Leo said ‘no,’ and he said well, he thought that was a mistake; that the police had said they would, and said his children’s eyes had been hurt from it, and their conversation went on. I had asked Leo earlier if he didn’t think the union was wrong in not allowing this young man to maybe make a pay-day and then join their union. I also asked him if he had picketed, and he said yes, hadn’t I seen him, and I said ‘No, I hadn’t, and the only person I had seen was that fellow that day, and I was very much surprised to see it done.’' So Mr. Thomas got in the conversation, and he went on to talk to Leo, and I did too, about it, and it was discussed generally back and forth about what should not and should be done between all three of us, and about the bombs. Why Mr. Thomas said that the police had said that tear bombs were dangerous, and I believe to the best of my knowledge, Mr. Miller, that Leo contended they were not. And then it came up again about the union, and Leo said they were not g’oing to allow this union after twenty-years — I remember that very emphatically he said twenty years — to be destroyed, what they had gotten up here in Meridian, and that they were going to have 'to do something drastic about it. Q. Well what drastic did he say it was? What words did he use? A. Well, he said they were going to blow it to h — 1,” all of which was substantially corroborated by Thomas, who stated that the appellant there said, among other things, “furthermore, if they don’t stop it, we are going to blow the d — mn top off the picture.” All of this was denied by the appellant and another witness who claimed to have heard the conversation.

After the appellant was arrested and placed in jail, he cut his wrist, causing it to bleed so severely that it was necessary for a surgeon to stanch the bleeding. On being *325 asked hy a police officer why he had cut himself, the appellant answered, “I just can’t stand the pressure,” and upon the officer telling him that “there wasn’t any use in trying to kill himself while he was in jail,” the appellant made no reply. The appellant, when testifying, said that he broke a milk bottle and cut his wrist therewith for the purpose of forcing his removal from the jail to a hospital, where he would have an opportunity of communicating with his friends. He had not, however, been denied access to his friends by his custodian. While this evidence is entirely circumstantial, it is amply sufficient to warrant the appellant’s conviction.

The appellant complains of the admission of the evidence of the explosion of the stink and tear-gas bombs. The ground of his objection thereto is that these explosions evidenced the commission of crimes other than the one for which the appellant was indicted, and were not relevant to the issue which the jury here had to decide, i. e., whether the appellant placed, or was responsible for the placing of, the fire bomb in the theater. All of these stink and tear-gas bombs were evidently placed in the theater in furtherance of the purpose of the appellant and of members of his union to coerce the owners of the theater into employing union labor only therein, or, at least, the jury were warranted in so finding. The conversation of the appellant with Thomas and Mrs.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
12 So. 2d 157, 194 Miss. 315, 1943 Miss. LEXIS 66, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schwartz-v-state-miss-1943.