Shelton v. State

126 So. 390, 156 Miss. 612, 1930 Miss. LEXIS 194
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 24, 1930
DocketNo. 28435.
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 126 So. 390 (Shelton 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
Shelton v. State, 126 So. 390, 156 Miss. 612, 1930 Miss. LEXIS 194 (Mich. 1930).

Opinion

Cook, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

At the June, 1928, term of circuit court of Claiborne county, the appellant, Allen Shelton, and Ruice Stevens were indicted for the murder of Mrs. Mattie Dungan. A severance was granted, and Ruice Stevens was tried, convicted, and sentenced to the penitentiary for life. At the June, 1929', term of the court, Allen Shelton, the appellant, was tried and convicted of the murder, and was also sentenced to life imprisonment in the state penitentiary; and from this conviction and sentence, he prosecuted this appeal.

The facts upon which this conviction is based are substantially as follows: About nine o’clock in the morning of January 21, 1928, a neighbor of Mr. and Mrs. Dnngan, who were old and had been ill for some days prior *616 to the murder, called at their home, and upon receiving no response to his knock at the door, looked through the window and discovered the dead body of Mr. Dungan lying before the fireplace, and the body of Mrs. Dungan lying near the door of the adjoining room. Both had been killed by gunshots, and blood was spattered over the floor and walls of the room in which the dead bodies were found. There were several pools of blood in various parts of the rooms, and especially near and under the bodies. There was a pool of blood on the front porch, and there were shoe tracks, and also the track of a bare foot, through the blood and thence over the rooms. Mr. Dungan was dressed in his shirt and trousers and a pair of overalls, one strap thereof being over his shoulder and the other down. Mrs. Dungan*was dressed in her night clothes, with only one stocking on. The dresser drawers and the trunks had been opened and ransacked, and papers and wearing’ apparel were scattered over the floors, and a plank had been removed from the ceiling over the front door in the north room. Mr. Dungan’s shotgun was lying near his body, and two empty Ajax, shells were found therein, hut the testimony was to the effect that an examination of this gun’s barrels disclosed that it had not been recently fired. An empty Ajax shell was also found in the yard. A fire was smoldering in the fireplace before which Mr. Dungan was lying.

The alarm was promptly given, and the sheriff of the county and many citizens gathered at the Dungan home and made all possible investigations as to the circumstances of the death of these parties. Bloodhounds were secured, but nothing’ was accomplished by them. A detective was promptly employed, and within a day or two Buice Stevens, a relative of the deceased, Hiobson Stevens, a grandson of the deceased, and the appellant and another party were arrested and placed in jail, and charged with the murder. The officers examined these parties fully in regard to their .movements on the night *617 of the murder, but since their statements did not tend to connect any of them with the murder, they were shortly thereafter released from custody. Another detective was engaged, and, after several months’ investigation by him, Euice Stevens, Hobson Stevens, and the appellant were again arrested and placed in jail. A few days thereafter, Hobson Stevens was released from custody.

All the testimony offered by the state, which tended directly to connect the appellant and Euice Stevens with the murder, was given by the said Hobson Stevens and Josie Lillis, a young woman who lived in the home cf Mrs. Jessie Mae Stevens, daughter of the deceased and mother of Hobson Stevens.

The said witness, Hobson Stevens, testified that he, Euice Stevens, and the appellant, Allen Shelton, left the home of his mother in Vicksburg about three o’clock in the afternoon of January 20, 1928, to go into the Mississippi Eiver Swamp on a hunting trip; that they traveled in a Ford touring car, and carried two dogs; that Euice Stevens had a "Winchester shotgun and carried Ajax and Shur-Shot shells; that they went south on the highway leading into Claiborne county for about nine or ten miles and turned into a settlement road leading into the swamp; that after some delay and difficulties on account of the muddy condition of this road, they reached a point near the river and left their automobile at an old settlement, and hunted down the river about four miles, thence east about two miles, and thence north to their automobile; that they got back to the automobile about ten o’clock p. m., and there built a fire and warmed themselves, and after eating a lunch started back to the main highway; that after some delay, on account of their automobile getting stuck in the mud, they reached the highway; that, instead of turning north toward Vicksburg, Euice Stevens, who was driving, turned the automobile south toward Claiborne county; that they proceeded south about twenty-five miles to a point about a mile and a half from the home of his grand *618 parents; that they there got out for the announced purpose of hunting in the Claiborne county hills, and started through the woods in the direction of the home of his grandparents.; that when they had proceeded only a short distance, his headlight went out, and it was'necessary to return to the automobile to mend it; that the appellant and Buice Stevens promised to wait for his return ; that he returned to the automobile and adjusted his light and then returned to the point where he had separated from Buice Stevens and the appellant but found them gone, and he was unable to locate them; that thereupon he returned to his automobile, and shortly thereafter he heard three shots fired in the direction of the Dungan home; that in about an hour and a half after they had separated, Buice Stevens and the appellant returned to the automobile, and they then drove to Vicksburg arriving there about two o’clock a. m.

He further testified' that on the trip from Claiborne county to Vicksburg, Buice Stevens and the appellant told him that if anything happened, not to tell that they had been in the hills, but to say that they had been in the swamp, and that if they were arrested, he would' be as deep in it as they were. Hie further testified that, on the day after the killing, and after he had learned of the death of his grandparents, the appellant met him in Vicksburg and again told him not to tell that they had been in the hills, and if any one asked about it, to say that they had been in the swamps, and it was between one'and two o’clock in the morning that they reached home; and that if they were arrested for anything, he, the witness, would be in it as deep, as they were. He also testified that shortly after they were released from jail, after their first arrest, the appellant told Buice Stevens that they had their tracks covered up so that they could not catch up with them, and if they stuck to the same- story they would not be arrested again.

Josie Lillis testified that for some time previous to the murder she had lived in the home of Mrs. Jessie Mae *619

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Bluebook (online)
126 So. 390, 156 Miss. 612, 1930 Miss. LEXIS 194, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shelton-v-state-miss-1930.