Sorber v. State

76 So. 2d 234, 225 Miss. 436, 1954 Miss. LEXIS 606
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 6, 1954
DocketNo. 39358
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 76 So. 2d 234 (Sorber 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
Sorber v. State, 76 So. 2d 234, 225 Miss. 436, 1954 Miss. LEXIS 606 (Mich. 1954).

Opinion

McGehbe, C. J.

At the September 1953 Term of the Circuit Court of Sunflower County the appellant, Minor Sorber, was jointly indicted with William A. Wetzel, Robert “Ohio” Jones and Robert Harrison for the murder of Edgar G. “Sonny” McGraw on April 14, 1953, on a turnrow near the edge of a cornfield on the penal farm of the Mississippi State Penitentiary in Sunflower County. The appellant was tried separately. He was tried on the 24th and 25th days of September, 1953, the trial beginning on the next morning after William A. Wetzel’s trial had been completed and he had been sentenced to death. There was a motion for a continuance of the appellant’s case, and in the alternative for a change of venue, on the ground that the newspaper articles concerning the Wetzel trial and the charges against his co-defendants which had appeared in the Commercial Appeal at Memphis, the Delta Democrat-Times at Greenville, the Jackson Daily News and the Indianola Enterprise, the latter being a local newspaper and all of them having a general circulation in Sunflower County, had served to cause a prejudgment on the part of the prospective jurors as to the appellant’s guilt or innocence and to prejudice his right to a fair and impartial trial. The motion for the continuance or for a change of venue was [440]*440overruled, and this action of the trial court is assigned as a ground of error on this appeal.

The other grounds assigned as error are first that the verdict of guilt which resulted in the defendant Sorber being sentenced to death, was against the overwhelming weight of the evidence; second, that the court erred in not sustaining his motion for a new trial; third, that the trial court erred in admitting certain incompetent and highly prejudicial evidence upon the trial of the case; and fourth, that the said defendant was deprived of his constitutional right to a fair and impartial trial during the course thereof.

It appears from the proof that Edgar G. “Sonny” McGraw, the victim of the knife slaying on the penal farm, had entered a plea of guilty to a charge of felony in Pike County, Mississippi, and had disclosed to the prosecuting officers the guilt of his two accomplices in the crime — McKnight and Watson; that he was given a sentence of two years in the st,ate penitentiary and his accomplices were given much longer terms when they entered pleas of guilty upon learning that McGraw had agreed to “turn state’s evidence” against them. It was the theory of the prosecution in the instant case that Sorber and the men jointly indicted with him had conspired to kill McGraw for violating the code of the underworld in admitting his own guilt of crime and then telling on his accomplices; that although neither of the four men indicted in the instant case for the murder of McGraw had been implicated by McGraw as being involved in the crime which he committed in Pike County, Mississippi, or elsewhere, they were nevertheless willing to put him to death for having told on other criminals, whom they had known only a few days.

The proof further disclosed that the said Edgar G. “Sonny” McGraw arrived at Parchman where the state penal farm is located on Sunday or Monday afternoon, was assigned along with the said McKnight to Camp [441]*4415; that they went to the cornfield on the next morning with approximately 70 other convicts to plant peas or soybeans among the stalks of corn, which were from 5 to 7 inches high, and that two men were assigned to each row, one to dig the holes and the other to drop the seed therein and cover the same; that McGraw was murdered in the early afternoon of his first day in the field; that sometime during the forenoon, either before or after the men had gone to the field, the driver or boss of the group had “called McGraw and asked him if he was the rap partner of a guy named ‘Muscles’ (meaning McKnight) and there was something said concerning a rat. He said he was a rat. * * In response to questions McGraw identified himself as being the one who received only two years, whereas his partners in crime received much longer terms. In other words, the driver or boss of the group needlessly exposed McGraw to his co-workers in the field as a “squealer”. Another witness, a trusty on the penal farm, testified that he heard the driver or boss say on that morning, “Which one of you men is the rap partner of ‘Muscles’. McGraw said he was, and he (the driver or boss) asked him how much time did he get and he said two years, and Captain Dye said ‘Didn’t Muscles get 25 years’, and he said, ‘yes, sir.’ He (the driver or boss) said, ‘So you got 2 and he got 25?’ And he said, ‘He is the rat in the bunch.’ Q. When he said that, do you know where Sorber was? A. Yes, sir, I was standing right by the side of him. Q. What did Sorber say? A. He said, ‘There is one that ought to go down.’ Q. Who was he talking about? A. Sonny McGraw.” The appellant Sorber admitted, when testifying in his own behalf, that he made a similar statement to the above, but expressed regret that he had done so and denied knowing anything about McGraw’s throat being cut until he saw him running back toward the water cart where he fell and died. The driver or boss, above referred to as having exposed McGraw to the group as a squealer was discharged about three [442]*442days later, presumably when his action in the premises was disclosed during the investigation of the killing of McGraw, and he did not testify as a witness.

The first witness for the State during the trial on the merits was Andrew Warren, who was the driver of the water cart drawn by a mule for carrying water for the men to drink. He had stopped his cart on the turnrow, which was about 16 feet in width and ran north and south, then placed two buckets of water thereon about 50 feet ahead of the cart and returned to the same. While sitting on the water cart, and in plain view of the men due to the fact that the corn stalks were low, he claims to have seen McGraw, who had completed his row, go to the water bucket, where he drank a dipper of water; that he then saw McGraw turn south on the turnrow in the opposite direction from the water cart and being followed by the appellant Sorber and the said Wetzel, Jones and Harrison; that he saw Jones knock McGraw’s hoe out of his hand, saw Sorber catch him by the hair, put his hand over the victim’s mouth, and then saw Wetzel come up behind him, place one hand on his shoulder and then reach around him and cut his throat with a knife, which the witness saw clearly as Wetzel’s hand went over McGraw’s shoulder before he cut his said victim’s throat; that thereupon he saw Wetzel hand the knife to the appellant Sorber, who evidently wrapped it in a blue handkerchief with white polka dots thereon, since he further testified that the knife was found at the edge of a drain ditch, a few feet from where the cutting occurred, and wrapped in a blue handkerchief, which was white polka-dotted, and covered with dirt; and another witness swore that he saw the appellant hide the knife there after he saw Wetzel hand it to him immediately after he had cut McGraw’s throat with it. Any theory of suicide is wholly untenable, since the testimony of the physician who examined the victim was that the index and next two fingers on the left hand of McGraw had a clean knife-[443]*443cut thereon, in addition to saying his jugular vein was almost severed by a cut on the right side of his neck about two inches deep and three inches long. Then, too, McGraw was not shown to have had the knife, and could not have successfully disposed of one after Ids jugular vein had been almost severed.

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Related

Averitt v. State
149 So. 2d 320 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1963)
Averett v. State
149 So. 2d 320 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1963)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
76 So. 2d 234, 225 Miss. 436, 1954 Miss. LEXIS 606, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sorber-v-state-miss-1954.