Spears v. State

175 So. 2d 158, 253 Miss. 108, 1965 Miss. LEXIS 974
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedMay 17, 1965
Docket43455
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 175 So. 2d 158 (Spears 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
Spears v. State, 175 So. 2d 158, 253 Miss. 108, 1965 Miss. LEXIS 974 (Mich. 1965).

Opinions

[111]*111Brady, Tom P., J.

This is an appeal from the Circuit Court of Attala County, where the appellant was indicted, tried and convicted for using obscene, indecent language over the telephone, in violation of Mississippi Code Annotated section 2291.5 (Supp. 1964), as enacted at the 1964 regular session of the Legislature of Mississippi. The appellant was sentenced to serve two years in the state penitentiary. Prom this judgment and sentence the appellant appeals.

Briefly, the pertinent facts in this case are these: On August 10, 1964, at approximately two o’clock in the afternoon, Mrs. W. S. Fowler, when her husband was absent, and while worldng at the Dr. Pepper and Seven-Up Bottling Company in Kosciusko, Mississippi, which is operated by Mr. Fowler, received a telephone call from an unidentified and unknown man who made a very vulgar, obscene, and indecent proposal to her. She demanded to know who was calling but the man refused to identify himself. Because of a prearranged plan entered into several weeks before between Mr. and Mrs. Fowler and another married couple of Kosciusko, she agreed to meet the caller who had made the insulting proposition to her, stating that she could not meet him that night, but that the following day and night her husband would be out of town and she could meet him on a certain road leading to the Moose Club, at 8:00 P. M.

Upon her husband’s return to the plant she told him about the conversation and immediately he called the sheriff. Plans were made so that the sheriff could apprehend the caller. On the designated night, because of a storm, she did not meet him, but after it had subsided he again called her while she was in her home and she invited him to come to the house, which he did. He entered the house by a rear door and went into, the kitchen where Mrs. Fowler was working, and she went [112]*112out of the kitchen into the dining room, where her husband and the sheriff were waiting, and on into her bedroom. When he entered the dining room he looked down the muzzle of a double-barreled shotgun which Mr. Fowler had aimed at his head. The appellant was arrested and taken to jail.

On the trial of the case the appellant admitted calling Mrs. Fowler both times and admitted maldng the engagement or date with her, but he denied using vulgar, obscene and insulting language, which was charged in the indictment and introduced by Mrs. Fowler by writing the words upon a piece of paper which was subsequently shown to the jury. Leaving out the formal parts of the indictment, the language in the indictment is as follows:

(D)id wilfully, unlawfully, and feloniously use profane, vulgar, indecent, obscene and insulting language over the telephone during the course of a telephone conversation which he the said Gerald “Jack” Spears originated and which was directed to and received by Mrs. Sara Fowler in violation of Section 2291.5 of the Mississippi Code of 1942, Recompiled, As Amended; said language being too filthy to be spread upon the records of this court but expressing in obscene words the desire of the defendant to have sexual intercourse with the said Mrs. Sara Fowler; against the peace and dignity of the State of Mississippi.

Prior to the selection of a jury, the appellant filed a motion to quash the indictment and, in support thereof, contended that the indictment wholly fails to charge in substance any crime against the appellant and especially under section 2291.5, in that said indictment does not specify the obscene language allegedly used by defendant in the conversation with Mrs. Sara Fowler over the telephone, which language is the gist of the offense contemplated by the statute and which language was unknown to defendant. Defendant asserts he can[113]*113not properly defend the case because he does not know what obscene language was allegedly used; that the indictment is not drawn in such a manner as to advise the defendant of the obscene language allegedly used, and is vague and uncertain; since the alleged obscene language is not set out in the indictment, the defendant, if tried on this indictment, could not plead former jeopardy in the event he was indicted again.

Appellant’s motion to quash was overruled by the trial court and the case proceeded to trial. On the voir dire the appellant, through his attorney, objected to the district attorney bringing up any other telephone calls, and moved that the jury panel be quashed and a mistrial he entered. This motion likewise was overruled, the court stating:

There has been no statement to the jury that any other calls were made by this defendant, or by anybody else, and the Court will further say that the jury is not to get the impression that there was any other calls. I didn’t get that impression, and the Court says that there has been no statement made to the effect that any other calls were made.

Numerous objections were made by the appellant in the trial of the case, some of which are assigned as errors, and the appellant also made several motions for a mistrial, all of which were overruled. After the verdict and judgment were entered in this case, a motion for a new trial was made by the appellant, which likewise was overruled. There are numerous errors assigned by the appellant, several of which constitute reversible error. However, we will concern ourselves not only with those which are reversible hut also those which, on a retrial of this case, should not he committed again.

The first error assigned is that the trial court erred in overruling appellant’s motion to quash the indictment. The writer of this opinion does not agree that the lower court erred in overruling appellant’s motion to quash [114]*114the indictment, bnt concurs with the dissenting opinion on this particular error, written by Justice Gillespie in this cause, in that the writer is of the opinion that the indictment is sufficient to sustain the conviction. A large majorty of this Court concludes that the appellant’s motion to quash the indictment should have been sustained, and this opinion expresses their conclusions on this point.

The constitutional right of one accused of violating the law to be informed of the nature and cause of his accusations has long- been recognized in this Court. In the case of Jesse Walton v. State, 64 Miss. 207, 8 So. 171 (1886), Jesse Walton was tried and convicted on an indictment charging as follows:

(T)hat he “did unlawfully in a public place, to-wit: on the streets of the town of Sardis, and in the presence of two persons, profanely curse and swear, contrary to the form of the statute in such case made and provided.”

The Court, speaking through Chief Justice Cooper, in an opinion of but twenty-eight words, acutely stated: “The motion to quash the indictment should have been sustained. The words spoken constituted the gist of the offense, and should have been set out in the indictment.” He cited “3 Bishop on Cr. Proc. 123; 1 Wharton on Cr. L. 351; Steuer v. The State, 59 Wis. 472.” This Court has been astute down through the years in requiring that the constitutional right of the accused be protected and safeguarded in this regard.

In Williams v. State, 130 Miss. 827, 94 So. 882 (1922), which deals with obscene matter which appeared in a publication called the “Wampus Cat,” the indictment was based upon what is now Mississippi Code Annotated section 2288 (1956), which prohibited “obscene or indecent book(s), writing(s) . . .

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Spears v. State
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
175 So. 2d 158, 253 Miss. 108, 1965 Miss. LEXIS 974, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/spears-v-state-miss-1965.