State Ex Rel. Davis Trust Co. v. Sims

46 S.E.2d 90, 130 W. Va. 623, 1947 W. Va. LEXIS 73
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 4, 1947
Docket9977
StatusPublished
Cited by47 cases

This text of 46 S.E.2d 90 (State Ex Rel. Davis Trust Co. v. Sims) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Ex Rel. Davis Trust Co. v. Sims, 46 S.E.2d 90, 130 W. Va. 623, 1947 W. Va. LEXIS 73 (W. Va. 1947).

Opinions

Haymond, Judge:

In this original proceeding the petitioner, Davis Trust Company, Administrator of the personal estate of Lucy Ward, deceased, seeks a peremptory writ of mandamus in this Court to compel the defendant, the Auditor of West Virginia, to issue a warrant upon the State Treasurer for the payment of an appropriation of $5,000.00 made by the Legislature of this State to satisfy the claim of the petitioner for damages resulting from the death of its intestate, an elderly lady, who was raped and murdered on January 20, 1945, by a felon under sentence of life imprisonment while he was absent from the state prison at Huttonsville in Randolph County, West Virginia, to which he had been previously assigned by prison officials acting in behalf of the State of West Virginia as its authorized representatives.

The State Court of Claims, by a two to one decision, allowed the claim which the petitioner prosecuted before that tribunal, awarded $2,500.00 as compensation for the death of the decedent, and recommended to the Legislature that it authorize the payment of -that amount. By a special act passed by both houses on March 8, 1947, effective from its passage, without the approval of the Governor, and which contained recitals that an escaped convict from the state prison farm at Huttonsville, West Virginia, on January 20, 1945, raped and murdered Lucy Ward, that his escape was due to the gross and inexcusable negligence of a prison labor guard then in the employ of the State of West Virginia, and that her heirs at law have suffered mental anguish and the loss of her services, the Legislature authorized and directed the Auditor to issue his warrant upon the Treasurer, payable *625 from the state general revenue fund,, in favor, of the petitioner as administrator of the estate of the decedent for $5,000.00, as compensation to her heirs for her wrongful death, and declared the appropriation of that amount necessary to discharge a moral obligation of the State. Chapter 30, Acts of the Legislature of West Virginia, 1947, Regular Session. The Legislature also incorporated in Title II of the general appropriation act of 1947, Chapter 27 of the Acts of the Legislature of West Virginia, 1947, Regular Session, two appropriation items of $2,500.00 each for a claim against the State Board of Control, Hut-tonsville Medium Security Prison, to which the convict had been assigned at .the time of the murder, to be paid from the general revenue fund, in favor of the petitioner.

Following this action of the Legislature, the West Virginia Board of Control issued its requisition on the Auditor in favor of the petitioner for the payment of the sum of $5,000.00. On May 2, 1947, the Auditor refused to honor the requisition for the stated reasons that the requested payment would constitute an unauthorized gift of public funds and that there was no liability of the State for the civil wrongs of its employees. The petitioner then instituted this proceeding in this Court.

The defendant filed his written demurrer to the petition by which he challenged its legal sufficiency upon numerous assigned grounds. The case was submitted to this Court for decision upon the petition and the demurrer and the briefs and the oral argument of the attorneys for the respective parties.

The allegations of the petition, which on demurrer must be regarded as true, and the opinions of the State Court of Claims to which the petition makes reference, disclose an unusual factual condition. Lucy Ward, the decedent, past seventy-three years of age at the time of her death and a respected citizen of Randolph County, had resided for many years with her sister and her brother on a farm near the Town of Huttonsville in that county. James Chambers, colored, an inmate of a state prison known as *626 the West Virginia Medium Security Prison, located in the neighborhood of the Ward farm, was serving a sentence of life imprisonment for murder and had previously been transferred from the State Penitentiary at Moundsville to the prison at Huttonsville. The murder for which the sentence of life imprisonment had been imposed upon him had been committed by Chambers in Wyoming County on April 1, 1935, at which time he killed a colored woman by cutting her throat with a razor. In 1941, during his confinement in the penitentiary at Moundsville, Chambers attacked another female inmate of that institution and stabbed her in the hip with a knife because she refused to have sexual relations with him. On another occasion he accosted her in a bathroom of the prison. For his misconduct he was punished by being confined to his cell and restricted to two meals a day for a period of sixty days. Sometime later, while working as a member of a prison road crew, he attacked a fellow prisoner with a knife. He was afterwards transferred by proper authority to the prison at Huttonsville.

On the morning of January 20, 1945, Chambers unaccompanied and unobserved, left the prison, went to the Ward farm, entered-the barn where his victim was engaged in milking a cow, and there, after raping her, murdered her with a knife. He then returned to the prison. His absence from the prison was not known to the authorities there until after the commission of the crime. After the murder was discovered, Chambers was tried, sentenced to death, and hanged in the penitentiary at Moundsville.

Shortly after the murder of Miss Ward a committee of the Legislature made an investigation and a report of the conditions which existed at the prison at Huttonsville. The report disclosed that the absence of Chambers from the prison when he committed the murder was not known to anyone in authority at the institution. It also revealed that prisoners were allowed to leave the prison at will unaccompanied by any guard; that they had attempted to rape women in that neighborhood, for which they had *627 not been punished; that they had been arrested lor other offenses while absent from the prison late at night; that they possessed keys to gasoline tanks and outside buildings of the prison; and that the knife with which Chambers killed his victim was obtained by him from articles of prison equipment. There was neither proper discipline nor adequate supervision of the prisoners. Under these conditions Chambers spent approximately six months of his term of life imprisonment, from July 27, 1944, when he was transferred to the Huttonsville prison, to January 20, 1945, when he murdered Miss Ward during his absence from that institution and while he was temporarily actually free from confinement.

The recital of the foregoing undisputed facts indicates beyond question that the authorities in charge of the Hut-tonsville prison and their agents completely disregarded the duty imposed upon them to keep Chambers securely confined to the prison at all times. Instead they afforded him the opportunity to leave the institution at will, without their knowledge of his absence, and without any surveillance whatsoever of his whereabouts or his behavior. Those responsible for his confinement were fully aware of his vicious character and his dangerous propensity to engage in voilent and murderous conduct. He was prone to commit revolting sexual offenses.

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Bluebook (online)
46 S.E.2d 90, 130 W. Va. 623, 1947 W. Va. LEXIS 73, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-davis-trust-co-v-sims-wva-1947.