State v. Bigham

112 S.E. 332, 119 S.C. 368, 1922 S.C. LEXIS 72
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedJanuary 26, 1922
Docket10827
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 112 S.E. 332 (State v. Bigham) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Bigham, 112 S.E. 332, 119 S.C. 368, 1922 S.C. LEXIS 72 (S.C. 1922).

Opinions

January 26, 1922. The opinion of the Court was delivered by The defendant was indicted, severally, for the murder of his mother, Mrs. Smiley Bigham; his sister, Mrs. Margery Black; his brother, L. Smiley Bigham; and two adopted children of Mrs. Black.

True bills were returned on all of the indictments; and the Solicitor elected to try him, first, under the indictment charging him with the murder of his brother, L. Smiley Bigham.

The defendant entered the plea of not guilty.

The jury rendered a verdict of guilty, whereupon the sentence of death was imposed upon him, and the 8th of April was fixed as the day of execution.

The defendant appealed upon numerous exceptions, which will be reported.

This is an extraordinary case; the testimony is very voluminous; four days were consumed in its trial.

The evidence is circumstantial. There are two theories in the case. The first is that the defendant killed the five parties whose names are mentioned in the indictments. The second is that Smiley Bigham killed four of the parties — his mother, sister, and the two boys — and then committed suicide.

Some time between the hours of 3 and 4 o'clock during the afternoon of January 15, 1921, Mrs. M.M. Bigham was found in a dying condition in her back yard, with a bullet hole in the left side of her neck, and another just behind the lower left ear; and expired almost immediately. About the same time the body of Mrs. Margery Black was lying dead in her room upstairs, with a bullet hole in *Page 378 front of her left ear. About the same time John McCracken, one of the adopted boys, was found dead on the back porch, with a bullet in his head. Leo McCracken, the other adopted boy, was found fatally wounded on a pile of straw about fifty yards from the rear of the house; one bullet hole was in the wrist, and another in the head. He survived, though unconscious, until the following morning. Smiley Bigham was found dead in the woods next morning, about 425 yards from the Bigham home, with a bullet hole in his head, and a pistol in his hand. The defendant, his wife, and his two daughters, together with the five persons who were killed resided at the Bigham home.

There can be no doubt that whoever committed the murders was actuated by a deep-seated motive, which was not robbery nor malice altogether, as there could have been none against the two little boys. The uncontradicted testimony shows that there was trouble in the Bigham family arising out of financial relations. We shall therefore attempt, in the first instance, to show what those relations were.

P.H. Arrowsmith, Esq., a witness for the State, testified substantially as follows:

"I was employed by the Bigham family, Mrs. Bigham, Mrs. Black, and Smiley, ever since the death of Mrs. Cain. Mrs. Cain was a deceased sister. I represented them until the death of these parties — about nine months. During that time I saw them frequently indeed. They would come to my office. The attitude of the son, daughter, and mother towards each other, was unusually considerate and affectionate, at all times when they were in my office. Practically every time they came they came together.

"The will that was introduced was drawn in my office and written by me. Prior to that time they had been at my office and had legal work done. After that time Edmund *Page 379 Bigham came to me. He came in my office and made himself known to me. I never had seen him before. He professed a desire to discuss the land case with me. I went over it quite in detail with him. He started at the death of his father; upon his death the descent of the property, one-third to the mother and the remaining two-thirds equally among the five children, Mrs. Black, Mrs. Cain, Edmund, Cleveland, and Smiley. We discussed the sale of Edmund's interest in 1908 to his mother and brother Smiley. (The original deed, I have it here and had it at that time.) We discussed the sale of Cleveland's interest in connection with the bond question, so that the property was left at that time owned by Mrs. Bigham, Smiley, Mrs. Black, and Mrs. Cain. We discussed the transaction which had resulted in the getting of a bond by Cleveland pending his appeal after conviction. We discussed the fact of Cleveland's being a fugitive from justice, and the transaction as to the land brought about by reason thereof, to the effect that the title to all the property, with the exception possibly of some lots in Pamplico, which had not been included, had been made to Mrs. Cain, so that, she not being one of the sureties under the bond, the State would not be enabled to collect the judgment that had been rendered upon the bond upon his default. Upon Mrs. Cain's death, two deeds had been recorded in the office of the Clerk of Court. About that time it became known that Messrs. Whiting Baker had been employed by Mrs. Cain to contend for a greater interest in the property than otherwise she would have been entitled to, except for these deeds. Conceding that a fraudulent or voluntary conveyance was good between the parties, I arranged through the First National Bank of Florence by a mortgage of the property for that bank to issue its certificates of deposit for an amount sufficient to pay the State of South Carolina the *Page 380 judgment, which had been rendered on the bond which had been estreated upon default of Dr. Bigham in 1910. This mortgage is duly recorded and the certificate of deposit is in the hands of Solicitor Gasque. It was my purpose to bring suit and sell all of the land so that Bogan Cain and his children would receive only a two-fifteenths part, and the balance would be owned by the other, Mrs. Black and Smiley. This was fully explained to Edmund in my conversation with him. He appeared at that time to be most anxious that some settlement of the matter be made out of Court, and asked my permission to talk to Bogan Cain, to which I gave my consent. Some time after that I had a conversation with Mrs. Bigham, Smiley, and Mrs. Black, and as a consequence of that conversation on Edmund's next visit to me I told him that I was too busy to discuss the matter with him, that I had already gone over it with him, and that I was not in position to discuss it with him any further.

"I did not at that time prepare any deeds for those parties.

"Q. Did you know whether they had signed a deed to Smiley? A. Only by hearsay.

"Q. Is there anything else you know about it? A. I know a great deal that I am not allowed to state.

"Q. What was the attitude of Mrs. Black the night she came to you to prepare that will? A. Greatly agitated. Her brother, Smiley, was with her.

"Cross-examination:

"Q. You state that you had in your files all of the papers and records of the Bigham property? A. I have them here.

"Q. You stated that at that time you had all the records when you prepared the will? A. Yes.

"Q. To whom was the will delivered after its preparation? A. Delivered to Smiley. *Page 381

"Q. I believe you occupy the position of County Attorney? A. I do.

"Q. Do you know anything with reference to the mutilation of the records in this county here? A. There were certain deeds torn out, and I only know this, that it was rumored that Smiley had destroyed the records; and the grand jury, knowing that I was Smiley's attorney, and that I was County Attorney, asked me to come before them, in connection with that matter, in the dual capacity of Smiley's attorney and the County Attorney, and give them such information as I had.

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Related

State v. Robinson
119 S.E.2d 671 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1961)
White v. Southern Railway Co.
140 S.E. 560 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1927)
State v. Holley
134 S.E. 213 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1926)
State v. Bigham
131 S.E. 603 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1926)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
112 S.E. 332, 119 S.C. 368, 1922 S.C. LEXIS 72, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-bigham-sc-1922.