State v. Bigham

131 S.E. 603, 133 S.C. 491, 1926 S.C. LEXIS 114
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedFebruary 1, 1926
Docket11913
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 131 S.E. 603 (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, 131 S.E. 603, 133 S.C. 491, 1926 S.C. LEXIS 114 (S.C. 1926).

Opinions

*496 The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Justice. Watts.

The defendant was indicted for the murder of his brother, It. Smiley Bigham. The homicide occurred in Florence County on the 15th day of January, 1921. At the same time Mrs. M. M. Bigham, the mother, Mrs. Margie Black, the sister, and her two adopted sons, John and Leo Mc-Cracken, were also slain. The defendant was arrested on. January 20, 1921, on warrants charging him with the murder of all of these parties. At the March term, 1921, of the Sessions' Court of Florence County, he was indicted, bjr the grand jury for their murder, and at the same term of Court went to trial under the bill charging him with the murder of his brother, Smiley Bigham.

.Upon that trial he was convicted and sentenced to suffer death by electrocution. He then applied to be released on habeas corpus, alleging as his ground the sentence to be unlawful, as the Court had held over beyond Saturday of the week allotted. This petition was denied. He then-prosecuted his appeal to this Court for a general review, and the conviction was sustained. State v. Bigham, 119 S. C., 368; 112 S. E., 332. He then applied for a new trial on after-discovered evidence, which was refused, and the refusal was affirmed on appeal. State v. Bigham, 123 S. C., 411; 117 S. E., 57. He then applied to this Court for leave to move on Circuit for a new trial on after-discovered evidence and upon the further ground that he had been the victim of a “mob trial.” Leave was granted, and his Honor, Circuit Judge John S. Wilson, granted the motion. A change of venue was had on the motion of the defendant, unopposed by the State, and the case was retried at Conway, in Horry County, before his Honor, Circuit Judge H. F. Rice, and a jury. He was again convicted, again sentenced to suffer death by electrocution, and again appealed.

*497 One of the group of exceptions complains that it was error to allow Mrs. Ola Kirton to testify (over objection) for the State on her direct examination, to an alleged conversation between E. Smiley Bigham, the deceased, and herself, the defendant not being present, on Tuesday before the homicide on the following Saturday, relating to a hostile statement alleged to have been made by the defendant to the deceased at some previous time, not designated. The testimony was purely hearsay; it did not come within the exceptions to the universally sanctioned rule excluding such testimony; it was completely at variance with the decided cases in this State on the subject, and highly prejudicial.

The witness was allowed to testify to this conversation, both at this trial and the former trial. State v. Bigham, 119 S. C., 371; 112 S. E., 332. The admission of this testimony was made the ground of the eighth exception in the appeal to this Court from the judgment pronounced against him at that trial. Appellant’s counsel, Mr. Smith, has this to say in his points and authorities, which embodies what was done in that appeal and the decision of the Court (his statement is correct) :

“In disposing of the exception contrary to the contention of the defendant, the Court, Mr. Justice Gary delivering the opinion, held, in substance, (1) that the question propounded was not objectionable, and a motion should have been made to strike out the answer if it were regarded as inadmissible and not responsive to the ruling of the Court (citing State v. Mills, 79 S. C., 187; 60 S. E., 664, and State v. Bing, 115 S. C., 506; 106 S. E., 573); and (2), that no ground of objection to the testimony was stated. (State v. Bigham, 119 S. C., page 396; 112 S. E., 332.) When this opinion was rendered the Court was composed of only four members. Mr. Justice Cothran concurred in the opinion, and the lamented Justice Fraser filed a separate concurring opinion. Mr. Justice Watts did not participate *498 in the decision on account of illness. In discussing the exception, Mr. Justice Fraser declared:
“ ‘As to the statements made by the deceased: A witness was permitted to say the deceased said: “He is kind of cutting up some with us; he has had his share, but I am going to give him a piece of the land if he will behave himself. He is talking about killing us all, but I am not afraid of him.” Ordinarily that is incompetent, clearly so. Much depends on the surroundings. The theory of the defendant was that Smiley was a crazy man. The only way ordinary people can judge of a man’s sanity is from what he says and does. The defendant, on the cross-examination, had been allowed to prove Smiley’s actings and sayings, and I cannot say it was reversible error to allow the State to follow the defendant’s lead on the redirect examination.’ State v. Bigham, 119 S. C., 400; 112 S. E., 342.
“It will, therefore, be noted that the direct question of the competency of this testimony was not determined by a majority of the Court; and such testimony was sustained by Mr. Justice Fraser upon the ground that he could not say that its admission ‘was reversible error,’ although ordinarily clearly incompetent, when the State on the redirect examination only followed the defendant’s lead on the cross-examination.”

The question is now presented squarely to the Court, whether the testimony was competent or not. Specific objection was made that it was not competent, that the defendant was not present at the timé the alleged conversation between the witness and deceased was had, and such statements were not a part of the res gesta or a dying declaration. In no view of the case was it admissible, according to my view; it was clearly incompetent and highly prejudicial.

It is different at this trial and the former trial. At this time objection was made promptly, and a motion to strike out the answer was made and refused by the Court. Even *499 if the question of sanity was at issue, the State did not bring itself within State v. Driggers, 84 S. C., 530; 66 S. E., 1042; 137 Am. St. Rep., 855; 19 Ann. Cas., 1166. Here the witness was allowed to detail the conversation with the deceased on Monday before the, homicide on Saturday; the defendant not being present, showing threats and a hostile attitude on the part of the defendant, and the alleged conversation not being a dying declaration or a part of the res gestee. The alleged conversation was a statement made by the deceased when he was not even under an oath.

The statements of the deceased, and declarations made by him, are not competent evidence either for or against the accused, unless made in his presence or unless they ar& admitted in evidence as part of res gestee or dying declarations or proved by the defendant as threats against him. 12 Cyc., 429. Nettles v. Harrison, 2 McCord, 230. State v. Wyse, 32 S. C., 45; 10 S. E., 612. State v. Taylor, 56 S. C., 360; 34 S. E., 939. State v. Allen, 56 S. C., 495; 35 S. E., 204. State v. Goodwin, 127 S. C., 107; 120 S. E., 496.

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Bluebook (online)
131 S.E. 603, 133 S.C. 491, 1926 S.C. LEXIS 114, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-bigham-sc-1926.