State v. Corbitt

109 S.E. 133, 117 S.C. 356, 20 A.L.R. 328, 1921 S.C. LEXIS 165
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedOctober 10, 1921
Docket10719
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 109 S.E. 133 (State v. Corbitt) 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. Corbitt, 109 S.E. 133, 117 S.C. 356, 20 A.L.R. 328, 1921 S.C. LEXIS 165 (S.C. 1921).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court en banc was delivered by

Mr. Justice Cothran.

At the May term of “the Court of General Sessions for Orangeburg County true bills upon separate indictments were returned against the defendant, charging him with the murders respectively of Bryan Salley, Julian Cooper and Hugh Panning, on March 27, 1920. At the September term he was tried upon the indictment charging him with the murder of Bryan Salley, and was acquitted. At the following January term he was called for trial upon the indictment charging him with the murder of Julian Cooper. He thereupon filed a plea of former acquittal, based upon the proposition that the three homicides, resulting from a single act, intent, impulse, and volition, constituted but one offense, and that, having been acquitted *364 of any criminality in connection therewith, as evidenced by his acquittal as stated, he was entitled to be discharged.

To this plea the State demurred, upon the ground that the indictment in the case in which the acquittal occurred and that in the case at bar show that the offenses charged in the two indictments are distinct and different and require proof of distinct and different facts.

The Circuit Judge heard argument upon the plea and the demurrer, and orally announced his ruling (which is incorporated in the record and should also be in the report) overruling the demurrer. He then passed a formal order, reciting the fact that he had overruled the demurrer, and adjudging that the plea of former acquittal be sustained. From said ruling and order the State appeals.

1 Upon the presentation of the plea two courses were open to the State: To traverse the plea or to demur. The State adopted the latter course, and the legal effect thereof was to admit the allegations of fact contained in the plea. State v. DeWees, 76 S. C. 74; 56 S. E. 674; 11 Ann. Cas. 991.

2 The question at issue must therefore be decided upon the plea, the demurrer and the two indictments, without reference to the testimony taken upon the. trial which has been had. It was unnecessary and improper that this testimony be incorporated in the record for this appeal. The exceptions of the State to the order of the Circuit Judge striking out this .testimony in settling the case for appeal are therefore dismissed:

The main facts, pertinent to the present inquiry, alleged in the plea and admitted by the demurrer, are the following omitting those already stated herein and certain argumentative statements therein:

On the night of March 27, 1920, while the defendant was in his front yard, several men, among whom were Bryan Salley, Julian Cooper, and Hugh Fanning, advanced *365 upon him; that in self-defense, to protect his person and habitation from their' joint and confederated attack, the defendant fired at them several times with an automatic revolver, firing as rapidly as the pistol would fire, not aiming particularly at any one of them, but shooting at them one and all, whereby the three men named were instantly killed; that in said shooting the defendant was actuated and moved by the same and identical impulse, a single act of volition to do anything and everything against said three men to protect his person and habitation against their joint and confederated aggression.

The validity of the defendant's plea of former acquittal depends upon a solution of the following questions, battle ground upon which the defendant has pitched this controversy :

(1) Were the three homicides a single act on the part of the defendant?

(2) If the three homicides were a single act on the part of the defendant, is he entitled to claim that the act constituted but one offense?

It is apparent that if each homicide was a separate act, ' then necessarily each act constituted a distinct and separate offense; or if the three homicides were a single act from which distinct and separate results flowed, each homicide was a separate offense.

1. Where the three homicides a single act on the part of the defendant?

3 The defendant so alleges in his plea, and now contends that the State by its demurrer has admitted that to be a fact. We do not so regard the demurrer. The allegation in the plea is nothing more than a characterization, in the interest of the defendant—an inference favorable to him, which he draws from certain alleged facts; the issue is one of law, therefore, not of fact; and a demurrer admits only facts.

*366 As is declared by the Court in State v. DeWees, 76 S. C. 75, 56 S. E. 675, 11 Ann. Cas. 991:

“If the two indictments charged offenses which in their nature are so separate and distinct as to be incapable of legal identity, then defendant’s allegation that they charged the same offense would not'make it so, since the demurrer only admits the facts properly pleaded.”

So here, when the defendant alleges the circumstances of the affraythat the three men and another were advancing upon him; that he shot them down;> inferentially, one at a time; that he fired his pistol as rapidly as it would turn the cylinder; that he was determined to do anything and everything to- stop their confederated aggression, which of course included as many shots and reloadings as might be necessary—it is not for him to decide or for the State to admit by its demurrer that such intense, determined, continuous and effective warfare, defensive though it may have been, was a single act.

Assume as we must that the defendant acted not in malice or in the hot blood of aggravation and exasperation, but in defense of his home and person, a circumstance which goes to the- merits of his defense, and not to the discussion of the question whether or not his shooting down three men with separate shots was a single act, the circumstances cry out against his favorable interpretation. His purpose, as he states, was to halt this confederated aggression; at least four men were advancing upon him; he had a pistol as his weapon of defense;' he knew that it fired only one shot at a time, he could not possibly kill all four at one shot; he necessarily, therefore, predetermined to fire at least four times, each firing being a separate act, and each, as events developed, followed by the fall of a man. The admitted facts, aside from the. argumentative characterization of the shooting as a single act, show a predetermined and *367 pursued series of acts to shoot, and shoot, and shoot; to do “anything and everything against the three men * * * to protect his person and habitation.” We are concerned here with what he did, not with the purpose; and in the attempted justification of his conduct he reveals the character of his conduct as a series of acts, and not a single act.

4 The authorities are simply overwhelming that under the circumstances stated the defendant was guilty of a separate crime (if a crime) against each one of his victims, and that the acquittal of one charge is not a bar to a further prosecution.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
109 S.E. 133, 117 S.C. 356, 20 A.L.R. 328, 1921 S.C. LEXIS 165, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-corbitt-sc-1921.