State v. Dean

58 S.E.2d 860, 134 W. Va. 257, 1950 W. Va. LEXIS 34
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedApril 4, 1950
Docket10167
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 58 S.E.2d 860 (State v. Dean) 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 v. Dean, 58 S.E.2d 860, 134 W. Va. 257, 1950 W. Va. LEXIS 34 (W. Va. 1950).

Opinion

Riley, Judge:

Matilene Dean was indicted in and tried before the Circuit Court of Logan County, and convicted of murder of the first degree without recommendation. To the judgment of the circuit court based upon a jury verdict, sentencing her to be hanged at the state penitentiary at Moundsville, defendant prosecutes this writ of error.

The defendant, a negro woman twenty-three years of age, and a native of Logan County, residing at the village of Stowe, early on the morning of November 8, 1948, shot and killed Mack Nixon, commonly known as “Shamrock,” and sometimes referred to by that name in this opinion. Until about a year prior to the homicide she resided with her mother in the village of Shamrock in Logan County. *259 Thereafter and until she was arrested she resided with and worked as housekeeper for one Sam Richardson, a widower, for fifteen dollars a week at the Richardson home in the village of Stowe, located on Buffalo Creek, approximately fifteen miles from the City of Logan.

On November 7, 1948, defendant left the village of Shamrock by bus late in the afternoon and arrived at Logan a short time later. Again boarding a bus at Logan about 7:30 on the same evening, she arrived at Stowe after dark about 8:55 that night. Upon alighting from the bus at or near the village of Stowe, she saw a man on the highway acting “strangely,” which prompted her to stop at the home of Richard Coleman, who lived a short distance from the Richardson home. She asked Coleman to turn on his light so she could see her way to the Richardson house. While talking with Coleman, the decedent Nixon, approached her through the darkness and called “Matilene,” whereupon defendant identified herself and inquired if the person was “Shamrock.” Nixon, who had a flashlight informed defendant that he was going to the Richardson house, and the two then proceeded there, where they found Richardson in his work clothes preparing to go to work. Decedent offered Richardson a drink of whiskey, which was declined. Then defendant in the presence of Nixon asked Richardson how much money he would draw the following Saturday, and took from her purse a statement which purported to show the money due, along with eighteen dollars in United States currency. When Richardson was ready to go to work, defendant and Nixon accompanied him to a place called the “grill” located near the highway between Stowe and the village of Lundale, where Richardson got on the bus for the purpose of going to his working place.

After Richardson got on the bus, defendant left decedent and began walking toward the village of Lundale, assigning in the record as her reason for not returning to the Richardson home with decedent that she was “afraid to go back, he was acting so funny.” At Lundale she went to the home of Marie Redley (sometimes spelled “Ridley” *260 in the record), a friend. About five minutes later Shamrock followed her into the Redley house and “started talking loud.” Defendant says when she asked decedent to be quiet, he began to “curse and go on,” and that she walked out of the house and left him there. Marie Redley, although summoned, did not appear to testify. Defendant then went to the nearby home of Tom Hall, and upon knocking she was admitted by Hall, who at the time of the trial was dead. As defendant walked into the Hall home, she was followed by decedent who was “cursing and going on.” Defendant testified that when she asked Shamrock “What do you mean cursing me, you make people think I am something to you,”, he “slapped me and my nose bled.” Defendant says that decedent then called Hall a vile and insulting name and said, “Do you want to take that up?” Hall then got a .22 caliber rifle from the closet. Defendant left the two during the argument which ensued, and “didn’t stop.” Proceeding to her home, she locked the doors, sat down and wrote two letters. Then examining to see that the doors were locked, especially the kitchen door, she went to bed and fell 3sleep.

Defendant testified that she next saw decedent in her bedroom, standing over her bed, holding a shot gun; and that when she asked, “Sam, is that you?”, decedent replied, “Shut up, G— damn you, shut up, I will blow your G— damned brains out.” Defendant then said, “If I have anything you want, just take it,” and got out of bed, opened her wardrobe, and, according to her testimony, found her pocketbook was missing. Defendant asked decedent for her pocketbook, and he said he did not have it. Then she accused decedent of breaking into her house, which he denied, saying “your house was already open.” Defendant called over to Mrs. Leeper, her closest neighbor, who lived in a house thirty-five or forty feet away from the Richardson house, told her what had happened, and asked her and her husband, William Leeper, to come over as “This man came over here and broke in my house”; but Mrs. Leeper’s only response was, according to defendant, “What man, can’t you get him out?” After a “good argument” with decedent, defendant says she went *261 over and knocked on the Leeper’s door, but the Leepers refused to help her.

Thereafter defendant ran down to the Coleman house, and tried to get Coleman to take her to the state police, but was told he did not have enough gasoline. She then borrowed two nickels from Mrs. Coleman so that she could call the “States,” evidently meaning the state police. Next she proceeded to a neighboring house, occupied by a Mr. Myers. There she tried unsuccessfully to call the state police, but the telephone was out of order. Meanwhile the decedent was standing “up there cursing.” Going to another nearby house, occupied by Pete Zanders, she told Zanders what had happened, but Zanders, having been informed by defendant that decedent had taken Richardson’s shot gun, refused to go to the Richardson house, but drove defendant to Lundale to the residence of one William Mosley, a constable of Triadelphia District, Logan County, and asked the constable to arrest decedent. Mosley told defendant he would “Be right on down.” Upon having been driven by Zanders to the vicinity of the Richardson home, defendant went to the Leeper home, stayed four or five minutes, and then went into the Richardson house, but found no one there.

Shortly thereafter defendant went again to the Coleman house, and told Mrs. Coleman that Richardson’s money, gun and whiskey were missing. From the Coleman house, defendant proceeded in the direction of Lun-dale to the home of a Mrs. Moore. She gave Mrs. Moore the two nickels Mrs. Coleman had given her, and tried again to call the state police from that place, but received no response. She then proceeded to the nearby home of Annie Arthur, where decedent roomed and told Annie Arthur that “Shamrock broke into my house,” and asked her, “Did he bring a gun?”, to which the Arthur woman, replied, “No, sir”; but that decedent had been in and out of the house all night. Defendant found decedent at the Arthur home in bed, and asked him to accompany her home. She says she made this request “so when the laws come he would be there and catch him with my money.” *262 When defendant and Nixon arrived at the Richardson home, she asked decedent to let her have the gun, and said that decedent could have the money. Nixon replied that he did not have the money, and upon searching for the gun (a 12 gauge shot gun), found it lying by the couch in the living room.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
58 S.E.2d 860, 134 W. Va. 257, 1950 W. Va. LEXIS 34, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-dean-wva-1950.