State v. Emerson

58 S.E. 974, 78 S.C. 83, 1907 S.C. LEXIS 228
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedSeptember 6, 1907
Docket6641
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 58 S.E. 974 (State v. Emerson) 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. Emerson, 58 S.E. 974, 78 S.C. 83, 1907 S.C. LEXIS 228 (S.C. 1907).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

*86 Mr. Justice Jones.

The appellant was indicted for the murder of Thomas E. Drake, and, upon being convicted with a recommendation to mercy, was sentenced to life imprisonment, from which appeal is taken upon numerous exceptions.

The homicide occurred on the night of August IS, 1906, in the home of the deceased in Anderson County. Mrs. Belle Bailey, a married daughter of the deceased, about thirty-one years old, was living in the home of her father, with her child Mary, about thirteen years old and her brother Ralph Emerson. The defendant, a sergeant of the county chain gang, left camp some fourteen miles from Drake’s for the purpose of visiting Belle Bailey in her bed room. Hitching his mule in the woods near the house, he went to the open window of the bed room and discovering a knot in the curtain, the signal agreed upon between them, he entered through the window. He placed his coat and pants upon the floor and his pistol on top in reach from the side of the bed and got in bed with Belle Bailey. The deceased occupied a room just across the hall and nearly opposite Belle Bailey’s room. Deceased got up during the night and set a lighted lamp in the hall on a table standing almost opposite Belle Bailey’s room door, which stood slightly ajar. Belle said to her paramour, “There is a light, Allen,” then got out of bed and started towards the door. She testified that her father pushed the door open before she reached it, that she asked him what he wanted and he said, “I want to hear a fuss,” that he had a pistol in his hand, that she heard Allen say, “Don’t shoot,” that her father immediately fired towards Allen, that Allen shot his pistol, that her father immediately started to shoot again, when Allen shot the second time and her father fell away from the room door into the hall. The deceased was shot through the heart and died immediately. The defendant testified that when Belle punched him in the side and said, “There is a light, Allen,” he raised up in bed and saw the door open and Drake with a pistol in hand, that he said to Drake, “Don’t you shoot me,” and bent over in bed *87 to get his pistol and while in that position Drake fired, the ball grazing and cutting the skin on his back, that he (defendant) then fired into the ceiling above to ward him off and get a chance to get out of the room, that Drake was about to fire again when defendant fired as quick as he could and Drake disappeared, that he then left the room without his clothes and went to where his mule was hitched, and that Belle brought the clothes to him there. The defendant and Belle went off together to Anderson, the defendant voluntarily surrendered to the sheriff and Belle went to Atlanta.

The defendant set up the plea of self-defense, and the real struggle in the case was on the point whether defendant was without fault in bringing on the difficulty. On this issue defendant sought to show the cause of Belle Bailey’s marriage with William Bailey, some thirteen years before the homicide, that her father knew of her unchaste character and her previous relations with the deceased, that he was estranged from his daughter by reason of her conduct, that he never spoke to her or entered her bed room, that defendant knew of this relation, and therefore did not expect to encounter the father on his visit to the daughter.

1 The first exception assigns error in the Court’s refusal to allow defendant’s counsel to ask the witness, Ralp Drake: “Do you know the immediate cause of her marriage at that time? Why was it she got married just at that time?” The object was to show that the marriage was forced because Belle was with child by William Bailey. This was properly excluded as too remote and as not throwing any light upon the homicide occurring thirteen years afterwards, and there being nothing to connect the circumstances of that marriage with the defendant or the homicide. If the purpose of the testimony was preliminary to showing an estrangement between Belle Bailey and her father because of her unchaste conduct and the improbability of the defendant encountering the father in her bed room, the ruling was harmless, as it was an undisputed fact in the case established by the State’s witness, Ralph Drake, at folios *88 25-26, that the relation between Belle and her father was not friendly, that he had not spoken to her for ten or twelve years, and that he never entered her room.

2 The basis of the third exception is the alleged refusal of the Court to allow the witness, Belle Bailey, to answer the question, “Did you make it known to him (defendant), that your father did not communicate at all with you ?” The case at folio 74 shows the following in the examination of Belle Bailey:

“Q. You need not state what you said to Allen Emerson, but I will ask you this question, whether or not you made it known to him, that your father never, under any circumstances, came into your room? A. I have. Q. You told him that? A. Yes, sir.”

After this, when the question referred to in the exception was asked, objection was made by the Solicitor and the Court sustained the objection. This cannot constitute reversible error, if it be conceded that the testimony was competent, for the question, in so far as it relates to whether Drake ever entered her room, had previously been answered without objection and remained as testimony in the case. Moreover the defendant, at folio 149, testified that he knew Drake never had any communication with Belle and never visited her room, and that he had no reason to expect to meet Drake in that room. It is not reversible error to exclude testimony as to matters already in evidence and undisputed. The fact that Drake did not speak to his daughter or visit her room was proven by the State, as already remarked, and was not a matter of dispute.

3 The second and fourth exceptions charge error in refusing to allow the following questions to be propounded to the witness, Belle Bailey: “Do you know whether or not your father was aware of this relation between yourself and Allen Emerson?” “I wish you would state to the jury whether or not your father had knowledge of the fact that there had been illicit relations between you and Allen Emerson, the defendant.” The witness, Belle *89 Bailey, had just previously testified that ten years before .she gave birth to a child, and that the defendant was its father, but there was at that stage in the case no testimony of any ether improper relation between the parties up to the night of the homicide. .So we are bound to assume, the purpose of the question was to ascertain whether the deceased knew of the illicit relation which had existed between his daughter and the defendant ten years previously. The Circuit Court ruled that the testimony might be relevant and admissible if Drake, the father, had on this occasion killed the defendant and was on trial for the same, but that it was not relevant to the issue in this case. The appellant contends that the father’s knowledge of the unchaste relation between defendant and.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

State v. Clinkscales
99 S.E.2d 663 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1957)
State v. Gunter
119 S.E. 844 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1923)
State v. Jones
101 S.E. 647 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1919)
State v. Stockman
64 S.E. 595 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1909)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
58 S.E. 974, 78 S.C. 83, 1907 S.C. LEXIS 228, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-emerson-sc-1907.