State v. Foley

35 S.E.2d 854, 128 W. Va. 166, 1945 W. Va. LEXIS 73
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 13, 1945
Docket9712
StatusPublished
Cited by46 cases

This text of 35 S.E.2d 854 (State v. Foley) 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. Foley, 35 S.E.2d 854, 128 W. Va. 166, 1945 W. Va. LEXIS 73 (W. Va. 1945).

Opinions

Riley, Judge:

In the case of State of West Virginia against E. H. Foley from the Circuit Court of Clay County, the defendant and Ranson Kirk were jointly indicted for the murder of Joseph Groves in Clay County, West Virginia, on March .1, 1944. The defendants each having demanded a separate trial, the State elected to try Foley first, and he was tried and convicted of voluntary manslaughter and sentenced to the penitentiary. To a judgment of sentence this writ of error is prosecuted.

On March 1, 1944, defendant Foley shot and killed Joe Groves at Widen, West Virginia, with a 32 calibre Smith and Wesson revolver. The sole defense interposed was that the killing was done in self-defense.

*168 Foley and Kirk were employed in the months of February and March, 1944, for the purpose of organizing for the United Mine Workers of America the employees of Elk River Coal and Lumber Company at Widen. On the morning of February 28, 1944, Foley, in pursuit of his employment drove to Widen. He was accompanied by Byrne Wilson and unarmed. He testified that previously on February 23, 1944, when he was driving into Widen, Elmer Groves, driving an automobile in the opposite direction, stopped Foley’s car and inquired of him if he was “that G- - damned organizer”, and warned: “I am telling you, by G - -, to stay out of here and don’t be here when I come back.” Elmer testified that he did not know Foley until he returned to Widen on February 28, 1944, after a visit. Upon arriving at Widen early in the afternoon, Foley went into the Y.M.C.A. building, where Elmer Groves and his father were seated.

Elmer Groves testified that on February 28 Foley had “backed his car out in the road and just brushed my pants’ leg”; that against his father’s advice he approached Foley to ask him about the car incident; that Foley spit on the floor and when Elmer told him to clean it up “said something about a damned fool”; whereupon Elmer Groves grabbed Foley, slapped him, followed him out of the building, and caught him somewhere between the door and the Foley car parked a short distance away. He denies that he choked Foley, but says that when he grabbed Foley by the collar, the latter fell down “playing possum” and arose and went to his car when someone suggested that a doctor be called. The record, however, in our opinion, does not sustain Elmer Groves’ version of this incident. Foley testified, and in many particulars he is fully substantiated in this record, that while he was in the “Y” talking with Theodore Given, Elmer Groves came up to him from behind, grabbed him by the collar and said, “What the G - - damned hell are you doing back here? I thought I told you to stay out of here”; that Elmer told him to take off his glasses, reached up and caught the glasses; jostled defendant, and when de *169 fendant bad partly broken loose from him, knocked him down on the floor, causing his jaw to be cut almost through, so that it bled until about seven o’clock that evening; and that he got to his feet and went out the door, followed by Elmer and his father. He testified that Elmer kicked him as he went out the door; that he caught defendant near the back end of his car and hit him once or twice; that when defendant broke loose he got about half way to the door of his car, and that Joe Groves was “following, trailing right along”; that when defendant got about half way to the car door Elmer caught him again, choked him, pushed him so that he fell to the ground on his back, where he lay for some time in an unconscious condition. After Foley regained consciousness, so he testified, he went to his car, where Joe Groves, who had followed him, told him to “get the hell out of there.” Upon informing Groves that he could not do so because he had left his keys in the building, Groves went back into the building and returned with Foley’s keys and glasses, and said, “Now, you get your G - - damned a - - out of here and stay to hell out of here. If you come back in here bring an ambulance with you or a hearse.” Defendant is corroborated in this latter incident by the witness, Tom Radcliff. Defendant says as he was talking, Joe Groves pulled back his leather jacket and witness could see the butt of a gun. Virgil Grogg testified that in the “Y”, Elmer grabbed Foley, who said, “Well, wait a minute. What is this?” Icie Frame, a clerk in the Y.M.C.A., testified that as Foley was walking through Elmer stepped up to him, took him by the shoulder, and asked him, “what he was doing there trying to organize the union”, jerked his glasses' off, shoved him back next to the pool tables, while Foley told him he did not want to have any trouble with him, and then followed Foley out of the door. The witness Shannon Gray first saw Foley and Groves on February 28, as they were scuffling outside the building; that Foley got loose and started to run; that Joe Groves told' Elmer not to let Foley get away; that after this admonition Elmer caught Foley again as he was running up to *170 his car, put him on the ground; and that after Foley got up, he went to his car, followed by Joe Groves.

After the encounter on February 28, Foley exhibited physical evidence of his treatment at the hands of Elmer Groves. Virgil Grogg testified that when Foley went to witness’ home on the evening of February 28, his clothes were torn and dirty,.and he had a scar on one side of his face. Charles C. Gressang, General Superintendent of Elk River Coal and Lumber Company, who, on the evening of February 29, 1944, had attended a meeting in Charleston at which representatives of the United Mine Workers of America, including Foley and Ranson Kirk, an independent union of the coal and lumber company’s • employees, and a representative of the National Labor Relations Board were present, relative to the holding of an election by the mine employees at Widen to determine which of the two competing organizations, if either,' would be elected as the collective bargaining agency, testified that on that occasion he noticed a “pretty good sized” red mark on Foley’s face. Kirk testified that at the meeting he noticed that Foley had a “pretty bad swollen jaw”, and the witness H. 0. Murphy noticed blood on Foley’s face as he was leaving Widen on February 28.

■ On the question whether Elmer Groves was able to inflict injury on Foley, it may be noted that Foley was forty-eight years of age and weighed one hundred sixty-three pounds, and Elmer Groves, who had recently been discharged from the United States Army, was twenty-two years of age, about six feet tall, and weighed, according to the variant testimony, from one hundred seventy-seven to two hundred ten pounds.

On February 29, 1944, Elmer Groves was arraigned, pleaded guilty, and was fined before Lee Wilson, a Justice of the Peace in Clay County, on the charge that he “did unlawfully assault and beat him, the said E. H. Foley.” Various witnesses testified concerning Joe Groves’ activities at Widen on February 28 and 29. *171 Virgil Grogg testified that when Joe Groves asked Icie Frame for Foley’s keys and glasses, he said, “Yes, he [Foley] promised to leave town.” The witnesses Grogg, Theodore Given, William Matheny, and others for the defense, as well as the State, testified that Joe Groves followed Elmer as the latter was pursuing Foley out of the “Y”.

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Bluebook (online)
35 S.E.2d 854, 128 W. Va. 166, 1945 W. Va. LEXIS 73, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-foley-wva-1945.