State v. . French

34 S.E.2d 157, 225 N.C. 276, 1945 N.C. LEXIS 420
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedJune 6, 1945
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 34 S.E.2d 157 (State v. . French) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. . French, 34 S.E.2d 157, 225 N.C. 276, 1945 N.C. LEXIS 420 (N.C. 1945).

Opinions

STACY, C. J., dissenting.

WINBORNE, J., concurs in dissent. The defendant was tried at the October Term, 1944, of the Montgomery Superior Court, upon an indictment charging him with murder of Duck LeGrand.

The evidence of the State tended substantially to show that James Richardson, driving Shang LeGrand's car, in which were Shang and his wife, Duck LeGrand, the deceased, and other persons, was going out of an alleyway towards the highway. French was driving his car along behind them. As Richardson came out of the alleyway and turned along the highway. French came out, also, and in trying to go around the car, hit a telephone pole. There was no collision between the cars. When the French car struck the telephone post, the LeGrand car stopped, then pulled off and went on to Wadeville. French backed away from the post and carried his car towards home. About 25 minutes later, a State's witness met defendant going up the road, and defendant asked him "where that damn Shang LeGrand was." Witness said that he did not know, and French replied that somebody was going to pay for his G__ damn car. About that time Shang LeGrand's car passed, and defendant went on to where Shang's car was parked on the right-hand side of the road. Later witness found French at the LeGrand car arguing about his own car and talking to James Richardson. Duck LeGrand and her husband were there also. French told Richardson that he wanted pay for the "damn damages." Richardson told him to wait until tomorrow *Page 278 and he would talk about it. Duck and Shang and the rest of them walked down the road to "Craven's house." Another person went up and got LeGrand's car and drove it, French standing on the side of it. The car was driven about 40 yards from where they had been talking. French kept arguing about damage to the car, and James kept telling him he would see him tomorrow. French replied, "G__ damn it, wait till I come back, I will kill all you s. o. b.'s." Duck LeGrand, Shang LeGrand, James Richardson and Margaret Ingram were present. Witness had not seen any previous fight, nor had he seen any weapons of any kind in the hands of LeGrand and his wife, or any of that party.

The defendant then ran down through a cornfield about six or seven hundred yards to his house; and some ten minutes later came running back with a rifle and ran around the side of the car where the driver was. He came by the side of the car where Shang LeGrand was, struck the barrel of the rifle in the car and shot four or five times into the car. Duck LeGrand and Shang LeGrand were sitting on the front seat of the car as the defendant approached on the driver's side. Witness did not hear either of the LeGrands or French say anything. French fired five or six times and Duck started to get out of the car. She got out on the running board, and defendant fired again, and she fell. He was standing near the front of the car when he shot Duck Legrand [LeGrand]. Her face was turned away from defendant, her back to him, and when she fell, defendant turned around and ran.

E. T. Reynolds, a mortician of fifteen years' experience, and licensed by the State, testified that on the night of September 2nd he saw the bodies of Duck LeGrand and Shang LeGrand, both in front of the bank building. Duck LeGrand was in the back of the car, down in the foot. Witness prepared her body for burial, finding a bullet wound in her back, about an inch to the left of her spinal column and down below the shoulder blade. The veinous system was punctured somewhere in the thorax or the chest. The bullet wound in the back was about the size of a .22-caliber rifle bullet.

Another witness for the State testified that he pulled the Shang LeGrand car out from the "piccolo" (restaurant) out in front of Craven's, and drove it a distance. French was standing on the running board on the driver's side. There was no one in the car at that time. After the car was pulled in front of Craven and Beatrice Turner's house, the defendant began to curse Duck LeGrand and Margaret, her daughter, in the presence of Shang, Arthur Hill and Henry Ingram, Duck LeGrand's boy, a lad about 15 or 16 years old. Defendant called Duck a s. o. b., and after he called her that, he left and said he was going home and get his gun and come back and kill all the s. o. b.'s. He broke and ran through a cornfield. Witness was not present when he came back. *Page 279

Arthur Hill testified that he was with Shang LeGrand and Duck, the deceased woman, and James Richardson. Duck and Shang drove in front of Miss Flora's, on the right-hand side, and stopped, and the party was there a few minutes when defendant walked up and began talking to Richardson about the damage. Richardson asked him to wait until tomorrow and defendant said, "I am going to have some damn damage tonight. He was talking to Richardson, Duck and Shang LeGrand. French was cursing Duck LeGrand and Shang LeGrand, and then John D. McCall came, got the car and drove it on down in front of Craven's, with French hanging on the side of the car. Duck and Shang went on down behind the car after it had been driven on. Then the argument started again, with defendant cursing them and repeating that he intended to have some damn damages. He then ran up the road, telling Shang and his wife to be there when he got back, he was going to kill every s. o. b. that was there. He came back in about 20 minutes, had his rifle up when witness broke and ran. Defendant ran around on the driver's side and poked the rifle into the car, and witness heard four or five shots. Duck and Shang were in the car at the time. Later, he saw Duck lying on the back seat, dead.

Henry Ingram testified that Duck LeGrand was his mother and Shang LeGrand was his stepfather. Witness was standing in his grandmother's yard when defendant came up to the automobile. Witness was about 25 or 30 yards from the automobile in which his mother and stepfather were sitting. The defendant was standing there shooting into the LeGrand car in which were his mother and stepfather when the witness first saw him. He saw him fire four or five shots into the car.

Witness started towards the car, and defendant turned around and shot him in the leg. The defendant was standing beside the car when he fired on the witness, and witness heard him fire again after he went back into his grandmother's house.

Witness returned to the car, found his mother lying on her face in the back of the car, picked her up, put her in an automobile and carried her to Dr. Harris' office. She was dead when witness picked her up. Witness did not have any weapon, nor did he find any weapon about the body of his mother when he picked her up.

Ivey Hall, Chief of Police of Troy, testified that he brought the defendant to the sheriff's office or jail. He asked French why he shot those people, and the reply was that they had been "picking at him and he got tired of it, and said he would show them who to mess with."

At the close of the State's evidence, the defendant moved to dismiss as of nonsuit and for a directed verdict of not guilty as to the count or allegation of murder in the first degree. The motions were overruled, and the defendant excepted. *Page 280

The defendant testified that he was 34 or 35 years old and lived in Troy; that he had known Duck LeGrand and Shang Legrand [LeGrand] all his days.

Defendant testified that they were at "Miss Flora Kelly's `piccolo,'" a short distance at the rear of the courthouse. He saw Duck and Shang LeGrand come out from the "piccolo" in a car; that they started up ahead of witness "and made a bad drive in front of me," in consequence of which defendant bore to the left and hit a "telegram" post and cut it down.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
34 S.E.2d 157, 225 N.C. 276, 1945 N.C. LEXIS 420, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-french-nc-1945.