State v. Hayes

153 S.E. 496, 109 W. Va. 296, 1930 W. Va. LEXIS 64
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedMay 31, 1930
Docket6606
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 153 S.E. 496 (State v. Hayes) 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. Hayes, 153 S.E. 496, 109 W. Va. 296, 1930 W. Va. LEXIS 64 (W. Va. 1930).

Opinion

Lively, PRESIDENT.

Jim Hayes prosecutes error to a judgment of the circuit court of Greenbrier county sentencing him to confinement for eighteen years on a verdict of murder in the second degree committed upon Snowden Crane.

Snowden Crane, 69 years old, and a bachelor, who lived near Bellburn in the western portion of the county, was brutally murdered in his home on the night of November 24, 1927, and his body secreted on a high hillside about 1,000 feet away. His skull had been fractured in two places, a bullet had penetrated the base of his brain emerging below an eye, his wrists were bruised as if by a cord, and there were bruises on both legs between the ankle and knee. A rawhide strap was found tied around his left ankle. The fractures on the skull as well as the gunshot wound were alike fatal. The room which Crane habitually occupied showed signs of a struggle. A broken shotgun was found in one of the rooms, and there were evidences that a search had been made, presumably for valuables.

Up to about the 15th of October prior to the murder, a small shanty on Crane’s farm, about one-half mile from his home, had been occupied by Nellie Mays, and with her had lived Cody Allen, her paramour; John Allen (uncle of Cody), Hubert Allen, the son of John, and Lottie Adkins, who was Hubert’s paramour. Andy Cade frequently came to the shanty *298 and consorted with its occupants. They lived, in the main, by questionable practices. Another shanty about twelve feet from the Nellie Mays shanty was occupied by Sylvia Bear and her husband. The Allen crowd had moved from the shanty to another part of western Greenbrier county about the middle of October, but Nellie Mays’ household goods remained therein. Sylvia Bear and her husband continued to occupy the nearby shanty.

Cody Allen was suspected of complicity in the crime, and was arrested in Raleigh county in January, 1928, where he had gone to visit his father. He made a written confession in which he implicated as accomplices Ed Woodzell, a Mr. George, and an unknown man. After being taken to jail he changed his confession so as to relieve George, who had also been arrested and put in jail, and implicated defendant, Jim Hayes, who for five or sis years had lived in the neighborhood of the crime. Hayes had gone to Kentucky, where he had obtained work through some relatives, and he was extradited, jailed, and afterwards indicted for the murder at a special term of court on April 10, 1928. He continued his case, and it was tried at the following July term when the jury failed to agree. At the April term, 1929, he was convicted and sentence imposed May 15, 1929. His defense was : (1) an alibi; and (2) that Cody Allen, John Allen, Andy Cade, Nellie Mays, and perhaps others of the Allen gang, committed the murder.

Cody Allen testified that on Monday night, November 21st (prior to the murder on the following Wednesday night), he met Jim Hayes, Ed Woodzell, and a man unknown to him called “George” in the vicinity of Crane’s home, while on his way to the shanty where Nellie Mays had lived. They accosted him after parking their car on the roadside, and, after drinking some liquor, Hayes said he was “going to stop Snowden Crane from telling damn lies on him, ’ ’ and offered the witness $100 if he would go with them and watch. He agreed to go, and they arranged to meet at East Rainelle on the following Wednesday night. He met them as .agreed, and from there they drove in Hayes ’ car to a church where a path led to the Crane house, parked their car at the church, walked to the house, where he acted as a watch while the other three entered *299 the house. He then detailed what he saw them do, culminating in Hayes’ hitting Crane on 'the head a time or so with what looked like a club, followed by a shot in the head from a pistol in Woodzell’s hands. The three men then carried the body out in the direction of the hill (Cody remaining near the house as a watch), and upon their return they went into the house, and remained there some time, making a “considerable racket.” After that they all went back to the hard road by a different route, and, after swearing secrecy to each other, separated; the witness receiving a pint of liquor, but no money as promised. He was told to 4 ‘ get out of the country. ’ ’ Hayes says he went to Fayetteville that day, and did not return to his home (situated about three-fourths of a mile from Crane’s house) until night, and remained at home all night. In this he is corroborated by five or six witnesses, most of whom were closely related to him. Corroborating Cody Allen, and contradicting the alibi, is the evidence of E. S. Rexrode, a truck driver and mechanic of East Rainelle, who says that on the fatal Wednesday night, before Thanksgiving day, a stranger came into his garage and inquired the way to Snowden Crane’s place. Afterwards, when Hayes came into the garage where he was working, he recognized him as the stranger who had made the inquiry. His identification is positive. J. L. Fitz-water, a storekeeper on the road from East Rainelle to the church (spoken of by Cody), says that on the Wednesday night two men came in his store (then strangers to him), and one inquired the way to Snowden ‘ ‘ Haynes, ’ ’ but immediately changed it to Snowden Crane. The clothes of this man were described by him, and corresponded to the description of the clothes worn by the man who inquired of Rexrode. He after-wards identified Hayes as the man who had made this inquiry. It is argued that this evidence of Rexrode and Fitzwater is entitled to no weight; the argument being that it would be inconceivable for Hayes thus to advertise his presence in the vicinity of a contemplated crime, and make inquiry concerning a way quite familiar to him and which he had often traveled. The state argues that it was a shrewd scheme on his part to cast suspicion upon some strangers not familiar with the vicinity and its paths, and that his well-laid alibi would *300 exonerate him, if these witnesses should attempt to identify him, if, perchance, he was accused and extradited. The credibility and weight of this evidence and what were the motives which prompted Hayes in making the inquiries, and if made, were matters for jury determination, about which more will be said.

The state’s evidence tends to show two motives for the visit to Crane’s house, robbery (Crane was reputed to have money in his house), and revenge on the part of Hayes. Crane had been an important witness for the state in a prosecution for murder against Chase Brown, a brother-in-law of Hayes, and was, at the time of his murder, summoned as a witness in a new trial granted Brown. Hayes was a witness for his brother-in-law, Brown. Witness Sylvia Bear testified that Hayes had said: “If the Brown .boys got a new hearing, Snowden Crane wouldn’t hear it ”; and witness Boyer, an employer of Hayes, testified that Hayes, on the Monday preceding the murder, had said: “Snowden Crane had told about all the damn lies on him he was going to tell. ” This evidence, coupled with that of Cody Allen to the effect that Hayes said, on the Monday night when Cody was employed as a watch, that he “was going to stop Snowden Crane from telling damn lies on him, ’ ’ is what the state argues as evidence of a motive on the part of Hayes, in addition to that of robbery as evidenced by the ransacked condition of the house after the murder.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
153 S.E. 496, 109 W. Va. 296, 1930 W. Va. LEXIS 64, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-hayes-wva-1930.