State v. Hays

113 S.E. 362, 121 S.C. 163, 1922 S.C. LEXIS 172
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedJuly 5, 1922
Docket10921
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 113 S.E. 362 (State v. Hays) 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. Hays, 113 S.E. 362, 121 S.C. 163, 1922 S.C. LEXIS 172 (S.C. 1922).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Justice Marion.

Walter E. Hays, Ed Wilson, George Wilson, and Allen Emerson were indicted and tried in September, 1921, for the murder of T. F. Ramey. George Wilson and Allen Emerson were found guilty of carrying concealed weapons. Walter E. Hays and Ed Wilson, who are the appellants here, were convicted of manslaughter, with recommendation to mercy.

The nature of the exceptions upon which the appeal is based warrants a somewhat full outline of the evidentiary facts. The State introduced testimony tending to establish that about 11 o’clock in the morning of the day of the homicide Walter Hays, one of the appellants, and his brother, Tom Hays, drove by the home of Ramey, the deceased, shouted to him an opprobrious epithet and called upon him to “come out and shoot it out”; that Mrs. Ramey, wife of the deceased, ran to the road, begged for peace, and succeeded, as she thought, in making peace; that about 2 p. m. of the same day Walter Hays and Ed Wilson drove in an automobile to ia farm where George Wilson worked and had a talk with him; that George Wilson then got his pistol and went with his visitors to a point where they saw and talked with Allen Emerson; that Allen Emerson then went in the house, came out with a pistol in his pocket, and got in the car; that the car containing the four men named was then driven in the direction of Starr; that a car containing Walter Hays, Ed Wilson, and two other men was later seen to' arrive from the direction of Starr at the home of Walter Hays, who went' in his house, got two guns (a riñe and a shotgun), and put them in the car; that the car was then driven rapidly away in the direction of Ramey’s home, some six or eight miles away; that thereafter while Ramey, the deceased, was sitting in a chair *166 in his yard under the shade of an oak tree mending a tire, Walter Hays drove his car into the yard and up to within a few feet of where Ramey was sitting; that with him in the car were his brother, Tom Hays, and Ed Wilson, George Wilson, and Allen Emerson; that Walter Hays and Ed Wilson covered Ramey with pistols, and Walter Hays told his brother Tom to get his club and beat Ramey until he was satisfied; that Tom Hays then struck Rame)f with a mattock handle; that at about that juncture Barney Ramey, the IS-year old son of Ramey, appeared on the scene with a rifle; that Walter Hays fired the first shot; that in the melee that followed Tom Hays was killed, supposedly by the boy Barney Ramey; that the deceased, Ramey, received five fatal shot wounds; and that the tragedy occurred in the presence of Ramey’s wife, who was far advanced in a condition of pregnancy.

The defendants introduced, testimony tending to show that previous to the day of the homicide Tom Hays and the deceased, Ramey, were on unfriendly terms; that the defendant Walter Hays, at the solicitation of his brother, had tried to compose the differences; that on the day of the tragedy all of the defendants were on their way by the most direct route to a farm controlled by Walter Hays ; that in passing the home of Ramey, Ramey hailed them, and by signal invited them to enter his premises; that upon entering Tom Hays got out. and went toward Ramey, who advanced to meet him; that, after a few words had passed between them, Ramey suddenly drew a pistol; that thereupon Tom Hays struck Ramey with a chair; that Ramey’s son, Barney, then ran out of the house and shot Tom Hays with a rifle; that thereafter Tom Hays and the deceased Ramey began shooting at each other; and that .the defendant Walter Hays then interfered in behalf of his brother and struck the deceased, Ramey.

The exceptions, four in number, will be considered in inverse order.

*167 The fourth exception imputes- error to the trial Judge in charging the State’s second request, which was as follows:

“So if the jury are satisfied by the evidence beyond a reasonable doubt that those named in the indictment were present when deceased received the mortal wpund or wounds, and that one or more of them gave the mortal wound or wounds, and the others aided and abetted therein, they are all equally responsible therefor.”

The charge complained of stated an elementary proposition of law applicable to the facts adduced in evidence. It is suggested that it erroneously deprived those who might have been present aiding and abetting any of their number in inflicting the mortal wound of the benefit of any legal excuse or justification for the infliction of such wound. The charge was directed to the point of equal responsibility. If there was no responsibility in a legal sense— that is, if the infliction of the wound was excusable or justifiable — it is obvious that all present would be equally excused or justified. In addition to its inherent validity, this portion of the charge was preceded and followed by instructions which made it entirely clear that the responsibility referred to was responsibility for the commission of a felony. The fourth exception is overruled.

The third and second exceptions impute error to the trial Judge in depriving defendants of a fair and impartial trial by intimating and impressing his opinion throughout the charge that the State’s theory of the case wias correct. The only portion of the Court’s charge specified and cited to sustain this sweeping allegation of judical unfairness is the following language used by way of explanation or modification of the defendant’s fourth request:

“That is all true, I think, but I charge you that in connection with what I have already charged you that where two or more persons combine and confederate together in *168 the attempt to commit an assault and battery, and as a natural and proximate result of such a combination, even although they originally did not intend to kill the person assailed, yet if they did by common -consent with malice engage in such an act of assault and battery and were present aiding and abetting each - other, or present ready to aid and abet each other, to- commit -such assault and battery with malice, even although they may not have intended that such assault and battery should result in the death of the person assailed, yet if such death did occur as the natural and proximate result of such assault and battery engaged in, why they would be equally guilty.”

That that portion of the charge in question and other statements of the law of like import were, from defendants’ standpoint, painfully apposite to the facts of the case, is doubtless true. But that the Circuit Judge did not thereby charge upon the facts or intimate an opinion' would seem too clear for discussion. Indeed, in the printed points of appellant’s counsel no argument as to these exceptions is submitted — an entirely deserved recognition of the fact that the charge of the late lamented Judge Moore as a whole was an exceedingly fair, clear, and able exposition of the law applicable to the facts of an unusually gruesome tragedy.

The first exception questions the correctness of the following instructions:

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Related

State v. Long
480 S.E.2d 62 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1997)
State v. Sales
328 S.E.2d 619 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1985)
State v. Hewitt
31 S.E.2d 257 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1944)
State v. Woodham
160 S.E. 885 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1931)
State v. Johnson
156 S.E. 353 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1930)
State v. Francis
149 S.E. 348 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1929)
Currie v. Davis, Agent, Etc.
126 S.E. 119 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1923)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
113 S.E. 362, 121 S.C. 163, 1922 S.C. LEXIS 172, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-hays-sc-1922.