State v. Hedrick

130 S.E. 295, 99 W. Va. 529, 1925 W. Va. LEXIS 179
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedMay 26, 1925
DocketNo. 5221.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 130 S.E. 295 (State v. Hedrick) 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. Hedrick, 130 S.E. 295, 99 W. Va. 529, 1925 W. Va. LEXIS 179 (W. Va. 1925).

Opinion

*530 Hatcher, Judge:

A jury of the circuit court of Grant county found the defendants guilty of murder in the first degree for killing Alonzo Sites. Upon a recommendation of the jury, the defendants were sentenced by the court to life imprisonment in the penitentiary. From this judgment, the case is here on error.

George W. Sites and John W. Hedrick owned adjoining tracts of land in Grant county. Bad feeling had existed between them for a good many years. An old abandoned county road is located close to a boundary line between these farms. From a map filed, it seems to be on the Hedrick farm. Sites claimed half of this road, and thought he had a right to use it. At the time of the trouble, Sites had been hauling over the old road. The evidence discloses no harm done to the road or to Hedrick’s property by Sites. But Hedrick did not like to see Sites using the road. It irritated him, and made him unhappy. It produced in him much the same frame of mind that caused Haman to worry when he saw Mordecai sitting at'the King’s gate. That mental condition led to all this trouble, just as it caused the destruction of Haman. The matter preyed on Hedrick’s mind until he complained of Sites to his son, Arthur, (a man of 42 years), even as Haman complained to his wife, Zeresh, of Mordecai. And the son took up the gage of battle for his father, just as the wife did for Haman. Zeresh planned to have Mordecai hung — Arthur planned an attack on Sites.

Hedrick finally sent word to Sites to stop using the road. This message was communicated to Alonzo Sites, aged 15 years, who was the son of George Sites, and by Alonzo, delivered to his father on the very day that Alonzo was killed. Sites disregarded the message, and he and Alonzo were coming out over the road with a load when they were met by Arthur Hedrick and a boy named Charley Michaels, aged 15 years, who was being raised by John W. Hedrick. According to Michaels, Arthur Hedrick had requested him to assist in beating up Sites, and had showed Michaels where to get some clubs for the purpose, which they then had with them. These clubs were of green hard wood, and averaged *531 about an inch and a quarter in diameter and nearly four feet in length. John W. Hedrick was not immediately with the two at the time they met Sites, but was in a field nearby. According to Michaels, John W. had said he “would be there if we needed any help.” He also had a club of green wood. Sites described what then happened in the following language:

“After fye crossed the creek and-.started up the slate bank Arthur Hedrick and Charley Michaels stepped up in front of the horses and each one had a club in their hands and commenced hollowing, I guess not, I guess not, and I got off the sled and took the axe in my hands and I took the ase and slapped the horses over the rump and thought that that would make them go by, and when they would not let the horses go any further I took the axe in the left hand and thought maybe I could lead them by and when I got to the horses heads they commenced striking at me with their clubs and then I took the axe in both of my hands to knock their licks off to keep them from hitting me in the head. * * * * *
They were striking at me with their clubs and I was trying to knock the licks off and in trying to do this I struck Arthur right here with the pole of the axe and when I struck him he bent over and commenced hollowing that I had broken three ribs for him. Charley kept on striking at me and finally he hit me and knocked me part of the way down and then I dropped the axe and that was the last I saw of the axe and when X raised up from there I got hold of Charley Michaels and pushed him back against the bank and tried .to get a hold of his neck but I couldn’t, then he struck my hands and by that time John Hedrick come up and I got hold of him and threw him down with his head against the bank and was holding him there and Charley Michaels come up behind me and got to pounding me on my right shoulder and I reached around and got hold of his club to keep him from clubbing me and then Arthur Hedrick stepped in and hit me here with his club and that knocked me back against the bank and that let John W. Hedrick up and he stepped up with his club and said ‘let me kill the son of a bitch’ and Arthur said, no that he has had enough now, *532 and when Arthur would not let them strike me over the head he struck me across the legs and then he turned around and said ‘kill the little devil, kill the little devil’ and Ajrthur turned around and struck Alonzo over the head. * * * * *.
After they knocked him down the boy got up and went back and got upon the sled, and he had not much more than got on the sled when they started back after him with their clubs, one on each side. * * * * *
"When they started back towards him he jumped off the sled and run over in my field. After he got over in the •field I got up and started back to the sled and John W. Hedrick started back with me and said ‘I guess you will keep out of here now’, he said some kind of an oath, but I just don’t remember what it was.”

Sites further testified that he believed that Arthur Hed-rick saved his (Site’s) life at the time John W. Hedrick was trying to hit him by preventing John W. from doing so; that he (Sites) and John Hedrick walked down to the sled afterwards, Hedrick still having in his hand a club; that Hedrick could have struck him at that time had he so desired; that there were no further licks struck after Alonzo had been knocked down; that after Alonzo got home, he helped to do the feeding, but seemed nervous and complained of his head hurting, and that after a while he became sick, etc., and died about 11 o’clock that night.

The post mortem examination showed that Alonzo had a fractured skull, and that a blood clot had formed on his brain about two and one-half inches in diameter*, and about one-half inch thick. One of the physicians testified that Alonzo’s skull was not quite as thick at the point where he was struck as the normal skull.

Charley Michaels testified as a witness for the State, and confirmed the testimony of George W. Sites in practically every detail. Michaels further stated that when Sites got off the sled and hit the horses to make them .go on, Sites said “Let me by” and that we said, (having reference to Arthur Hedrick and witness) “I reckon not — I ’reckon not;” that when George Sites dropped his axe during the fight, Arthur *533 Hedrick threw the axe- over the fence into Sites’ field, and that after Arthur had struck Alonzo in the head, John W. Hedrick hit Alonzo on the back. One of the physicians testified that there were some abrasions or bruises of the skin on Alonzo’s back.

The testimony of the defendants is that when Arthur Hed-rick met George Sites, he requested George to “reason something about the fence' and close up this,” and that George at once got off his sled and attacked Arthur and Michaels with his axe. Arthur testified that he pleaded with George not to hit him; that he did not want any trouble, and that he used his club solely to ward off George’s licks; that John W. Hedrick came up about that time, and George Sites then attacked him; that while John W.

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Related

State v. Haddox
276 S.E.2d 788 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1981)
Wallace v. McKenzie
449 F. Supp. 802 (S.D. West Virginia, 1978)
State v. Burdette
63 S.E.2d 69 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1951)
State v. Reppert
52 S.E.2d 820 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1949)
State v. Mowery
176 S.E. 851 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1934)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
130 S.E. 295, 99 W. Va. 529, 1925 W. Va. LEXIS 179, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-hedrick-wva-1925.