State v. Kelly

196 Iowa 897
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedNovember 13, 1923
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 196 Iowa 897 (State v. Kelly) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Kelly, 196 Iowa 897 (iowa 1923).

Opinion

Preston, C. J.

There is a sharp conflict between the testimony offered by the State and that offered by the defendant. The evidence for the State puts an entirely different phase on the transaction from the case presented by the defendant. However, the defendant was entitled to have his case heard on his theory of it, and on his theory of the evidence which he presented. Under the circumstances, we deem it necessary to set out only so much of the evidence, which is largely that of the defendant, as is necessary to show the errors, or some of them, which the defendant has assigned as grounds for reversal.

The killing occurred during the night of July 3, 1921. The defendant claims that he was acting in self-defense. Defendant is a negro, and at the time of the killing was living with his wife at Andersonville, a coal camp in Marion County. Defendant was employed at the mines as a coal miner.' He is 31 years of age. The deceased, James Johnson, and his two brothers, Dave and Orval, lived in Knoxville. On the evening in question, the three brothers went from Knoxville to the home of defendant in an automobile, for the purpose of buying liquor from defendant. Defendant had some home brew on hand. Whitlatch- and Etcher, and perhaps others, were at defendant’s place. From the defendant’s house they went to another place, and secured and disposed of a quantity of “chalk.” They then went to another place, some two miles distant, where they obtained two quarts of whisky, and of it they appear to have drunk freely. Defendant went with them to this place, but says he did not drink of the whisky. Returning to defendant’s home, they went into his front room, and amused themselves by playing his graphophone. Dave testifies that during this time deceased and defendant got into a dispute, and “Kelly ordered us out of the house,” and that he and his brother Orval took deceased across the street to Watts’s, and left him there.

“We stayed there a while, and then went outside again, walked down the road a little ways, and came back to Kelly’s house. ’ ’

Defendant testified as a witness. His version of the transaction is substantially as follows: That, after they got back from obtaining the whisky, they got out of the car and went into [899]*899his front room. They were playing' the graphophone, and seemed all right.

“Deceased was sitting on the couch, and I went over and sat down by him. I asked him how he was, and he swore at me, and called me ‘ a black son-of-a-•. ’ I got up from the couch, backed away toward the kitchen door, and told them to take him out of there. They took him out, and after while McAninch came and told me that deceased had a knife, and was -going to cut me in two before morning. A day or two before, I had asked McAninch for his shotgun, to go hunting with, but had not yet got it; so I said I wished I had that gun now, and maybe I could bluff them off. He went and brought it to me, and I put it in the front bedroom. When Dave and Orval Johnson came back, they called me outdoors, and wanted to make me think everything was all right. So I put the gun back into the house, and we three went in the kitchen and drank the last bottle of home brew. Then we went out in the front yard again, and after a while, deceased came over to us. The first thing I knew, someone knocked me down. I did not know which one of them it was. They kicked me in the side, and said they would get me now. I crawled out and got up, ran to the kitchen door and into the front room, reached through the bedroom door, and grabbed the gun. I only had one shell, and it was in the gun. Deceased followed me through the house, and said, ‘You black son-of-a-, I’ll cut your damn gizzard out.’ When I grabbed the gun, he ran on out of the front door. I was afraid, and thought I had better get away from them; so I sneaked back through the kitchen, and was going out the back way and get away; but just as I reached the outside kitchen door, I heard them coming around.the northwest corner of the house; so I thought I could get away by going around the northeast corner of the house and passing between my automobile and the house. When I got around the corner and almost to the automobile, here they came from the southeast corner of the house, right at me, — the three Johnson brothers, and one of them said, ‘Get that G — d—- nigger. ’ I was so scared I hardly knefa what I was doing, and I just raised the gun and pulled the trigger; did not point it at anyone in particular, but it seemed like that was the only way to stop them. My lip was cut open against my [900]*900teeth when they knocked me down. When I fired, I ran right on, and as I passed Skipper’s place, I threw the gun in his yard. ’ ’

Defendant’s wife, 21 years of age, says:

“I have taught in public schools. * * * Along in the night, they returned to our house, came in and played the graphophone. Deceased was sitting on the couch, and he and defendant got into some kind of difficulty, and defendant ordered the John-sons out. They used vile language in our house, and when defendant tried to make them stop it, they repeated it. When Dave and Orval took their brother out, I started across the street, but came back, came into the kitchen, and from there to the bedroom. I was sick, and had been feeling bad all evening, and was soon asleep. I Avas aAvakened by a noise of some kind, and heard someone say, ‘ I am going to get you right now. ’ Defendant came running in at the kitchen door, and deceased was right after him. Deceased had one hand raised, and said ‘I’ll cut your damn gizzard out.’ I could not see what, if anything, he had in his hand. They passed from the kitchen into the front room. I heard a chair knocked over in the front room, and in a moment defendant came back to the kitchen and out of the back door. Just then, I heard someone rushing along the south side of the house, and someone said, ‘ Get that G — d—• nigger'; ’ and I heard a shot fired. ’ ’

McAninch gaA^e testimony similar to that of the defendant, and further:

“Deceased said he would cut him [defendant] in two before morning, and showed me a knife. After some time, Mrs. Watts came out where I was, and asked me to go and tell the Johnson brothers to come and take him [ deceased] out of their house. I hunted Orval up and told him, and he said, ‘What the hell do you mean by giving us orders? You son-of-a-b — , you won’t live till morning, giving us orders.’ After the Johnsons had left defendant’s house, I told defendant Avhat they had said, and about seeing the knife. A few days before, I had promised defendant he'could have my shofgun, to go hunting, etc. * * * There were a number of people in the camp up and around that night, and seA^eral AA'ere doAAm at Adam’s; also some up around defendant’s house. There Avas some kind of confusion there, [901]*901and I could hear swearing and loud talk. I heard someone say, ‘ Get that G — d— nigger, ’ and immediately afterwards, saw the fire from a gun, and heard the shot. I went over to Kelly’s, and saw Orval there. He said he was going to kill the first son-of-a-b— he saw; so I got scared,, and went home. ’ ’

Another witness testifies:

“I live about 100 yards from defendant’s house. On the night of July 3d, there was drinking, quarreling, and noise. I could see people up at Kelly’s. I heard loud swearing and confusion. Just before the shot was fired, I heard someone say, ‘Get that G — d— nigger.’ I saw the fire from the gun, but could not see who fired it.

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Related

State v. Nelson
480 N.W.2d 900 (Court of Appeals of Iowa, 1991)
People v. Robinson
516 N.E.2d 1292 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1987)
State v. Wilson
17 N.W.2d 138 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1944)

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Bluebook (online)
196 Iowa 897, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-kelly-iowa-1923.