State v. Lee

36 S.E. 706, 58 S.C. 335, 1900 S.C. LEXIS 128
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedJuly 31, 1900
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 36 S.E. 706 (State v. Lee) 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. Lee, 36 S.E. 706, 58 S.C. 335, 1900 S.C. LEXIS 128 (S.C. 1900).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Justice Gary.

A general statement of the facts herein is correctly set forth in the argument of the appellant’s attorneys as follows: “October 5, 1899, Maxcy C. Lee, a young physician, was living with his aged father, Dr. Henry J. Lee, in Darlington County, near a little hamlet *338 called Lydia. The father and son had thus been living together for about five years, engaged in the practice of medicine in partnership. Dr. Henry Lee had lost his wife some three years before; his other children had married and settled around him at varying distances, and Maxcy, who was unmarried, was his sole companion, the only other inmate of his house being a white woman — a Mrs. Munn— employed as cook and housekeeper. Dr. Henry Lee had reached the age of seventy, and was held in high esteem and much beloved throughout the surrounding country. He was well-to-do, owning at least $25,000 in property, mainly in money. As a general thing, the relations between father and son were of the most cordial and affectionate character, and when the old man was unwell, it was the practice of the son to sleep with 'him, so as to administer to his needs during the night. Both men, however, at times, drank to excess, and at times quarrelled violently, being both of passionate nature. These quarrels, as far as the testimony shows, were followed by speedy reconciliations. They occupied bed rooms in the rear part of the body of the house, fronting each other, across a wide passage, and the doors of these rooms were in line for the free circulation of air. As Maxcy Lee said, the house was built for ventilation. Dr. Henry Lee’s room was on the right to one going down the passage from the front door of the house, and Maxcy Lee’s on the left. Some two weeks' or ten days before the fatal occurrence, Maxcy Lee had borrowed from a friend at Darlington C. H. — one Early — a double-barrelled hammerless breech-loading gun, of superior make and value, for the purpose, he said, of killing some turkeys that had become wild; and had obtained to go with it No. 3 or 4 shot. This gun was regarded as a curiosity worth looking at by Maxcy Lee, and friends of his called in, or were called in, to examine it. There was some difficulty in unbreeching and working it, and Maxcy being unskilful in so doing, his father handled the gun for inspection. The gun had its place in Maxcy’s room, while the father had a gun that was kept in his own *339 room. October 5th, Maxcy Nee went to Darlington C. H., and while there obtained permission from Early to retain the gun a little longer. He returned home late in the day, riding with his brother, Dickson Nee, who came with him. They had whiskey with them, and on reaching home, some hot water was obtained, and father and sons together took a toddy. As far as the testimony shows, they were on the best of terms, and were seated together in the bed room of the father. No dinner had been put up, or prepared, for Maxcy, and he ordered an early supper, and was perhaps put out because he had nothing to eat. The father asked about the Early gun, and Maxcy said Early had sold it for $100. Sim Woods, a colored servant, was present, and asked to see the gun, and being told to do so, he got the gun from Maxcy’s room and handed it to Dr. Henry Nee, who unbreeched it. Sim said it was unloaded, but he failed to put himself in a position to ascertain the fact. The old man was seated when he handled the gun, and Sim and Maxcy were standing, and unless Sim had been standing just behind the stock of the gun, he could not have seen whether or not it was loaded; one barrel certainly was unloaded. After the gun had been replaced, Sim was told to go after the mail. It was raining, and looking for an umbrella, Sim found that Maxcy’s was broken. Upon this Maxcy spoke very roughly and angrily to Mrs. Munn, reproaching her for not taking better care of his property. As far as the testimony shows, this roughness óf the son did not offend the father. They were, apparently, sitting there in the father’s bedroom on the friendliest of terms, the one imparting the news of the court house to the other. The 2d of October had been the father’s birthday, and as a birthday present, the son had given him a gold watch chain. Dickson had left, and Dr. Henry Nee had walked out to the road to meet Sim and receive his mail; while there Mrs. Munn, doubtless offended by Maxcy’s rough talk, came out of the house with a bundle. The old doctor directed her to go back, but saying that she could not, she went her way. The *340 old man got his mail — papers and letters — and went to the house. Sim and another negro were at the well, near the road. They saw him enter the house, and directly after-wards, as they say, they heard the report of the gun. Dr. Henry Dee said, ‘As I came down the passage, Maxcy shot me from the door; he was in eight feet of me.’ If Sim heard aright, he said further that Maxcy was standing in his (Maxcy’s) room door, and shot him as he turned to go into his (Dr. Henry Dee’s) room door. Maxcy Dee said that ‘he was still in his father’s room when the old man returned with the mail. That he (Maxcy) took his letters and went into his own room and sat on his bed, working with the gun in his lap. That his father came out in the-passage and stood in front of him eating an apple, when the gun fired.’ ” The defendant was found guilty, with a recommendation to mercy, and sentenced to life imprisonment in the State penitentiary.

He appealed upon the following exceptions: “I. That his Honor abused his discretion in refusing to continue the case in accordance with the motion of the defendant, made on the 25th and 26th days of October, as it is respectfully submitted that said case should have been continued upon the physician’s certificate presented for that purpose on said days. II. That his Honor abused his discretion in refusing to continue the case under the physician’s certificate presented of date November 6th, 1899, to which day he had postponed the trial of the case from the 26th day of October, it being respectfully submitted that under said certificate, the defendant was not in any condition to undergo the strain of a serious trial, and the case should have accordingly been continued. III. Because it is respectfully submitted that his Honor, the Circuit Judge, abused his discretion in refusing, when said certificate of date November 6th was presented and motion made for continuance, to allow defendant’s counsel to call into Court the physician to more abundantly and fully show that defendant was not in fit physical condition to stand the trial. IV. His Honor erred *341 in charging the jury, in his preliminary charge, as follows: Tf you come to the conclusion by the preponderance of the evidence that the killing was accidental, you will then have to determine whether it was such an accidental killing as should be allowed to go unpunished, or whether it belongs to another class of accidental killings that requires to be punished.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
36 S.E. 706, 58 S.C. 335, 1900 S.C. LEXIS 128, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-lee-sc-1900.