State v. McMillion

138 S.E. 732, 104 W. Va. 1, 1927 W. Va. LEXIS 144
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedMay 31, 1927
Docket5771
StatusPublished
Cited by61 cases

This text of 138 S.E. 732 (State v. McMillion) 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. McMillion, 138 S.E. 732, 104 W. Va. 1, 1927 W. Va. LEXIS 144 (W. Va. 1927).

Opinion

Woods, Judge :

G. C. McMillion was tried in the circuit court of Fayette county for the murder of one Estel Hatcher. He was found guilty of second degree murder, and sentenced to a term of eight years in the penitentiary, and now brings error to this court.

From the case made by the State, it appears that Goff Odell, a State prohibition officer, had secured a search and seizure warrant from 0. M. Evans, a justice of Fayette county, for a Studabaker automobile operated by one Pat Flint, who, Odell was informed, was operating a still and disposing of intoxicating liquors in the neighborhood of John H. Hatcher, the father of the deceased. This officer informed the elder' Hatcher that he would notify him of .the time when he would come into the neighborhood to execute the warrant, and requested Hatcher to have some local officer present to assist him. Hatcher, who was interested in apprehending the bootlegger, upon .the receipt of a letter from Officer Odell to the effect that the latter would go to Point Lookout, where the main road is intersected by the Harris road, and watch for the ear operated by Flint, on the.evening of September 10, 1925 (the date of the homicide), arranged with John D. Skaggs, a constable of the county, to go with him to meet Odell for the purpose of watching for and apprehending Flint. So, on the appointed evening, Hatcher and his son, Estel, accompanied by the constable, drove to the point designated, which is between two and three miles from the Hatcher home and store. Upon reaching the designated spot, Hatcher drove his car a short distance out the Harris road and parked it. Officer Odell, Constable Skaggs, both armed, and young *4 Hatcher, who was unarmed, stationed themselves along the side of the main road near its intersection with the Harris road. They watched for a ear driven .by, Flint. Two cars were stopped, bnt found not to be the one wanted. They claim that they were in this position when the defendant’s car, hereinafter referred to, started forward, after it had been passed by a certain car which had previously been stalled. As .defendant’s car approached the place where the officers were stationed, Estel Hatcher remarked, ‘ ‘ There is the car! ’ ’ meaning Flint’s ear, and officer Skaggs called, “Halt!” Whereupon defendant began to shoot from the side of his ear. Young Hatcher immediately fell, fatally wounded by three bullets. The officers then returned the fire- and the defendant’s car speeded away. Young Hatcher was taken to the Oak Hill Hospital, where he died the following day.

The defendant relied on self-defense. To support his claim that he believed himself to foe in imminent danger of death or great bodily harm at the hands of a mob at the time he fired the fatal shot, and that such shot was fired in good faith for the sole purpose of protecting his life and limb, he introduced a typewritten notice, signed “K. K. K.,” which he states was served on him at his home one night about four months prior , to the homicide, by eighty hooded men. This notice, purporting to have been given at the instance of six thousand determined Klansmen, directed that he resign his office as justice of the peace and leave the county within thirty days. This alleged demonstration occurred a few days after a colored man, charged with a grave offense against a white woman, had escaped from the custody of the defendant, while the latter was conveying him to the county jail at Fayette-ville. However, the defendant in his testimony said that this hostile demonstration was a political scheme to drive him out of the taxi business, and that the escape of the colored man was taken as a pretext. On the evening of the homicide, defendant shows that he was returning to his home at Winona from Oak Hill, where he had gone that afternoon to attend Squire Woods’ court, where his son, Richard, and Ernest Hor-rocks were wanted for some road violation. He was accompanied by his son Richard, Caleb Iiorrocks, Ernest Horrocks *5 (son of Caleb Horrocks) and Gordon Bandy. On the return trip he stopped at Fayetteville at a street fair until sometime after dark, when he and his party proceeded toward home in a touring car driven by defendant. Some distance out from Fayetteville, and near where the officers and deceased were stationed, defendant and his party observed an auto across the road ahead of them. Caleb Horrocks left the ear of defendant to inquire concerning* the reason for the ear being across the road. Defendant at this juncture gave the wheel over to his son, Bichard, and got into the back seat of his ear. The man in the stalled ear was having trouble, and Hor-rocks came back and called to defendant and his party that the man was all right, defendant having previously expressed his opinion that it was a “hold up,” and that he was not going to stand for “any damned mistreatment.” The car was removed from its position across the road ¡by the aid of the elder Horrocks, and proceeded in the direction of Fayette-ville until it had passed beyond defendant’s oar some little distance. According to defendant’s testimony, someone hallooed “Halt!” and began firing towards his car from the direction of the car which previously had been stalled across the road; that defendant drew and leveled two pistols over the edge of his car and returned fire (some ten shots) in the direction of the hostile fire; that he was shot in the arm; that he then proceeded home and got in touch with the county officers.

Ernest Horrocks, an occupant of defendant’s car, sustains the State’s witnesses in their contention that defendant’s ear was going forward at the time the shots were fired, and that the defendant fired the first shots — 'firing “just as quick as the word [halt] was out of the fellow’s mouth.” Caleb Hor-rocks likewise corroborates the State to the effect that defendant’s ear was moving when the shooting occurred, and while the reports of the first shots came from the opposite side of the ear from him he could not tell whether the same 'were fired on the outside or not, but that he could only see the flash. On 'being asked whether the car was moving rapidly or slowly at the time the first shots were fired, he replied that it was “moving very slowly, but he put the gas on it then and *6 went just as bard as be could.” Horrocks endeavored to board the car as it passed, ¡but failed. Tbe defendant’s contention as to who fired the first shots and that they came from behind the stalled ear which had just passed is supported by his son Richard. Bandy, a young lad who lived with defendant, testified that upon seeing the stalled car ahead of them the defendant told Caleb Horrocks that it was a “hold up” and that he was going to “take no rough treatment”; that Caleb got out and went up and saw who this fellow was, stayed there a good little bit and came back and told defendant that “that fellow is all right”; and that Caleb then went back up to help him start the car. Bandy claims the defendant’s ear was standing still when they were fired upon. He states that he had taken a rifle, which the defendant had placed in his car 'before leaving 'home that afternoon, in his hands at the direction of the defendant and says that after the shooting began he climlbed over the door and got on the fender of the car, tried to cock the rifle but failed, fell off the fender and ran into the bushes (dropping his rifle as he ran), where he secreted himself for the remainder of the night.

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Bluebook (online)
138 S.E. 732, 104 W. Va. 1, 1927 W. Va. LEXIS 144, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-mcmillion-wva-1927.