State v. Meharg

200 So. 25, 196 La. 748, 1941 La. LEXIS 981
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJanuary 6, 1941
DocketNo. 36036.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 200 So. 25 (State v. Meharg) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Meharg, 200 So. 25, 196 La. 748, 1941 La. LEXIS 981 (La. 1941).

Opinion

ROGERS, Justice.

William. Meharg, William Landers, William Heard, and Floyd Boyce were convicted of the murder of Frank C. Gartman and sentenced to death. They took this appeal, relying on two complaints to obtain a reversal of their conviction and sentences.

A brief statement of the facts will be helpful to understand the legal propositions involved in appellants’ complaints.

In the early part of September, 1940, a general prison break occurred at the Arkansas Penitentiary, when thirty-five or forty prisoners escaped. Six of the escaped convicts, including the four defendants in this case, made their way into Louisiana. On the afternoon of September 2, 1940, in the Town of Rayville, they kidnapped two girls and a boy ranging in age from 16 to 19 years, and commandeered their automobile. Taking the three young persons with them, they drove the automobile until the following night when, at a point within approximately two miles of the Town.of Columbia, in the Parish of Caldwell, a casing on the automobile went flat and they stopped to repair it. Meanwhile notice of the kidnapping had been sent to the sheriff of the Parish of Caldwell, among others, and he had his deputies patrolling the roads of the parish over which he thought the convicts might be traveling. While the kidnappers were repairing the casing on the stolen automobile, a deputy sheriff of Caldwell Parish, named Jones, passed the party and observing that the license number on the automobile corresponded with the .license number of the stolen car, he repaired to Colum *751 bia to obtain assistance for the purpose of making the arrest. Together with other deputies, among whom was Mr. Gartman, Jones returned to the spot where the stolen car was parked, and after driving some distance beyond that spot, they left their car, returned in the darkness, and assumed positions at different points near the stolen car. The road at the spot where the stolen car was parked is bordered on one side by the river levee and on the other side by a fence which encloses a pecan orchard. Jones, with another deputy, came up on the river side of the levee to a point opposite to and approximately 60 feet from the stolen car, and Gartman and another deputy took a position behind a pecan tree located about 40 feet from the car and between the road and the levee. The remaining two deputies posted themselves behind a second pecan tree located about 60 yards from the stolen car at a place which was also between the road and the levee. After Jones and his companion deputy had established themselves in the place above described, another car passed by and, availing himself of the light cast by the lamps of the passing car, Jones fired at the stolen car puncturing the car and its casings in several places. Several shots were then fired from the stolen car in the darkness and apparently in the general direction of the spot where Jones and his companion had stationed themselves.

Gartman carried a large flashlight, and focusing the light on the stolen car, he called to the escaping convicts to come out and surrender. The young people with the convicts made their presence known by crying out and asking the deputies not to shoot.

Prior to the shot fired by Jones, Floyd Boyce and two of the convicts left the parked car and apparently crossed the levee. One of the convicts was killed the next day near the spot where the stolen car was parked. Bruce Fowler, the other convict, was killed at Vicksburg, Mississippi, a few days later. William Meharg, William Landers, and William Heard, remained near the stolen car and apparently' did some of the shooting which immediately followed the shot fired by Jones. As’ soon as this shooting had ceased, William Heard and William Landers took the two young girls, helped them over a fence, and made their way through the pecan orchard. The whereabouts of William Meharg and the boy, who was kidnapped with the girls, was not disclosed on the trial of the case.

Gartman kept his flashlight focused on the two convicts and the two girls who were crossing the pecan orchard and when they had reached a point approximately 100 yards from the disabled car about six shots were fired, three from the levee side of the road, and three from the fence on the opposite side of the road. These shots were fired by the escaping convicts, and as a result, Gartman was struck and killed by twenty-eight buck-shots of small size, ranging from his shoulder to a point just below his hip on the left side of his body.

On the following morning a posse, made up of officers and'citizens, began a systematic search for the convicts, one of whom *753 •was found wounded a short distance away from the scene of the shooting of Gartman. This convict was immediately shot to death by a guard from the Arkansas Penitentiary who was one of the p.osse. On the next day, within a few miles of the scene of the killing, William Meharg, William Landers, and William Heard were captured with the three young people they had kidnapped, and later Floyd Boyce, after his two companions had been killed, was captured at Vicksburg, Mississippi.

• After Floyd Boyce and Bruce Fowler left the place where Gartman was killed, they reached the highway running between the Town of Columbia and the City of Monroe, where they stopped J. H. Hinton and forced him to take them in his car. Near the Village of Waverly, one of the tires on the car became flat. Shortly thereafter, another automobile, containing Mrs. C. E. Eldridge, her sister and her young nephew, drove up. Fowler stopped them and asked where they could have a tire repaired, and then Boyce threatened Mrs. Eldridge with a shotgun. Boyce and Fowler took charge of the Eldridge car and its occupants and drove off in the direction of Vicksburg, leaving Hinton and his car in the road. As we have stated, when the party reached Vicksburg, Fowler was killed and Boyce was captured.

Appellants’ first complaint is that the trial judge erred in overruling their objection to certain testimony sought to be elicited from Mrs.' C. E. Eldridge and her nephew, Woodrow Wall, relative to certain words and actions of the defendant, Floyd Boyce. On the trial of the casé, the State proved, without objection, the kidnapping of the three young persons in the Town of Rayville and the actions of the kidnappers up to and including the time of the killing of Gartman; also the kidnapping by Boyce and Fowler of Hinton and of Mrs. Eldridge and her companions.

When Mrs. Eldridge and her nephew, Woodrow Wall, were testifying, the defendants objected to the witnesses testifying “minutely and in detail, the actions of the kidnapper, Floyd Boyce, during the entire period while kidnapped.” The objection was predicated on the contention that the testimony was irrelevant, immaterial, not a part of the res gestae, and that it had no connection with the killing of Gartman. The testimony was offered by the State for the purpose of showing flight on the part of the defendant Boyce, his resistance to arrest at the time of capture, and his identity as one of the parties charged in the indictment; also to prove possession and identity of the weapons which were taken from him as weapons that were used in connection with the homicide.

The testimony was admitted by the trial judge solely for the purpose of establishing flight and for the purpose of establishing the identity of the guns found in the possession of Boyce.

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Bluebook (online)
200 So. 25, 196 La. 748, 1941 La. LEXIS 981, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-meharg-la-1941.