State v. Paul Roush

120 S.E. 304, 95 W. Va. 132, 1923 W. Va. LEXIS 225
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 20, 1923
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 120 S.E. 304 (State v. Paul Roush) 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. Paul Roush, 120 S.E. 304, 95 W. Va. 132, 1923 W. Va. LEXIS 225 (W. Va. 1923).

Opinion

Lively, Judge:

The verdict is murder in the second degree on which a sentence of ten years imprisonment is based; to this judgment and sentence defendant prosecutes this writ.

The) case has some remarkable aspects, and it is difficult to conjecture why the verdict was murder in the second degree. The indictment is against defendant Paul Roush, Howard Crummit, James Betts and Arthur Vannort, and charges them with combining and conspiring together for the purpose of inflicting bodily injury upon Wheeler Sanders, the deceased, and that in pursuance of the conspiracy they did, on *135 the- day of May, 1921, willfully, maliciously, etc., kill and murder Wheeler Sanders. Crummit, Betts and Yannort elected to be tried separatelyRoush was tried upon his plea of not guilty, with the result above set out.

The deceased, Wheeler Sanders, came to Clarksburg* on the 9th of May, 1921, for the purpose of entering into some music business with Prank Hayes who played the piano at moving picture theatres and incidentally did some “bootlegging.” Sanders was thirty-two years old,, five feet nine and a half inches high and weighed two hundred and forty-seven pounds and was very strong physically. He and Hayes, about 11 o’clock that night, registered at the New Olympia Hotel, a place of questionable resort. It seems that liquor was vended there, and the resort was used for assignation purposes. They were both drinking red liquor and moonshine liquor, and consumed as much as four pints between themselves and others who were examined as witnesses. After registering they went to several places in the town that night, and at one or two of them Sanders wanted to wrestle with some of the witnesses, whom he met. They returned to the hotel about 4 o’clock A. M. when Sanders laid down on the bed with his clothes on and went into a doze. Hayes did not retire, but went down into the lobby and elsewhere about the building. Roush, with Howard Crum-mit, James Betts and Arthur Yannort, had been together that night in town and about 5 o’clock A. M. came by the hotel when Crummit suggested they would go to his room on the first floor which he occupied for a day, and obtain-liquor. They did so1, and purchased two pints which they proceeded to drink. A few minutes after they arrived Pred Waldo joined them. Hayes met one of the party who was obtaining water from the clerk, made his acquaintance and was invited into their room to take a drink. He went. Upon invitation Roush went with Hayes up to the room occupied by Hayes and Sanders on the second floor, where Sanders was awakened from his stupor, wher^ he caught Roush and' threw him on the bed in a friendly spirit, being much the superior in physical strength. Roush weighed one ^hundred and thirty-five pounds, was twenty-one years old, and-his left arm was stiffened and almost useless as the result -of a rail *136 way accident some years previous, and his right arm above the elbow had been crushed in that wreck. One of his companions, Crummit, came in the room, and he also eng’aged with Sanders in a friendly wrestle. Afterwards, Roush, Hayes, Sanders and Crummit went down stairs to the other room where they all partook of what remained of the liquor at that place. Sanders had a badge on which was the legend “Special Officer”, and he was named by the members of the party “the Sheriff”. The wrestling in the upper room was in some way mentioned, and thereupon Sanders and Betts entered into a wrestling bee, but were stopped because of the fuss they were making, by the clerk or night porter who was then closing his books for the night. It was then after daylight, and Roush and his friends concluded to go to their respective homes. "We have examined the testimony, of the witnesses to ascertain if any ill feeling was engendered or could be presumed by the occurrences at the New Olympia Hotel between Sanders and Roush or any of his companions. We fail to find the slightest trace thereof. The wrestling and drinking were all in a friendly spirit. It was a gathering together of kindred spirits for the purpose of convivial drinking. Liquor was the assembling factor. It appears that Sanders was a stranger to all of .them, and possibly Hayes was a stranger to most of them. They were all having a friendly drinking bout and were making a night of it. The vast preponderance of evidence is-that Sanders was very much intoxicated and hilarious and that his penchant in that ■condition was for wrestling. It appears that Sanders left the hotel first and was going down Fourth street a short distance from the hotel when the others came out on the street accompanied by Hayes. Roush remarked “There goes the Sheriff, he threw me upstairs, but I am going down and throw him.” One of his companions told him not to be wrestling on the street as he would be arrested by the police; .another said to him, “Go on and we will see the fun.” He immediately left his companions and overtook Sanders, who turned when he approached him. Roush says there was an expression or look in Sanders ’ face which scared him, and he immediately struck Sanders with his fist two light blows on the cheek bone. His weight, age and physical incapacity by *137 reason of the railway wreck has been noted. When he struck Sanders the latter appeared to staggger, and sank down on the street or pavement near an ice truck. George Berry, a disinterested witness, who came along urn the opposite side of the street, says Sanders caught hold of the end of the gate of the wagon or ice truck standing near by and went down very slowly just like he was laying down. To about the same effect is the testimony of H. S. Brown, a railroad, conductor, who says he saw- him when about two or three feet from the ground and it looked as if he was laying down. The others came up, and Roush called to some of them to get him from under the ice truck as it might run over him. Crummit approached him, kicked him lightly, but Sanders did not arise, and they all began to be alarmed at his condition-. Ice was taken from the truck and put on his head, and his clothing was opened and he appeared to be in a serious condition, and in a very few minutes expired. Roush had walked on away toward his home, but observing.an ambulance going in the direction of his companions he walked back. The body had been removed when he got there, and he was arrested by the police at that point.

An autopsy was made by the coroner, Dr. Matheny, who had several years practice as a physician but who had not much experience in surgery, and none in brain surgery. It disclosed that death had resulted from a large blood clot near the base of the brain. There was nd blood on the exterior surface of the brain, no bleeding from any exterior membrane in the interior of the skull. There was no sign of congestion. The interior was natural and showed no apparent cause for the hemorrhage. A small blood vessel inside the brain near the base ofl the skull in what is called the medulla pons was ruptured and this caused the blood clot and consequent death. On the back of the head -near the center of the skull and well above the interior blood clot there was a small contusion or discoloration of the skin, the doctor said, about the size of a quarter. There was no abrasion of the skin on the outside, and this small bruise could only be ascertained by the discoloration inside of the skin where it joined the skull. The skull was not hurt. It was manifest that this contusion was of an inconsequent nature. The doctor said it looked as

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Bluebook (online)
120 S.E. 304, 95 W. Va. 132, 1923 W. Va. LEXIS 225, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-paul-roush-wva-1923.