State v. Porter

127 S.E. 386, 98 W. Va. 390, 1925 W. Va. LEXIS 58
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 10, 1925
DocketNo. 5206.
StatusPublished
Cited by35 cases

This text of 127 S.E. 386 (State v. Porter) 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. Porter, 127 S.E. 386, 98 W. Va. 390, 1925 W. Va. LEXIS 58 (W. Va. 1925).

Opinion

Woods, Judge:

Harry W. Porter was tried for the murder of Charles Golden Jordan, in the Court of Common Pleas of Cabell County, at the April term, 1924. He was convicted of first degree murder and sentenced to life imprisonment. His motion for a new trial was denied by the trial court. He petitioned the circuit court for a writ of error, which was refused, and he prosecutes his writ here.

Porter and his wife had lived in Huntington for some time. Ethel, the wife, owned a taxi-cab business and Porter helped her to conduct it. She drove taxi-cabs herself and was about the office much of the time. Jordan came to Huntington in the latter part of the year 1923. He became acquainted with *393 and is said to have paid attention to Porter’s wife. There is considerable evidence concerning this intimacy, and the feeling engendered between deceased and defendant because of it. The homicide admitted, occurred on the 12th of March, 1924, about 3 o ’clock in the morning. At the trial the defendant relied upon self-defense.

On the evening of the homicide, sometime near 11 o’clock, Ethel was informed that her husband was at Bettie Church’s, and shortly after midnight she also went there. On being told her husband was up stairs, she went up to where he was in Bettie Church’s room. She found Bettie sick and the doctor there. While she, her husband and the doctor were in Bettie Church’s room, Jordan arrived, together with Gibson and Kelly, both taxi drivers of the Rose Taxi, and Jordan asked for Ethel. Lillian Dean, a girl living at the house, called Ethel down stairs. There is a sharp conflict in the evidence as to just what happened at this time. While Lillian and Ethel contend that Jordan drove Ethel from the house at the point of a gun, and compelled her to go away with him; Gibson, states that he never saw a gun; that Lillian told him (Gibson), as she and Ethel came down, if he saw Harry coming down to let Ethel know; that Ethel went into the room where Jordan was waiting; that she talked two or three minutes to Jordan, laughed, turned and walked out the side door; that a few moments later, Jordan stepped out to the driveway, where Ethel was waiting with the car door open; and that they drove off together. Lillian Dean testifies that she went upstairs and told Porter: “Jordan has got Ethel and made her leave, he has got a gun. You go and protect Ethel and protect yourself.” Porter left the house at once. Porter states that he went to his taxi office, got a .38 Smith & Wesson Special and cartridges; went to the Rose Taxi office, asked Lafferty if he had seen his wife, and received a negative answer. Lafferty testifies that Porter did not make any inquiry as to his wife, but inquired concerning Jordan, and that he said: “I heard that Jordan was looking for me with a pistol. I am going to kill bi-m on first sight. I am not going to give him a chance with me.”' Porter denies this, saying, “I told Elzie (Lafferty) that I was *394 going to hunt Ethel and if Jordan was with her, I was going to take Ethel and I was prepared to protect myself.” According to Porter, he again went to his office and from there again to Bettie Church’s to inquire if Ethel had been there since he left; he returned to his office, where he was told by Moore, one of his drivers, that Ethel had just called in, stating that her car was stalled at the foot of 22nd Street, and requesting some one from the garage to come and pull the car out of the mud. Moore started to take Porter to relieve his wife. They found Jordan on a street corner a couple of blocks up from the river front. Moore inquired of the whereabouts of Ethel; Jordan denied any knowledge of her whereabouts, and stated that he had a ear stuck at the foot of 22nd Street. Moore started to drive on, when Porter, on looking back, saw a wrecking truck approaching 22nd Street. He told his driver to turn and see if Jordan got on the truck. They passed just as Jordan got on the truck, then turned again and followed the truck down a few blocks, until it turned off to another street and went back in the direction of the City. Porter testified that he failed to see his wife’s car out on the river bank and decided to follow the wrecking truck back to the City. From another witness it seems that this truck returned to the Fourth Street garage to get chains. At one of these stops, little eleven year old Gertrude Mathews, at No. 2131 Washington Avenue, heard a conversation between one whom she recognized by an impediment in his voice to be Porter and another, in which the unknown person said: “You had better not do that you will get put up; they’ll put you up!” and to which Porter replied: “I don’t give a damn, I am going to kill him before morning, if it is the last thing I do ”; and then they drove off. Porter states that they returned to the taxi office, inquired for Ethel, and was told she had not returned; they! then went to the Fourth Avenue garage, where they heard men getting chains out and some one (he took it to be Jordan’s voice) say, “That there was going to be a free-for-all down on the river bank. ’ ’ Smith, the truck driver, testified that he (Smith) made such a statement to the boys in the garage but was only ‘ ‘ kidding. ’ ’ Porter further states that he and Moore then hurried back *395 to the taxi office for a 25-20 rifle and a box of cartridges. They again started out in the ear, which it was shown had no side curtains up, and ran out of gas; ’phoned for another car, and Lear Lester came with another Cadillac, with curtains up. Porter got in the front seat, Moore in the rear, and Lester drove the car. They recognized a Buick from the Rose Taxi approaching. Porter directed Lester to let it pass, but it did not pass. Porter’s car stopped, so did the Buick, and a few words passed between Porter and Jordan. Porter’s car resumed the.trip, and likewise the Buick. Porter’s car now turned into Washington Avenue, headed East; he ordered it stopped again. The car stopped this time directly in front of house No. 1051, Washington Avenue, and on the same side of the street. The Buick came to a stop on the opposite side of the street. Jordan called to Lear Lester, to come over and asked if he was sure Harry was going to pull Ethel out of the mud hole, or whether he was looking for him. Lester informed him that Porter was going for Ethel. Jordan then asked Lester to tell Porter to come over, to which Porter replied that he didn’t have time to fool with him. Jordan got out of his car and came over to the front left-hand side of the Cadillac, which was open. Gibson, Jordan’s driver, and the only other occupant of the Buick, moved his car up about forty feet and stopped, let the motor run, and didn’t hear anything until shots were fired a few seconds later. Jordan inquired of Harry if he was looking for him, and receiving a negative answer, continued, according to Lester’s testimony, “I-t looks to me like you are; you are following me around all night.” Moore, who occupied the rear seat of Porter’s ear, testified: “He (Jordan) said, ‘You (Porter) have been bragging and blowing around what you are going to do * # * * * You think because you have killed a man or two’ — I am not sure that he said ‘Killed a man or two.’ He either said ‘Killed a man’ or ‘Killed a man or two’ — I am not sure just which, ‘You can get by with it. You’ve been living on your past reputation, and you think you are a bad man just because you get by with two or three things.

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Bluebook (online)
127 S.E. 386, 98 W. Va. 390, 1925 W. Va. LEXIS 58, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-porter-wva-1925.