State v. Stukes

53 S.E. 643, 73 S.C. 386, 1906 S.C. LEXIS 200
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedMarch 1, 1906
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 53 S.E. 643 (State v. Stukes) 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. Stukes, 53 S.E. 643, 73 S.C. 386, 1906 S.C. LEXIS 200 (S.C. 1906).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Chiee Justice Pope.

The defendant was tried and convicted of the crime of murder at the July term, 1905, of the Court of General Sessions of Sumter County. After he was sentenced, he appealed to> this Court upon seven grounds. From1 the record it appears that the appellant stabbed, to' death, Capt. D. K. Wells, by the use of a knife upon his neck, throat and back, inflicting eight wounds from which he instantly died. The history of the crime was about as follows-: While the defendant was confined in jail at Sumter, S. C., *388 for some misdemeanor, unable to1 give bail bond, Capt. D. F. Wells, a planter of some wealth, was induced to become his security upon an agreement that said defendant, being a married man, would quit running around after other women and stay at home and attend to his work. The defendant, thereafter, moved his family to the premises of Capt. Wells and lived upon his place. It seems that the defendant was upbraided by Capt. Wells on several occasions for his neglect of duty under 'his aforesaid promises, namely: his failure to work faithfully and stop' running after other women. On the 12th day of May, 1905, at noon, when the field hands came to the dwelling house of C'apt. Wells and after finishing his dinner, which had been prepared by the family of the defendant, Capt. Wells was sitting- in his chair smoking his pipe, and in. effect remarked to the defendant that he had failed to keep, his word as to his work and as to his conduct, and, therefore, he intended to surrender him' to' the magistrate to1 be put back in jail. That he called another farm hand to go to. the magistrate for him in order to make the surrender. That thereupon-the deceased, Capt. Wells., arose fronT his seat and stepped a few paces to place his pipe on the top. of a cupboard standing- in the passage, hereupon the defendant struck the deceased and stabbed him with a knife, which stab alone nearly severed his head from his body, and after the deceased had fallen headlong upon his face upon the floor, the prisoner jumped upon his prostrate body and stabbed him repeatedly. All this, happened while the deceased was unarmed. The prisoner said while he was stabbing Capt. Wells a number of times, “You going to' send for the magistrate, is you ?”

The following are the seven grounds of appeal:

“1. It is respectfully submitted, that his Honor erred in allowing the witness, Frazier Gibbes, over the objection of defendant’s counsel, to testify that he ‘heard him1 (the defendant) open the private room door and walk in there,’ and ‘there was not anybody in there but Colclough’ (the defend *389 ant), on the ground that said testimony was. purely hearsay and not part of the res gestae.
“2. It is respectfully submitted, that his Honor erred in allowing, over the objection of defendant’s counsel, witness to answer or counsel of the State to interrogate John Moulton, a witness for the State, with regard to- ‘where did you come from when you came into- this Court this morning,’ and ‘has- not seen Stukes in jail for some months-,’ on the ground that the evident intention of counsel for the State was to impeach the witness for the- State.
“3. It is respectfully submitted, that his Honor erred in allowing, over the objection of defendant’s counsel, witness to- answer or counsel for the State to interrogate Colclough Stukes (the defendant) upon the subject of his relations with one Beulah Johnson, as set out in the testimony, on the ground that said evidence was entirely irrelevant. ‘The issue being (in the words of counsel for the State) whether Stukes killed the deceased with malice aforethought.’
“4. It is respectfully submitted, that his Honor erred in allowing, over the abjection of defendant’s counsel, witness to answer or counsel for. the State to interrogate Colclough Stukes (the defendant) with regard to an alleged interview the defendant had with a reporter of the S-umter Daily Item, as set out in the testimony, on the ground that said interview was not made under oath, and cross-examination, and was, therefore, not the best evidence, and on the ground that said interview did not contradict defendant’s testimony on tm trial, but was, in consideration of the use made of same by counsel for the State, as evidence independent on the merits of the case.
“5. It is respectfully submitted, that his Honor erred in allowing, over the obj ection of defendant’s counsel, witnesses to answer or counsel for the State to interrogate Maria Stukes (defendant’s wife) with regard to an affidavit, which purported to impeach the oral testimony of witness- at the trial, and given to John F. Ingram1 and Mr. Wells and Mr. W. G. Wells, on the ground that John F. Ingram and Mr. *390 Wells and Mr. W. G. Wells were interested witnesses, and on the further ground that said affidavit was not the best of evidence.
“6. It is respectfully submitted, that his Honor erred in denying counsel for defendant to interrogate or introduce in evidence the testimony of Cain Burriss, a witness for the defendant, who testified that he lived and worked with deceased, and who left the employ of deceased because deceased took away and interfered with wife of witness, on the ground that the aforesaid experience of witness was known to defendant and was., therefore, a warning to defendant, and was competent in view that such was calculated to. influence the conduct of. the defendant and make him apprehensive.
“7. It is respectfully submitted, that his Honor erred in charging the jury the definition of murder and manslaughter as existed at common law in this. State, and should have confined himself -to charging the same in the words of the statute, which abrogated the rules, of common law in the State, and thereby misled the jury to. the prejudice of the defendant.”

We will now examine the grounds of appeal.

1 The witness, Frazier Gibbes, testified that the only person left in the house when Capt. Wells was killed was. Cblclough Stukes. That he, the witness, had changed his. own position immediately after the appellant had killed Capt. Wells, so1 that he could not see into, the house, but that he heard Stukes call his wife in a loud tone three times, and then turning, Stukes. walked through the hall and turned the bolt of the lock on the door of Capt. Wells’ bedroom. The defendant objected to1 this testimony because the witness did not see said Stukes, but only heard him. The witness gave as his reasons for so stating that it was Stukes, who entered the bed-room of Capt. Wells,’that he heard Stukes. call his wife, and from where he was when he called his wife, he heard him. walk to said bed-room, and that he, Stukes, was the only person in the house at that time. It is *391 true, the witness Gibbes did not see Stukes enter the bedroom, but he gave good reasons for his statement, which was made in the presence of the jury. The statement was made after Stukes had killed Capt. Wells, and that he had killed Capt. Wells, was abundantly proved by eye-witnesses and was admitted by the appellant himself.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
53 S.E. 643, 73 S.C. 386, 1906 S.C. LEXIS 200, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-stukes-sc-1906.