State v. Toler

41 S.E.2d 850, 129 W. Va. 575, 1946 W. Va. LEXIS 81
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 8, 1946
Docket9835
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 41 S.E.2d 850 (State v. Toler) 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. Toler, 41 S.E.2d 850, 129 W. Va. 575, 1946 W. Va. LEXIS 81 (W. Va. 1946).

Opinion

Fox, Judge:

On the second day of October, 1945, the defendant, Noah Toler, shot and killed one Johnny Abbott in Mingo County. Toler was indicted, in the circuit court of said county, for murder of the first degree, was tried on that charge, and convicted of murder of the second degree. His motion to set aside the verdict of the jury was overruled and judgment was entered, by which he was sentenced to a term of imprisonment in the penitentiary. To that judgement we granted this writ of error.

There are no substantial contradictions in the testimony as to what occurred at the time of the homicide, but such as they are will be pointed out in the course of this opinion. The principal witness for the State was *577 Mrs. Howard Cook, who lived about sixty feet from the house where the homicide occurred, which house was occupied by Nora Henderson and two of her brothers, one of whom is the defendant. From her testimony we gather the following:

Four persons were present at some time during the events leading up to the homicide, and at the time of its consummation. They were Nora Henderson, Noah Toler, Norris Cook, sometimes called “Nig” Cook, and Johnny Abbott, the deceased. The difficulty began when Nig Cook and Abbott, who were seated in an automobile parked at the side of the Henderson house, were about to leave that point, when Nora Henderson came near the place where the automobile was parked but inside the fence inclosing her premises, and told them not to start the car, and that if they did she would break the glass with a rock. Someone endeavored to start the motor of the automobile and Nora Henderson threw something, and there was a breaking of glass. One of the men in the automobile stepped out, and Nora then came outside her lot, after being told by one of the men, “Well, if you want to come out, come on and if Noah wants to take it up bring him with you”, and went to the automobile door, opened it, and asked Cook to come out; whereupon, both men stepped out of the automobile. Nora Henderson and Abbott then began trying to fight; Nora asked Abbott not to come inside the fence; and Abbott then asked Cook to go in with him. Cook and Nora Henderson then went into the house, and after they had closed the door, Abbott also went into the house. Soon after Abbott entered the house a man, afterwards identified as the defendant, Noah Toler, left the house and went down an alley. After Toler left the house, Nora Henderson and Abbott resumed their altercation, and, according to Mrs. Cook:, Nora Henderson told Abbott that “Noah has gone to get a gun”, and said that when he came back he would shoot him. A quarrel then began over a flashlight owned by another brother of Nora Henderson, one Isaac Toler. At this point Nora went into another room of her house, out of sight of the witness, Mrs. Cook. After she had left *578 the room, Abbott went into the kitchen, pulled out a drawer in a table, and then closed it. What he did there the witness could not state, but other witnesses say that, at that time, he removed a butcher knife therefrom. Nora Henderson then came back into the room and asked Abbott to leave the house, and again told him that Noah íoler had gone to'get a gun and that he would shoot him; she told him that she and Cook would walk out with him. Mrs. Cook’s attention was then distracted by a passing train, and her view cut off by the closing of a door. She then went into the living-room of her home, where she was standing by a window, when she says she saw a man coming through the alley leading to the Henderson home, walking very fast. He opened the gate, went up on the porch of the Henderson house, and at that time thé door of the house opened. She says that it seemed to her that all of the parties met at the door; and there was some loud talking, but the only words she could distinguish were “stand back”; that immediately she went to the door of her house, ánd just as she started to step out on the porch, she heard the gun fire, and saw its flash,, and saw a man fall; a man then’ came off the porch, came out close to the gate and stopped, then opened the gate and started running up the road “real fast”; Nora Henderson and Cook then came outside the gate, and when the witness inquired of them what had happened, Nora Henderson told her that Noah had shot Johnny. It seems clear from all the testimony that there was considerable drinking during the'evening, especially by Nora Henderson and Abbott. The evidence is that these two people had formerly been friends, and that Abbott had lived at the Henderson home at times for some two or three years, except for the two or three-months period immediately prior tó the homicide.

The testimony of Nora Henderson does not conflict with that of Mrs. Cook, except that, she denies that she made the statements that Noah Toler had gone to get a gun and that .he would shoot Abbott. She also says that she heard Abbott say that he would “cut his [Noah’s] guts out”; but does not say that this state *579 ment was made in Noah’s presence; and also stated that defendant backed up to the edge of the porch before he fired his gun; that he loaded the gun while he was backing up. She says that Abbott was drinking and that she tried to get him to leave the house.

Nora Henderson is corroborated in her testimony by Norris Cook, sometimes referred to as “Nig”, except that he says he did not hear Abbott say that he would cut Noah’s guts out. He says that when defendant returned, Abbott took several steps toward him. It appears that a knife was found on the body of Abbott after he was shot, but Cook says he did not see the knife prior to the homicide. He does say that Abbott had the knife on his person, and that he saw him put it in his pocket about ten minutes before the homicide, and says that Abbott said he would defend himself. He testified that: “They had all been in a racket”, and that “Toler had told him [Abbott] to shut up”, and that this was “before he got the gun”; that defendant left, the house and was gone about thirty minutes, but that he did not know he had gone to get a gun.

Noah Toler testified as follows: “I come up the road, come from the sawmill up to the house. I got up on the porch and got up in about two foot of the door.' This man was quarreling with my sister. I said why don’t you hush that argument. He said ‘It ain’t nothing to you. It ain’t none of your business. If you want to take it up, I’ll cut your guts out’. He started walking towards me, and I said ‘Stand back, Johnny.’ I asked him to stop. He kept on coming. I got as far back without turning to see the steps. I got as far back as I could without falling. I had to shoot with the gun at my side in my hands. If I had got it to my shoulder, all he would have to do was knock it out of my hand and cut me.” He says Abbott’s right hand was in his front pocket and that his left hand was under his overall bib at the time he was coming toward him. He admits he did not see a knife, but says, “I didn’t know what he aimed to pull”, and that he expected that he would carry out his threat, and that he thought he was in danger of serious bodily harm, *580 at the time he fired the shot which resulted-in the death of Abbott. He also says that when he left the house that evening his sister was endeavoring to get Abbott to leave.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
41 S.E.2d 850, 129 W. Va. 575, 1946 W. Va. LEXIS 81, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-toler-wva-1946.