State v. VM JONES

276 P.2d 445, 73 Wyo. 122, 1954 Wyo. LEXIS 15
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 16, 1954
Docket2626
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 276 P.2d 445 (State v. VM JONES) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming 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. VM JONES, 276 P.2d 445, 73 Wyo. 122, 1954 Wyo. LEXIS 15 (Wyo. 1954).

Opinion

*125 OPINION

Riner, Justice:

This cause is here from the District Court of Hot Springs County by direct appeal to review a judgment of that Court rendered on the verdict of a jury. The appellant and defendant, Virginia M. Jones, was, by said verdict, found guilty of the crime of manslaughter —which was charged by the county attorney of that County by an information alleging, as concerns the *126 offense involved, that the defendant, Virginia M. Jones, “on the 30th day of March 1953 in the county of Hot Springs, in the State of Wyoming, didwilfully, unlawfully, feloniously, and voluntarily, upon a sudden heat of passion, then and there, kill a human being, to-wit, Andrew R. Jones.”

The facts involved in this prosecution are substantially these: Andrew R. Jones died as a result of a gunshot wound inflicted by a .22 caliber rifle held in the hands of Virginia M. Jones, his wife, on March 30, 1953, between the hours of eight and ten o’clock in the morning of that day, under the circumstances hereinafter detailed. These parties were between twenty and thirty years of age. They were married in San Diego, California, on December 26, 1947; Jones was at that time in the naval service of the United States. They had lived in the city last mentioned for about five months as husband and wife when Jones went out of the service without leave. He was apprehended, brought back to California, tried for his offense (AWOL) before a military tribunal, and sentenced to a term in Mare Island naval prison. After completing his prison sentence, he was not discharged but was retained in active duty and sent to Honolulu, Hawaii. His wife followed him there about a month later; and they lived in that city until September, 1949. After that they returned to the mainland, staying in Oakland, California, for some time. Thereafter, they moved from place to place in Wyoming and adjoining state —Jones obtaining employment as a laborer and finally working as a roustabout in the oil fields of this State. They moved to Grass Creek, Wyoming, in November, 1952, where they continued to live until March 30, 1953. Jones was then in the employ of the Ohio Oil Company. As husband and wife, Mr. and Mrs. Jones lived in that place in a trailer camp and in a trailer *127 house owned by them and located by them on ground which was the property of the oil company above-named. There are no children of this marriage.

During the first few months of their marriage, the parties appeared to have lived together with a reasonable degree of harmony. After Jones’ release from the naval prison, his character seems to have changed radically. He began drinking heavily and brutally abusing his wife. He left her at times and went off with other women; he would be gone on these occasions for some time. His wife threatened divorce proceedings, but eventually the parties became reconciled. Defendant was a woman weighing about one hundred pounds, but Jones was a muscular man about six feet in height and weighed approximately two hundred pounds. Neighbors noticed the harsh treatment Jones gave his wife and remonstrated with him concerning this conduct; although he expressed regret and promised not to do so in the future, these promises he never kept. In middle or late February, 1953, he struck her with his fist, splitting her lip, and loosening her teeth to such an extent that they all had to be removed and artificial dentures installed. On this occasion he broke her glasses and inflicted numerous other marks and bruises upon her. This trouble became known to several of the neighbors at the trailer camp.

On Saturday, March 28, 1953, Jones was working on an evening shift or tower on an oil rig from four o’clock in the afternoon until twelve midnight. That day he took some food in a lunch box, telling the defendant that he was going to work; but about an hour and a half later, Mrs. Jones learned that he had not gone to work. Finding that their car was gone, she obtained a ride to Thermopolis, a nearby town. There she found their car at a cabin camp, without gasoline, and with the rotary distributor on the motor missing. *128 She had notified the sheriff of Hot Springs County of the car’s disappearance; and when the car had been found, she sought his aid in getting its motor running. She then returned to the trailer house in Grass Creek. Her husband did not return home that night. The next morning she again went to Thermopolis and met Mr. Jones riding with one Randall toward Grass Creek. Jones then left Randall and got in the car with his wife, and they returned to their trailer home. The quarreled repeatedly during the trip home and the rest of the day. Jones told her he was leaving- her and going with a woman who was waiting for him in Thermopo-lis. During that day, he again struck and beat her. However, at his request, they returned to Thermopolis in the car, got his clothes from Randall’s automobile, and put them in their car. During the course of this journey home, he once more struck and beat her. That evening they returned to the trailer house and spent the night there. Mrs. Jones took the car keys out of his pocket and hid them. When he found what she had done in taking these keys, he became very angry. About six-thirty in the morning, he told her he was not going to work but intended to leave. She pleaded with him to change his mind; about seven-thirty that morning, he again informed her that the other woman was waiting for him in Thermopolis and that he was going to her even if he had to kill Mrs. Jones to do that. A short time later, he got a number of rifle shells from an egg crate. She also got a few shells which, as she says, she “grabbed” at the time he seized those which he took — she got nine to twelve shells. When she grabbed these, he caught her around the neck and choked her until she fell to the floor. When he allowed her to rise, she left the trailer (although he tried to prevent her doing so, she eluded him) and went to the car where the .22 caliber automatic rifle was kept. He tried to prevent her getting the weapon; he was *129 immediately behind her and reaching for the gun. Her sister and a neighbor, Mrs. Turner, were close by, watching this struggle. Her sister then asked them to quit fighting. Mrs. Jones then said she secured the gun so Jones would not hurt her any more. She put three shells in the gun clip; she was badly scared, she testified. When her sister and the neighbor woman appeared, Jones retired into the trailer home. Mrs. Jones came to the door and opened it. She never held the gun to her shoulder. At that time, Jones was sitting on the couch; and she was standing on the ground outside the door. When he saw her, he got up and started toward her. As stated above, she never brought the gun to her shoulder or pointed it at him. She fired the weapon from her waist or hip three times. He was at that time trying to take the rifle away from her; it was in his control when the third shot was fired. The first shot struck him in the abdomen, the second in the arm, at about the elbow, and the third struck him in the leg. Thereupon, both husband and wife were taken in a car belonging to a neighbor by the name of Davidson to the Thermopolis, Wyoming hospital. Shortly after that she was taken into custody of the sheriff of Hot Springs County and brought to the Hot Springs County jail.

Dr.

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Bluebook (online)
276 P.2d 445, 73 Wyo. 122, 1954 Wyo. LEXIS 15, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-vm-jones-wyo-1954.