State v. Whitt

40 S.E.2d 319, 129 W. Va. 187, 1946 W. Va. LEXIS 49
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 1, 1946
Docket9822
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 40 S.E.2d 319 (State v. Whitt) 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. Whitt, 40 S.E.2d 319, 129 W. Va. 187, 1946 W. Va. LEXIS 49 (W. Va. 1946).

Opinion

*188 Kenna, President :

In the Circuit Court of Logan County Everette Whitt was convicted of murder in the first degree for the killing of Mae Elkins by the discharge of a shotgun on the 21st day of August, 1945. The verdict of the jury further found that he be punished by confinement in the penitentiary with the result that the sentence was life imprisonment. This writ of error was granted upon a petition assigning twenty-seven alleged errors. Of the six assignments briefed and submitted, one is based upon the giving of State’s Instruction No. 1A, one upon the admission of photographs of the victims body at the scene of the killing contended to have inflamed the minds of the jury to the prejudice of the accused, one upon four alleged erroneous rulings admitting testimony on behalf of the State, and the remaining three upon the insufficiency of 'the State’s evidence to sustain a verdict of murder in the first degree. These assignments will be dealt with in the inverse order of their statement, beginning with the three assignments having to do with the entire evidence.

The record shows that the Whitt and the Elkins families lived on adjoining land on the right hand side of Rocky Creek, a short distance from Chapmanville. An unpaved public road went up Rocky Creek on its right bank to a point above their properties, the Elkins land not extending beyond the creek but the Whitt farm lying on both sides. The road crossed the creek on what seems to have been a log bridge fifty or sixty feet above a roadway from the public road into the Whitt property, which roadway, where it connected with the public road, was up the creek approximately one hundred, twenty-five yards above the Elkins house. The Elkins home is within a few feet of the public road and of the property line between the two places. It is on a bend so that the Whitt house could be seen by a person standing either behind or in front of that of the Elkins. The Whitt home is back from the road about sixty feet.

*189 A few days before the shooting' occurred the bridge had been repaired by WPA labor and new timbers had been put in place of the old that had been left by the workmen below the bridge in the bed of the creek. Ben Elkins, husband of Mae Elkins, and two of the Elkins boys had taken part in this work and had intended to take the discarded timbers to their home for what they call “wash wood!’, evidently wood used in heating water for the purpose of washing clothes out of doors. Billy Elkins, aged twelve, had gone up to the bridge the morning before the shooting occurred with a mule for the purpose of “snaking” the discarded timbers to the Elkins home to be so used and had then been told by Everette Whitt that the wood belonged to him and to “get down the road”, which he did without attempting to take the wood. That evening the Elkins discussed the occurrence at the supper table and the father told his boys to leave the wood alone because he did not want to have trouble concerning it. On the following morning- after the father had gone to work, Ben Elkins, aged seventeen and known as “Junior”, together with Billy, went up the creek with a mule for the purpose of dragging the logs to the Elkins home. They were seen by Everette Whitt in the bed of the creek before they had attached the mule’s harness to the timber. Whitt came to the creek with a cane that he was carrying, and after having taken the lines of the mule with which Billy was guiding it away from him, struck the mule so that it went down the creek toward the El-kins home with Billy after it. Whitt also struck Junior on the left arm or elbow with his cane so that Junior ran up the creek for a short distance. Whitt denies using his cane except to ward off a blow from Junior. As Billy was going down the creek toward the Elkins home he shouted that Whitt had hit Junior on the arm. This was heard by Margaret Elkins who promptly told her mother, who was in the kitchen preparing bread. Mae Elkins, the mother, at once left her house and started up the creek at a fast walk, passing both Junior and Billy, Junior having come down the road from above the bridge.

*190 There is considerable difference in detail between the evidence of the State and that of the defendant, much of which is not consequential and cannot be discussed. However, concerning the sequence of happenings immediately preceding the shooting there is material conflict, partly expressed by the witnesses in language that is not clear.

The State’s proof shows that after having gotten the two Elkins boys and their mule away from the logs and after Billy had shouted that Whitt had hit Junior and Mae Elkins had started up the road toward him, Whitt went quickly through a short cut to his house about forty or fifty feet away, got a single barrel, sixteen gauge shotgun and started down the path in his lot toward the road. He evidently stopped within thirty feet of the road and in the meantime Mrs. Elkins had reached the point on the road approximately that same distance below the Whitt private roadway. She had passed Junior coming down the road from above the bridge, as had Margaret. Junior testified that he was about seventy feet down the road from his mother when she was shot. Margaret Elkins was coming up the road with a twelve gauge, single barrel shotgun that she had gotten in the Elkins house when she saw Whitt leaving his home with a gun. She was followed by Billy. Whitt told Mrs. Elkins that if she knew what was good for her she would get down the road. She replied that she was on a public road where she had a right to be, called him a God damn son of a bitch and told him that he would have to pay for injuring Junior’s arm. Whitt then shot her from a distance of between fifty and sixty feet. Margaret was within about ten feet of her mother when the shooting occurred. Junior was uncertain as to when he took the gun from Margaret, but she says that after her mother was shot he strode up the road to where she was, took the gun, closed the breech and fired at Whitt. Whitt, who had then reloaded his single barrel shotgun, fired at Junior, hitting him but not injuring him seriously, although he was hospitalized.

*191 As stated, the testimony on behalf of the accused conflicts with that of the State in a number of respects, the defendant contending that it was his purpose to shoot Junior Elkins, who was armed at the time with a shotgun that he was preparing to discharge at him, the accused, and that he unintentionally struck Mrs. Elkins who at the time was standing quite close to Junior. Whitt also contends that he started to his house to get his shotgun after seeing Margaret Elkins start up the creek with the Elkins shotgun and that before the shooting occurred Mrs. Elkins had cursed him repeatedly and had thrown four or five rocks in an attempt to injure him. The defendant’s sixteen year old son, Blake Whitt, testified that he saw the entire occurrence from his bedroom window on the second story of the Whitt home and that Mrs. Elkins, with Margaret Elkins running behind her with the shotgun, was throwing rocks at his father and cursing him before Whitt started to his house to get his shotgun and that before Whitt fired the shot that killed Mrs. Elkins, Junior Elkins had grabbed the shotgun from Margaret and was raising it to his shoulder with the purpose of shooting Everette Whitt while standing within a foot of his mother.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
40 S.E.2d 319, 129 W. Va. 187, 1946 W. Va. LEXIS 49, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-whitt-wva-1946.