State v. Williams

56 S.E. 783, 76 S.C. 135, 1907 S.C. LEXIS 31
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedFebruary 15, 1907
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 56 S.E. 783 (State v. Williams) 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. Williams, 56 S.E. 783, 76 S.C. 135, 1907 S.C. LEXIS 31 (S.C. 1907).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Justice AVoods.

The defendant, James AVilliams, was convicted at the winter term' of the Court of General Sessions for Aiken County of the murder of E. H. Fisher. Fred Dunbar, who was jointly charged in the same indictment, being at the time a fugitive from justice, was not put on trial. AVilliams appeals to this Court, charging error in the refusal of the motion for continuance, in the admission of evidence, in the charge to the jury, and in the refusal to order a new trial. The alleged excited state of the public mind' at the time of the trial has emphasized the duty, which always presses on this Court, to seek for any error that may have been prejudicial to a defendant when the issue is life or death. AV'hile only a very few of the thirty-two grounds of appeal have been argued by the zealous counsel for the appellant, we shall endeavor to consider all of the alleged errors, without referring specifically to the exceptions.

The issues will be understood from the following brief statement of the circumstances of the 'homicide: At the instance of Fisher, the deceased, J. H. Eidson, magistrate, issued a warrant for the arrest of Barney Dunbar on the charge of stealing a mule, the property of one, Paul Frazier, on which property Fisher held a mortgage. The magistrate, at the request of Fisher, by special appointment deputized A. M. Black to- execute the warrant. Black, accompanied by Fisher, went in the night time to the house of Barney Dunbar for the purpose of making the arrest. On *138 the first visit he failed to find him. On returning to the house later in the night, Black entered and1 arrested Barney Dunbar, who submitted without resistance. Just as the arrest was made, or immediately thereafter, Fisher entered and was mortalfy wounded by a shot or shots fired by some person or persons from the other room of the house. The State offered evidence in support of its contention, that Fisher was not present for the purpose of attempting to aid in making the arrest, but was with the officer merely to identify Barney Dunbar, and went into the house only to aid the officer when he supposed him to be in peril, and that he was shot by defendant and Fred Dunbar or some other person without legal provocation. For the defense, testimony w'as offered to1 the effect that Williams was not present when the shooting occurred, and had nothing whatever to do with it. On the part of the defendant it was also' contended, that there was no legal warrant for the arrest of Barney Dunbar, that Black and Fisher had invaded his dwelling house as trespassers; and further, that even if the warrant was legal, Fisher was killed in the house of the person whose arrest it required, while attempting to serve the warrant, in violation of sec. 35 of the Criminal Code, which provides, “No magistrate shall deputize the person swearing out a warrant in any case to serve the same.”

As w’e understand, counsel for appellant rely mainly on alleged errors of the Circuit Judge respecting the alleged invalidity of the warrant.

1 The magistrate, Eidson, testified without contradiction, that the oath of Fisher to1 the affidavit on which the warrant was issued was made before him, the warrant itself issued and the special Constable appointed by him before the arrest of Barney Dunbar. The affidavit, the warrant, and the appointment were all on one sheet of paper. When the paper was offered and received in evidence as “the warrant,” it was properly considered by the *139 Circuit Court that the whole paper with all it contained was meant and understood to be in evidence. If the warrant, affidavit, and appointment had1 not been properly proved when they were introduced, the defect in the proof was afterwards fully supplied by the evidence of the magistrate.

The Circuit Judge charged as to' the warrant and arrest as follows: “I charge you, as matter of law, that if you believe the warrant which has been introduced in evidence here was issued by the magistrate and that he deputized constable Black to execute it, and the affidavit was signed by Mr. Fisher, I charge you that was a legal warrant, and it charged Barney Dunbar and Chris Bowe with grand larceny.” The point is m'ad'e that signing the affidavit was not equivalent to swearing to it, as the law contemplates. The objection to the language of the charge is hypercritical. It is true, signing is not the equivalent of swearing, but the Court said the “affidavit” must be signed and the word, “affidavit,” means a written statement sworn- to. In view of the fact, that the magistrate testified Fisher did take the oath in this case, and that there is no proof to- the contrary, if the defendant wished to have the distinction between swearing and signing the affidavit laid before the jury, he should have called the matter to the attention of the Court. For a like reason, the objection cannot avail that in another part of the charge the Circuit Judge said, “if this warrant was issued by the magistrate and signed by Mr. Fisher, and the magistrate deputized Mr. Black to execute it, then Black had a right to arrest the parties charged with the commission of this offense, larceny of live stock, on Sunday.” The jury could not fail to understand signing of the affidavit was. meant.

*140 2 *139 It is insisted the Circuit Judge charged on the facts to the prejudice of the defendant in saying to- the jury, “I charge you that as a matter of law that whenever a warrant is issued, and it is a valid warrant, and this is a valid warrant, if it was issued, then it is the duty of the party charged *140 with the commission of any offense in the warrant to submit tO' the officers of the law.” Just before using these words, the Circuit Judge had, in the most explicit language, left it to the jury to say whether the requirements of law necessary to make the warrant of arrest valid had been complied with. It seems hardly reasonable suppose the jury would have thought he meant, in the next breath, to take away from them the consideration of that question. But assuming that the language of the Circuit Judge is correctly reported and that the jury might have drawn such an inference, it does not follow there was reversible error; for, as we have already said, the affidavit of the prosecutor, the issuance of the warrant, and the appointment of the deputy, had been proved by the best possible evidence — the sworn statement of the magistrate who issued it — and there was not a scintilla of evidence to even cast suspicion on it. Under these conditions, it surely cannot be reversible error for the Circuit Judge in his charge to treat the warrant as valid.

3 *141 4 *140 The defendant further submits the Circuit Judge was in error in charging, if Fisher was killed by Fred Dunbar under such circumstances as would m’ake the killing murder, and the defendant Williams was “aiding, abetting, assisting, and encouraging him in perpetrating the crime, then the act of one would be the act of the.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
56 S.E. 783, 76 S.C. 135, 1907 S.C. LEXIS 31, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-williams-sc-1907.