State v. Williams

127 S.E. 320, 98 W. Va. 458, 1925 W. Va. LEXIS 66
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 17, 1925
DocketNo. 5185.
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 127 S.E. 320 (State v. Williams) 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. Williams, 127 S.E. 320, 98 W. Va. 458, 1925 W. Va. LEXIS 66 (W. Va. 1925).

Opinion

Woods, Judge:

Jesse Williams was tried in the Criminal Court of Marion County for the murder of Buck Williams; and upon a verdict of murder in the first degree without recommendation, was sentenced to be hanged. The Circuit Court of Marion County held that the judgment of the Criminal Court was plainly right; and the defendant prosecutes this writ of error.

Buck Williams, the deceased, a “jolly, good-natured fellow,” lived alone at Uzztown, on the outskirts of Fairmont, in a small one-roomed shanty. This shanty was located near the top of a hill, and was connected with the street below, some three hundred feet away, by a path which led directly down the hill. Several houses were located along this path. *460 The- first house below the shanty in question was occupied by Mary Anderson, and the next, by Elizabeth Wilson and children and Daisy Shelton. The furniture in the shanty, with the exception of a phonograph, belonged to Elizabeth Wilson, who also loaned the deceased certain cooking utensils from time to time, and for the purpose of having ready access to same, kept a key to the Yale lock on the door. The deceased also kept a pick and a .22 sixteen-shooter rifle in his shanty. He peddled ice in the community, transporting it on a wheelbarrow, and also was engaged in making home brew. On Tuesday, September 2nd, 1923, Mrs. Wilson ordered fifty pounds of ice, twenty-five pounds of which Buck delivered just about dark the same day, promising to deliver a like amount the following day. At the time of paying him, Mrs. Wilson noticed that the deceased had a ten dollar bill and several other bills. When he failed to make the ice delivery on Wednesday, she became uneasy, and on Thursday morning called him two or three times from the door of her house. Getting no response, she gave her key to the shanty door to Daisy Shelton, and told her to go up and see if Buck was still asleep. Daisy unlocked the door, went in, and found the deceased down on his knees at the bed with his head bowed over and it looked to her as if blood had been running from his ear; whereupon she became excited and ran out and called to Mrs. Wilson that he was dead, and one of Mrs. Wilson’s neighbors called for the officers. C. P. Wheeler, a constable of Marion County, arrived.on the scene at 1 o'clock and found the deceased in the position described above, dead, with his hip pockets turned inside out, the wallet with the .bills as seen by Mrs. Wilson on Tuesday evening being gone. “There ivas a pool of blood under his head and at" the foot of the bed, a little over, there was a big pool of blood, and a satchel standing at the foot of the bed covered with blood.” Wheeler also found a pick, the eye of which was covered with blood, lying near the deceased, and a billiard cue broken in two pieces, lying on the floor, about five feet from the body, the loaded part of the cue having- fallen out. These were the only weapons in the room. Dr. J. E. Offner made an examination of the body later in the day and found some *461 punctured places on the head, such as might have been made with the sharp point of a pick, and a fracture of the skull, such as might have been produced by the billiard cue. He testified that the deceased had been dead from forty-eight to seventy-two hours.

Jay Gould, a waiter in the Arcade Restaurant, saw the -accused with the billiard cue, introduced in evidence, some time prior to the killing while at the home of Ora Davis, where accused lived at that time. Herbert Davis, son of Ora Davis, also identified the broken cue as the one with which he and another boy had been playing ball on Labor Day, September 1st; knew it by reason of certain paint on it; and testified that the last time he saw it was about dusk on Labor •day, when he saw the accused pick it up and carry it away. On Tuesday evening', September 2nd, about 9 o’clock, the accused came to the Arcade Restaurant and asked Jay Gould to give him a bowl of soup but did not offer to pay for it. Between two and three o’clock, Wednesday morning, accused bought three or four pints of whiskey from D. Bostic, paying therefor $3.00 a pint. Between three and four o’clock of the same morning, he called at the house of Bud Jackson, on Spring Street, and inquired where Anthony VanLear lived. A few minutes thereafter he called at VanLear’s house, at the end of Spring Street, and upon being asked what he was doing out at that time of night, said he was just “cruising” around town. He then gave VanLear a drink of whiskey, and they sat- and talked until daylight. When VanLear mentioned something about getting his pistol out of pawn, Jesse told him that a man had given him a rifle which he would give him if he wanted it. They both walked down to where a boardwalk crossed Washington Street, and the accused ran his hand under the walk and got a .22 repeating Winchester rifle which accused carried back to Van Lear’s house under his arm, having first wrapped it in his coat. Roger Bryan (Bright Eyes) testified that he saw both men pass his house between six and half-past six in the morning, and that Jesse had something under his coat. The accused and VanLear then took the rifle down, but, not being able to re-assemble it, laid it on the chair on the porch. They *462 sat on the porch until about 10:30 or 11 o’clock, having been joined in the meantime by Ed Smith, who saw the riñe and also saw the accused have some $25.00 or $30.00. These three men, together with VanLear’s wife, got in VanLear’s car and went to Shagtown to get something to drink. They picked up Ora Davis on the way, returned to VanLear’s house, where both the accused and Ora Davis stayed until Friday morning, when the accused was arrested. The rifle was lost. VanLear stated that his wife saw a boy playing with the barrel, and that later the stock was found in the grass. This stock was again found by Gail Rice, who turned it over to the sheriff and one of his deputies. Mrs. Wilson was in the deceased’s shanty on Labor Day, September 1st., and saw a rifle standing “over in the corner kind of behind the bed,” while Daisy Shelton testified that she saw the rifle at different times before the murder “behind his bed.” Both these witnesses, as well as Mrs. Mary Anderson, from whom deceased had bought the rifle a month and a half before his death, stated that the rifle was similar to the one exhibited by the State, at the trial, for comparative purposes. The stock of the rifle, which was found near the VanLear home, by Gail Rice, was also exhibited to the witnesses.

The accused states that he went to D. 'Bostic’s house some time after 12 o’clock, asked for a room, but could get none. This is evidently the time that Bostic sold him the liquor, as has already been stated. Bostic testified that accused told him he (accused) and Ora had been having some trouble; that the city officers were looking' for him; and if he happened to get in, he wanted him (Bostic) to help him out. Later, accused inquired of Eddie Johnson the way to Van-Lear’s house, went there, arriving sometime before 6 o’clock, went with VanLear and got a rifle, which he stated Preacher Jackson had given him earlier that night, from under the board walk. As to his actions and declarations concerning the rifle, while at VanLear’s, not heretofore detailed, the following taken from his cross-examination is significant: “Q. Do you remember VanLear showing the' gun you gave him to Benny Smith and some of them at the house? A. Yes sir. Q. Do you remember telling VanLear, ‘There you go

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
127 S.E. 320, 98 W. Va. 458, 1925 W. Va. LEXIS 66, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-williams-wva-1925.