State v. Wolfe

129 S.E. 748, 99 W. Va. 694, 1925 W. Va. LEXIS 201
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 29, 1925
Docket5430
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 129 S.E. 748 (State v. Wolfe) 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. Wolfe, 129 S.E. 748, 99 W. Va. 694, 1925 W. Va. LEXIS 201 (W. Va. 1925).

Opinion

Woods, Judge:

From a judgment of fifteen years’ imprisonment in the penitentiary, upon a verdict-of a jury for second degree murder, Daniel Wolfe appeals to this Court.

To get a proper perspective of the case, the following facts preliminary to the summarization of the testimony are pertinent: The defendant, age 37 years, is a glass worker by trade, and has a wife and four children. Becoming estranged from his wife, some seven months prior to the time of the homicide, he left his family at their home in Clarks-burg, he having ever since that time been employed at his trade in Ohio and Pennsylvania. On the trial it developed that the husband attributed this estrangement to attentions givfen to his wife by his brother, Albert Wolfe. The said brother, however, disclaimed any motive in such attentions other than a natural friendly interest in the neglected wife and children of a brother. Aside from the diametrically opposed statements of the two brothers, as to the reason for such estrangement, the record is silent.

The evidence disclosed by the witnesses for the State is to the effect that on- the night of July 12, 1924, the defendant came to the house where his family had been living since he left them several months before, in the Northview Section of the City of Clarksburg. When the defendant approached the rear of the house, his wife, three children and his brother Albert, were in the kitchen. According to the testimony of *696 Albert Wolfe, as tbe defendant approached the kitchen the defendant’s wife said, ‘.‘There-is Dan,” and grabbed the children and rushed to the bath room; that the defendant came thru the door with a pistol in his hand and said, ‘ ‘ I have come back to get you, I am going to kill you,” directing his remarks to the witness; that defendant told witness to go into the dining room, which he did, and defendant searched him to see if he had any weapons on him; that defendant then went on to the bathroom door and tried to get in, but the door was locked and that defendant’s wife and children were screaming; that when defendant could not get in the bathroom he came back to where witness was and witness tried to reason with him and told him to put the pistol away and be reasonable and fix things up without trouble, and defendant said, ‘‘I came for trouble and I expect to have it”; that shortly after defendant came from the bathroom door witness heard one of the little girls, Esther, leave the rear of the house along the board walk, and in a minute or two later he heard screams over about Claude Wilson’s place, and shortly thereafter witness heard Wilson coming towards the house, and witness told defendant to put away his gun or he would get in trouble and defendant got up from where he was sitting and passed out through the dining room and out the rear door; that witness made for the front door and while he was unlocking it he heard a shot fired in the rear, and some one scream, “I am shot”; that witness went out of the house to a nearby store; that he saw Mr. Wilson crossing the vacant lot, and later assisted him into a hospital ambulance; and' that witness did not see defendant again until he was arrested by the officers at the home of another brother in a distant section of the city.

Esther Wolfe, age twelve years, a daughter of the defendant, was at home the night of the shooting and at her mother’s request went to the home of Claude Wilson for assistance. She testified that when the defendant came to the house her mother said, “My God, it’s Dan,” and ran into the bathroom, witness followed her and her mother locked the door; that the defendant came to the door and said, ‘‘If you don’t let me in I am going to kill you,” and that witness *697 got out of the window and went to Claude Wilson’s home and asked Mr. Wilson for help; that Mr. Wilson went to the defendant ’s home, but witness did not accompapy him, but later heard a shot; that the shot occurred about five minutes after Wilson left his home. Witness further testified that when Mr. Wilson started for defendant’s home he got a hoe from under his porch and took it with him.

Further testimony introduced by the State disclosed that the defendant went to the home of his brother, Adolphus Wolfe, at Glenwood Addition; that his sister-in-law on coming home from a show at eleven o ’clock found him there; that on being told that he had been over at his home, the witness inquired, “There was no trouble over there was there?” to which the defendant replied, “No, I did not go for trouble Daisy”; that witness further asked had he done any harm, and defendant said, “No, he had done no harm to nobody”; that as they were preparing for bed the officers came and arrested him. Sometime after his arrest he further told this sister-in-law that he had tried to reason with his wife, but that she ran into the bathroom and shut the door and “hallooed bloody fire ’ ’; that he asked her to come out, assuring her he was not going to hurt her; that about that time this man (Wilson) came and was going'to kill him, and he “shot once straight up into the air to scare him”. Seymour Edwards, one of the officers who assisted in making the arrest, testified that when they went to the home of Adolphus Wolfe, they found the defendant behind the door in a room; that he denied to* the officers that he had a pistol' and that he had shot deceased; and that later he said he had thrown the pistol in the river, where it was found by the officers.

Dr. B. F. Matheny, County Coroner, testified concerning the character of the wound that caused the death of the deceased, and on cross-examination testified that he probed the wound for the bullet and the wound would open better if the deceased’s hands were raised and that such would indicate that deceased’s left arm was raised at the time he was shot.

John Kroll, a neighbor, testified that he saw Esther Wolfe running to the Wilson house crying, ‘ ‘ Come on and help, my mother says that father came to kill us”; that thereupon *698 Wilson came over to witness’ Rouse and asked witness to go with him to the Wolfe home, “to help save life”; that after talking a few minutes Wilson left the witness ’ home and went straight to his front porch and later he saw a shadow going in the direction of the Wolfe house and later witness heard a shot at the Wolfe house.

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Bluebook (online)
129 S.E. 748, 99 W. Va. 694, 1925 W. Va. LEXIS 201, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-wolfe-wva-1925.