Stubblefield v. State

107 So. 663, 142 Miss. 787, 1926 Miss. LEXIS 104
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedApril 5, 1926
DocketNo. 25581.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 107 So. 663 (Stubblefield v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stubblefield v. State, 107 So. 663, 142 Miss. 787, 1926 Miss. LEXIS 104 (Mich. 1926).

Opinion

Ethridge, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The appellent, a boy fifteen years of age, was indicted for the murder of A. K. Watkins, a school teacher in Lincoln county, Miss. The facts in reference to the killing are substantially as follows: In February preceding the killing appellant was a pupil in the school taught by Professor Watkins and was punished corporally by Mr. Watkins for some infraction of the regulations of the *792 school, and at the time of the infliction of the punishment made some threat against Mr. Watkins. Appellant repeated these threats or made other threats at different times between the date of the punishment and the date of the killing, which killing occurred some two or three weeks after the school term closed. On the day of the killing appellant, being near the Watkins ’ house, fired a gun, the shot from which came in the direction of the home and attracted the attention of the Watkins’ family and of a young lady who was there on that day engaged in canning some products. When the first shot was fired, Mr. Watkins looked around the place a little and went to the home of a neighbor just across the road and asked him if he heard the shot and if he knew where it came from. The neighbor replied that he heard the shot, but did not know who fired it, nor where it came from. Mr. Watkins then asked this man to go with him into the woods near their homes and investigate the matter, but the neighbor declined to do this. Watkins returned to his home and was in his back yard when another shot was fired from a pine stump; the shot going in the direction of a child of Mr. Watkins. Mrs. Watkins and the young lady who was engaged in canning that morning in the Watkins’ home both saw and identified the appellant as the party who fired the shot, and the child testified that the shot struck the Watkins’ house. There was other evidence tending to show that the shot struck the Watkins’ house. Mr. Watkins at the time this second shot was fired was on the opposite side of a building on his' place and started around the building" in the direction of the shot when the appellant ran into the woods pursued by Mr. Watkins. In a few minutes a third shot was heard. The neighbors were notified, and search was made in the woods from whence the shot was heard, and the body of Mr. Watkins was found about an eighth of a mile from his residence, with a shot through the front of his body in the breast, passing through the lungs. He was lying on his face with his left hand under his head or face and his right hand ex *793 tended a short distance from his head. The parties who found the body testified that they found Mr. Watkins’ body in an open place in the woods, clear of sticks or debris, and that there was nothing near the body in the form of a stick; that there were no weapons upon the body of Mr. Watkins. Some little distance from the body was a burnt stump, and behind the stump were found tracks, and there were tracks found going from this stump to the body of Watkins. Near the feet of the deceased was found an empty gun shell, and also wadding from a shell was found near the body. This shell showed the shot to have been a No. 4 shot.

'Some effort was made to trace the tracks from the body of Mr. Watkins and these tracks were found some distance in the direction of the appellant’s home, but were lost before reaching there. Some of the parties searching saw the appellant at work on his father’s farm, and asked him if he had seen any one passing in that direction, and the appellant replied that he had not seen any one. They asked him if he knew that Mr. Watkins had been killed, and he replied that he did not. He was then asked if he had been around the Watkins’ home or over in that direction, and he denied having been over there. Afterwards a Mr. Gant with his bloodhounds was sent for and carried to the place of the killing, and these bloodhounds trailed these tracks from Mr. Watkins’ body to where the boy was, whereupon this appellant was placed under arrest and carried to the Watkins’ home. The deputy sheriff asked the appellant if he killed Mr. Watkins, and the appellant denied killing* Mr. Watkins. Afterwards at the Watkins’ place where a crowd of people were assembled appellant seemed to become frightened, and stated to those having him in custody that, if they would take him away, he would tell them all about it, and he made a statement telling them how he killed Mr. Watkins. This statement was objected to by the defendant, and the court excluded it from the evidence.

*794 The state then introduced a number of statements made subsequent to the killing of Mr. Watkins by the appellant while in the jail, in which statements the appellant admitted that he killed Mr. Watkins, stating that he had intended to kill him all along and that, if it was to be done again, he would do it all over again.

The defendant testified in his own behalf and admitted the killing of Mr. Watkins, but claimed that he had acted in self-defense. His statement was that, on the morning of the killing, he started plowing on his father’s farm, and that he had trouble with the mule he was plowing and took the mule out and went back to his home and helped his mother get off to some place she was going on business that day. He stated that his father was absent from home, at work in Louisiana, and that, after his mother left that day, there was no one at his home, and so he decided to take his gun and go down to a stream nearby, between his home and the Watkins’ home, and shoot some trout which he had seen shortly before. He testified that he did not find any trout in the stream and decided to go on hunting. That he had a dog with him. That he did not know how far he went before he found a rabbit and shot at the rabbit. He did not know how-far he then was from the Watkins’ home and did not know whether he killed the rabbit or not. That he walked on a little further and shot at a partridge, but did not know whether he hit the partridge or not. That he did not know how far he was from the Watkins’ home by that time, but that shortly after shooting at the partridge he saw Professor Watkins running in his direction, and he ran from him, and Mr. Watkins pursued him and was about to overtake him, and appellant called out to Mr. Watkins to stop, “Let’s drop the matter,” but Mr. Watkins said, “No; Í am going to kill you.” That he continued to run and Mr. Watkins was gaining on him. That Mr. Watkins had a stick in his hand, and that appellant again turned and called to Mr. Watkins to stop, but Mr. Watkins again said, “No; I am going to kill *795 you,” and was about to get hold of his gun when the appellant shut his eyes and fired his gun, and that he threw the shell out of his gun and continued to run, and that at the time he did not know whether his shot had struck Mr. Watkins or not. Appellant denied secreting himself behind the stump near the Watkins’ home and shooting at the Watkins’ child, and also denied that he had been behind the pine stump near where Mr. Watkins’ body was found, and denied also the statements testified to by the state’s witnesses making threats against Mr. Watkins, except those statements making threats against Mr. Watkins at the time immediately after the punishment inflicted on him by Mr. Watkins, and in regard to these statements he said he was so mad he did not know what he was saying at the time.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Hall v. State
420 So. 2d 1381 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1982)
Reid v. State
301 So. 2d 561 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1974)
Pitts v. State
51 So. 2d 448 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1951)
Crockerham v. State
30 So. 2d 417 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1947)
Lewis v. State
195 So. 325 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1940)
Durham v. State
131 So. 422 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1930)
Bennett v. State
120 So. 837 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1929)
Ivey v. State
119 So. 507 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1928)
Sullivan v. State
115 So. 552 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1928)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
107 So. 663, 142 Miss. 787, 1926 Miss. LEXIS 104, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stubblefield-v-state-miss-1926.