Stubbs v. State

114 So. 887, 114 So. 827, 148 Miss. 764, 1927 Miss. LEXIS 91
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 12, 1927
DocketNo. 26795.
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 114 So. 887 (Stubbs 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
Stubbs v. State, 114 So. 887, 114 So. 827, 148 Miss. 764, 1927 Miss. LEXIS 91 (Mich. 1927).

Opinion

'Ethridge, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The appellant, Virginia Stubbs, was convicted of the murder of an infant, and sentenced to imprisonment for life in the state penitentiary.

The principal ground relied upon for reversal is the appellant’s confession to the sheriff. This case was previously before this court under the style of Walker et al. v. State, 135 Miss. 422, 100 So. 9, in which case the judgment was reversed, Walker discharged, and the case remanded for a new trial as to the appellant.

The infant killed was born early in the year 1923. After its death and burial, which seems to have been kept a secret, some information circulated around the neighborhood that the child was missing, and a search was instituted. In a woodland, some three hundred yards from appellant’s house, in a secluded and damp spot of earth, the grave was found. One of the witnesses who found the grave, when coming to the place, took a stick and stuck it in the loose earth until it touched a box under the ground, in which afterwards the child was found. He testified that he went to the sheriff and reported this fact; that thereafter in company with the sheriff,' his deputy, and other persons, they repaired to the place, exhumed the body, and had a physician to make an examination of it; that such examination disclosed that the skull of the infant had been crushed in by a blunt instru *770 ment, that the skin was not broken over the wounds, and that blood had coagulated in them under the skin; and the physician testified that the child’s death was the result of such blows.

The body was found and exhumed on the 27th day of March, 1923; and the testimony of the doctor was to the effect that the deceased was a normal and well-developed child of the age of fifteen or twenty days at the time of its death and that it was of mixed races.

It appears that the appellant had been arrested before the body was exhumed on the charge of being guilty of murder, and confined in jail.

After the body of the child was found, it appears that a hammer was also found buried on the premises of the appellant, and the sheriff, accompanied by a deputy, took it to the jail where appellant was confined and asked her if she had ever seen the same, and she replied that she had. According to the sheriff’s statement, he said: “Virginia, this is the-hammer they tell me you killed your baby with.’’ She said: “I started to tell, you all about that the other evening.” The sheriff then testified that he told her if she told him anything that it would be no secret, that it would be used against her, but -she could make the statement if she wanted to, and that she then said that she desired to make a statement. Thereupon the sheriff asked her: “Did you kill your baby?” She replied: “I did.” The sheriff then asked her why she killed her baby, and. she stated that Enoch Walker, the man she and her sister were living with at the time, stated that the baby was not his, and that he wanted her ‘ ‘to do away with it before he returned. ” She then described the manner in which she killed the infant, stating that she placed a vaseline bottle under the child’s head and then lay down on it, but that this did not kill it, and she then took the hammer and struck it on the back of the head, that it did not stop breathing, and that she then struck it on the side of the head above the ear, and it did *771 stop breathing, and that when Walker returned that-evening- he made a box and buried it.

On cross-examination, the sheriff was asked, with reference to his testimony in the former trial, if he did not fail to state in that trial that any statement the appellant made would be used ag*ainst her; and he was also asked if the deputy who accompanied him did not abuse the defendant and tell her that she “just as well tell it,” and that a confession had been made by Enoch Walker and her sister. The sheriff denied making any threats, or that the deputy cursed or abused the appellant, and stated that he did not and would not permit such conduct. The deputy sheriff was also introduced as a witness, and his testimony supported the testimony of the sheriff in reference to the confession, but he denied using threats or violence in connection with such confession.

Another deputy sheriff was introduced, who, subsequent to this confession, accompanied the sheriff to the jail and had an interview with the appellant in which he said he asked her was she the woman who killed the baby, and she replied that she was, that she told him the details of the circumstance of the killing, and that he used no ■threat or persuasion to induce such confession.

Another person, the jailer, was introduced for' the defendant. He stated that he was jailer at the time the sheriff and deputy visited the appellant, and that he took them to the door of her cell; that he heard the deputy sheriff curse the appellant and tell her that they already had proof of her guilt, calling her foul dames and telling her she “just as well tell it.” The conversation between the sheriff and the prisoner and the deputy and the prisoner, as testified to by the jailer, without detailing it here, was sufficient, if believed, to render the statement inadmissible.

The defendant was introduced on the confession, and denied making it to the sheriff or deputy, but stated that if she did make it she was so frightened she did not *772 know what she was saying, and that the deputy sheriff cursed her and called her vile names in addressing her.

The court held the confession to be free and voluntary, and admitted it in the evidence, but stated in the ruling:

“Now as to the difference in the testimony given here on the stand to-day and that given on the former hearing, I won’t pass 'on that because that is a matter that can be referred to on cross-examination, but the direct testimony of the two officers indicates that the confession was free and voluntary and not extorted.”

The defendant’s theory of the case was that the child was born on the 4th day of February, 1923; that she was sick with influenza at the time the child was born, and that the child was born with it and also had chicken pox; that it died one week after its birth; that they were too poor to have a physician or buy a coffin for the child, and that Walker made the coffin; that Walker buried it in the place described; that she was unable to attend the burial and did not know how the child was buried; and that the colored cemetery was a considerable distance from her home-, and that they did not have the means to have it carried and buried there.

There was other testimony for the defendant; and a number of witnesses testified in corroboration of her-statement.

The case was submitted to the jury, which found her guilty as charged, fixing her punishment as life imprisonment.

It is insisted that the confession was inadmissible for two reasons: (1) That the corpus delicti

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Bluebook (online)
114 So. 887, 114 So. 827, 148 Miss. 764, 1927 Miss. LEXIS 91, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stubbs-v-state-miss-1927.