Sullivan v. State

115 So. 552, 149 Miss. 412, 1928 Miss. LEXIS 40
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 6, 1928
DocketNo. 26954.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 115 So. 552 (Sullivan 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
Sullivan v. State, 115 So. 552, 149 Miss. 412, 1928 Miss. LEXIS 40 (Mich. 1928).

Opinion

Pack, J.

Appellant appeals from a conviction and life sentence for murder. Appellant and Bunyan Smith were jointly indicted for the murder of Homer Dewise in the circuit court of the Second judicial district of Tallahatchie county. A severance was granted in the lower court.

The testimony for the state tends to show that Pat Sullivan, appellant, Bunyan Smith, and Homer Dewise, the deceased, all three white men, traveling in a Chevrolet roadster car, drove up to the house of a negro woman named Nancy, in the town of Philip, about nine or ten o’clock at night. All three men appeared to be under the influence of intoxicating liquor. Leaving the car parked in the street, the three men entered the house, apparently in perfectly good humor. They engaged in laughing, talking, and singing. Presently, the deceased took from his shirt bosom a pistol, being a .38 special, and inquired of John Miller, a negro man living in the house, if he knew of any one desiring to trade an automatic, and being answered in the negative deceased placed the pistol back inside his shirt bosom. Smith and deceased walked out into the back yard, while there the negro man, John Miller, and the appellant walked to the back porch. Thereupon, the deceased threatened to shoot them. All *419 four of the men returned into the house, when deceased again pulled out his pistol and threw it on appellant, who held up his hands and asked deceased not to shoot him. Smith interceded, and deceased drew his pistol on Smith. At this juncture, appellant and Miller ran out into the hack yard. The deceased insisted that he wanted to shoot somebody. Smith suggested that if he wanted to shoot, to shoot out the light, which was promptly done. The negro woman, Nancy, disappeared from the scene and was not present at any time after the light was shot out. Deceased and Smith then walked out into the street toward the car, and called to appellant, who went through the back yard, into the street, and joined Smith, leaving deceased in the street near the car.

Appellant and Smith decided to go to the home of one Weems, a few hundred yards distant, whom all three of the white men knew, for the purpose of procuring a gun, and while they were gone, the deceased got into the car and was sitting on the front seat under the steering wheel. Smith and appellant told Weems that a man had held them up, had taken their car away from them, and they wanted to borrow a gun. As stated, Weems was well acquainted with all three of the white men, being, perhaps, better known to deceased. Neither Smith nor appellant told Weems that Dewise was at Nancy’s house, or that he was the man causing the trouble. Weems loaned them an automatic shotgun loaded with five shells of squirrel shot, whereupon Smith and appellant returned. to the former scene, and found deceased sitting on the front seat of the car. John Miller, still in the back yard, heard either Smith or appellant command deceased to get out of the oar, the exact words used being, “Grod damn you, get out of that car,” which command was repeated two or three times. Immediately after hearing the last command, Miller heard a gun fire, and heard some one exclaim, as if in pain, “Oh! Oh!” After a lapse of a few seconds, the gun fired twice more, and he *420 heard no further outcry. He saw the car move on, after experiencing difficulty in hacking out and turning. It was soon reported to W'eems that a man had been killed. Driving his car down to the scene he saw by the headlight the body of the deceased lying in the street crumpled up, with the side of his face on the ground,* but saw no pistol or other weapon. The pistol was never found nor its absence explained. Appellant and Smith drove to Greenwood, where Smith was left in a hospital. Appellant then drove the roadster to Attala county, having disconnected the shotgun and placed the parts underneath the seat of the car.

About daylight the next morning, two officers, Dogan and Simrall, reported at the scene to investigate, and found the lifeless body of Dewise in the street in front of Nancy’s house. There was a trail of blood from the gate to the body of Dewise, and a puddle of blood where the body was lying. The blood stains were slight at the beginning, but increased toward the body. On examination, the body was found to have a shotgun wound on the left side of the face and the left ear; another wound in the right shoulder, circular in shape, about six inches in diameter, and another wound in the hip. All three of these wounds, apparently, had been inflicted by shots from the back. One of the arms was found to be swollen and bruised, and there was a wound across the chest about the size of an auto casing. Small shot were found in plank at top of a wire fence about four feet high, and! small shot were found on the outside of the negro’s house. The officers found no pistol or other weapons at or near the body. Late in the afternoon of the next day, the appellant returned to the hospital in Greenwood, and was there placed under arrest by the officer, Dogan, to whom appellant denied knowledge of the gun and denied any knowledge of the killing. The shotgun was introduced at the trial, and showed that the end of the barrel was burst or flared, and there was a bend or indentation in *421 the barrel about twelve inches from the end. The gun was free from these defects when loaned by 'W'eems to appellant and Smith.

The testimony for the defense tended to show that Smith, Sullivan, and Dewise were traveling aimlessly through the. Delta, and on the morning before the killing, the deceased bought a pint of whisky at Itta Bena, and two more pints during the day. Late in the afternoon, Dewise suggested that they go to Philip to see his (deceased’s) woman; that they were all drinking throughout the day, and, upon arriving at Nancy’s house, proceeded to drink a large quantity of home brew, deceased tailing the leading part "in the drinking. It was shown in this evidence that the deceased, while at Itta Bena, threatened to kill Sullivan, being heard by Smith but not by Sullivan, and repeated this threat several times while standing in the back yard at Nancy’s house. Smith testified that these threats were communicated to Sullivan as they went to find Weems. It was admitted that Smith and appellant went for the shotgun but they gave as their reason that they wanted to be in a position to protect themselves, and also to get the car. Appellant, being asked on cross-examination ‘ ‘Why did you take the gun?” answered, “To reason the thing with him, and, if we had to, to use the gun.” Upon reappearing at the car, they found deceased sitting under the steering wheel; that he refused to get out; and that he still had; the pistol in his hands. Upon being commanded to get out or move over, deceased opened the car door, stepped out, and seized Smith; that up to that time, Smith held the shotgiin, but dropped it, and clinched with deceased, holding deceased’s right hand to keep from being shot, and continued to hold fast the gun hand of deceased. That deceased weighed about one hundred eighty pounds, and Smith about one hundred thirty-five or one hundred forty; that deceased threw Smith to the ground where they scuffled, Smith finally calling to áppellant, “Pat, *422

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Bluebook (online)
115 So. 552, 149 Miss. 412, 1928 Miss. LEXIS 40, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sullivan-v-state-miss-1928.