Tinker v. State

1911 OK CR 126, 115 P. 475, 5 Okla. Crim. 584, 1911 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 178
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma
DecidedMay 2, 1911
DocketNo. A-408.
StatusPublished

This text of 1911 OK CR 126 (Tinker v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tinker v. State, 1911 OK CR 126, 115 P. 475, 5 Okla. Crim. 584, 1911 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 178 (Okla. Ct. App. 1911).

Opinion

*585 ARMSTRONG, Jupge.

The indictment in this case charges the plaintiff in error with unlawfully, intentionally, wrongfully, and feloniously attempting to shoot at one E. M. Claycomb with a certain pistol, and with a felonious intent to kill said Clay-comb. He was convicted by the jury of assault with a dangerous weapon, with intent to injure said Claycomb, and his punishment fixed at two years in the state penitentiary.

This prosecution grows out of a difficulty which occurred at a dance at the home of John Nickum in Harper county. It appears'that E. M. Claycomb and Nickum had arranged to have a dance and had invited certain persons, not including the plaintiff in error, to attend; that plaintiff in error came to the dance more or less intoxicated, and armed with a revolver. The testimony is conflicting as to just what was said and done; the state contending that plaintiff in error threatened to kill Claycomb, drew the pistol, pointed it at, and attempted to shoot, him. Plaintiff in error admits that he drew the pistol, but denied that he attempted to shoot prosecuting witness. The witnesses agree that considerable consternation prevailed while the plaintiff in error was being, disarmed. Four chambers of the revolver were loaded; but none of them were discharged in the scuffle. Plaintiff in error was tried at the October term of the Harper county district court, in 1908.

In his petition in error, a number of questions are raised, all of which are abandoned in the brief, except three, one of which, is that the verdict of the jury is contrary to the evidence, and is not sustained by the evidence. On this proposition we quote at length from the testimony in the record:

The prosecuting witness, E. M. Claycomb, gave the following testimony:

“Q. Did you have any trouble with him, Mr. Claycomb? A. Yes, sir. Q. You may state what that was. A. Well, what it occurred about? Q. Just state what the trouble was. A. The trouble was that he drew a gun on me, and said that he would kill me. Q. You may state the circumstances, now, of his drawing that gun. What caused him to do it? A. It seemed to be *586 because he didn’t get number one to dance on. Q. Were you selling numbers — dance tickets? Was that number one that you refer to a dance ticket? A. Yes, sir. Q. You say this occurred because he didn’t receive number one? A. That’s my understanding. Q. WJhat did he say about it, if anything? A. He said if he couldn’t get number one, he wouldn’t get any. Q. What else did he say? A. At that time that’s all he said; but after-wards Mr. Smith taken his sister and went out on the floor to dance, and he objected to her dancing with him. He said if he didn’t dance, she couldn’t. Q. Just go ahead, Mr. Claycomb, and state what occurred there. A. Well, then I think he went out of the room, and he came hack directly, and his sister went to him and caught him around — threw her arms around him, and began to scream that he had a gun; to come and take it away from him; and it seemed that they were rather slow about doing it, and finally I went up and taken the gun away from Tinker. When I went to him— started to him — why, he .swore he would Trill that bald-headed son of a bitch,’ and drew the gun, had the gun in his left hand, and raised it about in that position. Q. Pointing the gun at you ? ' A. Yes, sir.”

This witness also testified to talcing the gun from the plaintiff in error; that it had four chambers loaded; and that he delivered the gun and cartridges to the county attorney.

Witness John W. Nickum gave the following testimony:

“Q. After Mr. Claycomb got the gun, was it loaded? A. Yes, sir. Q. How many cartridges? A. I think three or four; I wouldn’t say which. Q. Examine those, and state whether or not they are the shells or cartridges. A. Those look like the same shells. Q. You say you saw that gun in Joe Tinker’s hand? A. Yes, sir. Q. What was he doing with it, Mr. Nickum. when you first saw the gun? A. When I first saw the gun, he seemed to be in a little dispute about numbers. I told Tinker, I said, ‘If you want a number, Joe, I’ll get it for you.’ He said, T can get my own number.’ He said an oath with it. I said, Now, they have gathered for a social time. There is no use to have any trouble.’ He said, ‘You look like 30 cents. You must take me for a spring chicken’ — and started to pull the gun out of his pocket. About that time his sister discovered the gun and. halloed, ‘He has a gun.’ Mr. Claycomb came walking in about that time, and he said, ‘You bald-headed son of a bitch, I’ll get you,’ and started *587 to raise tbe gun, and his sister grabbed him, and had her arms right around him by that time. Q. Did he snap the gun? A. I couldn’t say about that. I wasn’t close enough to hear it snap. Q.. Did you see the gun pointed toward Mr. Claycomb? A. I saw him raise it up that way. Q. When was that, with reference to the time he made the remark, Til kill the bald-headed son of a bitch?’ A. Just about the same time. Q. Was Mr. Claycomb near him when he made that remark? A. I would judge he was about as far as from here to that man. Q. Who was he addressing that remark to? A. I would judge to Mr. Claycomb. Q. Who took the gun from Tinker ? A. Mr. Claycomb. Q. Did you help ? A. Yes, sir; I had bold of one arm. Q. Did you put Mr. Tinker out of the house? A. Yes, sir; they pushed him out of the house. Q. How long did he remain there after that? A. He was back in the house after that. Q. Was there any further trouble? A. Yes, sir. Q. You may state whether Mr. Tinker was sober or otherwise that evening. A. I thought by his actions he was drinking. Q. What was the commencement of this trouble, Mr. Nickum? A. The first I heard of it was over a number. His sister was on the floor, dancing with a young fellow by the name of Hunter, and he said if he couldn’t get a number, why, she couldn’t dance; and I went and talked to him and said, ‘Come on, Joe, and have a good time, and have a good time with the rest of them,’ and the next time was when this gun play came up.”

Witness Mrs. Viva Painter gave the following testimony:

“Q. Did you hear Mr. Tinker make an assertion to Mr. Claycomb? A. I heard him cursing him about a number. He wanted a number on the dance, as I understood. Q. State how you heard it stated. A. I can’t say. He wanted — it seemed as though he wanted a number of the dance, and he wanted the first number, as I understood it; and he had asked Mr. Claycomb to give him a number, and Mr. Claycomb said he wasn’t selling numbers, and then he went outdoors, and when he came in Mr. Claycomb had given out some numbers, and it seems -as though it made Mr. Tinker mad. because he didn’t get one of the first one, and he forbid his sister dancing, was the first I noticed any trouble, and she wanted to go home, and he wouldn’t go home. Q. Did you hear him make any remark directly to Mr. Claycomb ? A. Why, yes. Q. State what it was. A. He was cursing, and I couldn’t say just to the words what he said, because you know what a woman is when there is any trouble; but he called him a *588 ‘bald-headed, Eoman-nosed son of a bitch/ Q. You say you weren’t close enough to see the gun? A. No; there were some' men between us. There was a set dancing between where I sat and where he was. Q. Was there considerable noise there about the time you heard him malee those threats? A. Yes, sir.”

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Bluebook (online)
1911 OK CR 126, 115 P. 475, 5 Okla. Crim. 584, 1911 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 178, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tinker-v-state-oklacrimapp-1911.