Velvin v. State

90 S.W. 851, 77 Ark. 97, 1905 Ark. LEXIS 158
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedNovember 11, 1905
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 90 S.W. 851 (Velvin v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Velvin v. State, 90 S.W. 851, 77 Ark. 97, 1905 Ark. LEXIS 158 (Ark. 1905).

Opinion

Riddick, J.

This is an appeal- from a judgment convicting Arthur Velvin of the crime of voluntary manslaughter, and sentencing him to seven years imprisonment in the penitentiary for killing W. G. Smith by shooting him with a 'gun. ' 'Smith-' attached a crop of a negro tenant in which a brother of'Velvin,who had been recently killed in Texas, had some interest. The defendant, Arthur Velvin, went to the home of Smith, as he says, to settle the matter in some way. The evidence shows that there was some ill feeling between the two parties, and Velvin took with him a Winchester repeating shotgun loaded with buckshot. He found Smith in a field something over a hundred yards from his home, gathering peas. His wife and young son were with him. The wife of Smith testified that when the defendant came up to them he had his gun in his hand, and w-as only ten or fifteen steps away when the}'- noticed him. Smith was down on his knees, picking peas, and Velvin said to him, “Get up, you damned old son-of-a-bitch! I have got you!” She stepped between them, and asked Velvin to let him alone. Defendant said to her: “Stand back, God damn you, or I will- kill you!” Smith then started to run towards his house. Velvin followed him a short distance, and ordered him to stop, and when he did not do so shot him. The testimony of the boy was substantially the same as that of his mother. He testified that the first words of Velvin to Smith were: “Get up from there, you damned old son-of-a-bitch! I have got you, and am going to kill you!” That his father ran, and was shot down. On the other hand, Velvin testified that he did not go to the field to hurt Smith, and did not take the gun with that intention, but only intended to talk with him in an effort to make some arrangement by which the attached crop might be gathered. He testified that he got over the fence into the pea patch a short distance from Smith; that he had only taken a step or two towards him when Mrs. Smith began to scream; that the boy ran towards the house for a gun ; that he told Smith not to.run, that he wished to talk with him, but that Smith ran to the road, and toward the house, calling for his gun; that defendant followed after him, telling him to stop, until he saw the daughter of Smith coming from the house towards her father with a Winchester rifle, when the defendant shot Smith, intending to shoot him in the legs to prevent his getting the gun from his daughter.

There was other testimony tending to show that at the time the shot was fired the daughter of Smith was coming towards him with a rifle, and testimony tending to show that she had no sum. and that this statement of the defendant was not true.

A number of exceptions were saved on the trial, but the only ground of reversal urged in brief of counsel is that the court erred in giving instruction number fifteen at the request of the State.

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Related

Pinkerton v. Davis
207 S.W.2d 742 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1948)
Gibson v. State
205 S.W. 898 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1918)
Hoard v. State
95 S.W. 1002 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1906)

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Bluebook (online)
90 S.W. 851, 77 Ark. 97, 1905 Ark. LEXIS 158, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/velvin-v-state-ark-1905.