Walters v. State

1969 OK CR 179, 455 P.2d 702, 1969 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 477
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma
DecidedMay 21, 1969
DocketA-14967
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 1969 OK CR 179 (Walters 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
Walters v. State, 1969 OK CR 179, 455 P.2d 702, 1969 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 477 (Okla. Ct. App. 1969).

Opinion

BUSSEY, Judge.

On the early, Sunday morning of October 7, 1962, James R. Chaney awoke, talked on the telephone and appeared to be in a calm frame of mind as he dressed and left his home in his automobile. He drove to the home of his brother-in-law, James Vernon Davis, where he had breakfast with the Davis family, drank some coffee and left in the company of Davis, who also appeared to be calm and in a good frame of mind. Neither of these men had any weapons with them when they left home. They drove together to the home of Dewey Avon Davis and awoke him where, after dressing, the two Davis brothers drove away in the Dewey Avon Davis car, followed by James R. Chaney in his automobile, and they apparently drove to the home of A. C. Walters, defendant herein. The Davis car was parked in front of the A. C. Walters’ farm residence on the east side of the road and the Chaney car was parked immediately behind it, facing in the same direction. Several of the neighbors of A. C. Walters heard five gunshot blasts occurring in a sequence of three rapid shots with an interval, and two shots thereafter. A passing motorist drove in front of the Walters’ residence and observed a man bending over the bodies of two men in the roadway in front of the Walters’ residence. This motorist heard noises and it appeared as if the man standing in the road was doing something to the bodies. The motorist then proceeded to the Bar-bee residence, where she called the sheriff of Grady County. This witness and others, went to the front porch where they observed A. C. Walters in the road, bending over the bodies and watched him leave the roadway, enter his home and a short time thereafter return to the vicinity of the bodies in the roadway, where they again heard noises. Walters remained there a short period of time and walked south, past the Davis and Chaney cars, to a point some 100 yards in the center of the roadway, where he slumped on the ground and remained until Sheriff Emmett Watson and Deputy Sheriff Don Cerlock found him and placed him under arrest.

Upon receiving the call from the Barbee home, Sheriff Watson called Deputy Cer-lock. The two men left and proceeded to the A. C. Walters’ home at a high rate of speed, arriving there about fifteen minutes later. Upon arriving at the scene, Sheriff Watson parked his automobile, walked past the bodies of the Davis boys in a southerly direction, where the defendant was seated in the middle of the road, pounding a rock with his hands, apparently unaware of the sheriff’s arrival. The sheriff placed his hand on the defendant’s shoulder and the defendant asked him to help him find his (the defendant’s) wife. Thereafter, the defendant was handcuffed and taken into custody.

Witness Teague testified at the trial that he heard the defendant say to the sheriff, “Emmett, if you will get me out of this I will give you my automobile.” The sheriff testified that he had not heard the defendant make the statement concerning the automobile, but acknowledged that at this point other people were arriving and the defendant could have made the statement without him hearing it. The defendant was placed in LeRoy Goyne’s car and Goyne and Cerlock took him to the county jail in Chickasha. The sheriff testified, in substance, that at the scene of the homicides the Davis car was parked on the east side of the road, headed north and the Chaney car was parked immediately behind the Davis car on the east side of the *706 road, headed in the same direction and that the automobile belonging to A. C. Walters was parked on the east side of the road headed south in front of the Davis car; that between the Davis car and defendant Walters’ car were the bodies of the two Davis brothers, within three or four feet of the bodies was a Browning automatic shotgun laying on the ground between the defendant’s car and the Davis car; three expended shotgun shells were found on the road, near the open door of the Walters’ vehicle, and two expended shotgun shells were found on the front seat of . the Walters’ car. The sheriff further testified that the road condition on that day was that of gravel and soft sand and that he observed footprints from the Chaney vehicle near the driver’s side, leading in a westerly direction across the road to the body of Chaney, which was hanging on a barb wire fence on the other side of the bar ditch.

The telephone operator testified that she received a call from the A. C. Walters’ residence, for Wilson Smithen on the early morning of October 7, 1962, but that when she got Smithen on the line, the telephone in the Walters’ home was apparently off the hook. The witness who had first notified the sheriff from the Barbee residence, became impatient for the sheriff’s arrival and attempted to place a call to the sheriff a few minutes after the first call, but was unable to complete the call because the Barbee phone was on an 8-party line, one of which was a telephone in the A. C. Walters’ residence. Sheriff Watson testified that he entered the Walters’ home the morning of the investigation and found the telephone receiver off the hook.

Upon removing the Davis bodies from the scene, an opened three-inch pocket knife was found between and beneath them. This was covered with sand, dirt and substance. A closed three-inch knife was found in the pocket of one of the deceased Davis. The autopsy performed upon Chaney reflected that he had been mortally wounded from shotgun pellets in the back of his head and neck and that multiple injuries had been sustained from shotgun pellets which pierced his lungs, liver and other vital organs, causing bleeding which could produce death. These wounds were all in the back portion of the body. The cause of death of Dewey A. Davis, while not allowed by the court to be elaborated on in detail, was that he had received shotgun pellets largely confined to the right shoulder and chest and back of the head; Vernon Davis had a wide spread concentration of holes on the right side of his body from the shoulder to the head and a few in the neck. He also had one large vertical incision that extended from about the midportion of the chest down close to the navel, which could only have been caused by a sharp instrument. The testimony of other State witnesses was merely cumulative in substance and will not be set forth.

The defendant and his wife testified in his behalf in considerable detail about his mental and emotional condition several months preceding the homicides and were in substance that he was subject to attacks of blindness, heard noises and voices, and was unable to properly attend to his business. They further testified he was unable to sleep and had slept very little a week preceding the slayings and further that he was erratic in his working habits, sometimes working all night. It was their testimony that during this period of time he had illicit relationships with one Bonnie Terry, sister of the deceased Davis boys and sister-in-law of James R. Chaney. They testified that Bonnie threatened to tell defendant’s wife of the affair and that the defendant advised his wife of this. The defendant testified that Bonnie attempted to extort money from him and Mrs. Walters related that she had gone to the home of Bonnie one evening prior to the slayings and stabbed her with a knife, for which injury the said Bonnie was hospitalized. The defendant related threats allegedly communicated to him by the Davis brothers, wherein they made threats against his person and that of his wife, if *707 he did not pay Bonnie’s hospital bill and other money to satisfy her.

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1972 OK CR 259 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma, 1972)
Hill v. State
1972 OK CR 211 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma, 1972)
Love v. State
1971 OK CR 397 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma, 1971)
In re Habeas Corpus of Walters
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1969 OK CR 179, 455 P.2d 702, 1969 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 477, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/walters-v-state-oklacrimapp-1969.