Webster v. State

12 So. 2d 533, 194 Miss. 381, 1943 Miss. LEXIS 80
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedApril 5, 1943
DocketNo. 35274.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 12 So. 2d 533 (Webster 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
Webster v. State, 12 So. 2d 533, 194 Miss. 381, 1943 Miss. LEXIS 80 (Mich. 1943).

Opinion

Roberds, J.,

delivered the opinion of the coux*t.

Appellant was indicted for the murder of his wife, Ruth Webster, and one J. D. McGhee, all three being* negroes. Appellant was granted a severaxxce. This is an appeal from his convietioxx and a life sentexxce to the state penitentiary for murder of his wife.

His plea was self-defense, that he shot and killed his wife unintentionally and accidentally while justifiably shooting at McGhee in an effox't to save himself from *386 real and apparent danger of losing his life or suffering-great bodily harm at the hands of McGhee. It is not claimed that the wife was attempting to harm him. In fact, he says he did not know he had shot her.

He first contends on this appeal that the evidence shows conclusively that the killing of Ruth Webster was in the heat of passion under such circumstances as preclude his conviction of a greater crime than manslaughter. This requires a summary of the evidence.

Webster and his wife lived in what is described as a “shotgun” three-room house in the Town of Bude, Misr sissippi. A “shotgun” house means the rooms are in a straight row. Entrance to the premises was through a fence-gate into a small front yard; thence upon a front porch and through a door therefrom into the front room, some nine feet long and ten feet wide; thence by a partition door into the middle room, some twelve feet wide and ten feet long; and thence through a partition door into the kitchen, from which a door opened onto a small back yard, or garden, to the rear of which was a low fence and the family toilet.

Webster was the only eye-witness to the tragedy. His version of the events is this: On the night of July 4,1942, about eleven o’clock, after he had been away in the Town of Bude some two and a half hours, he returned home. The house was dark. He entered the front door of the front room and turned on the electric light, and by that light he saw, through the door into the middle room, his wife and McGhee jump from the bed; that McGhee ‘ ‘ grabbed” a single-barreled 410-gauge shotgun of appellant’s, which was at the foot of the bed, “and started up with it towards me”; appellant continued to advance to and entered the middle room, grasped the gun in the hands of McGhee and they struggled over it; that the barrel of the gun struck the wall or floor of the middle room and exploded; that during this time appellant opened a drawer of a dresser in this room and got therefrom his *387 pistol and shot at McGhee ten times (that being* the load capacity of the pistol) as fast as he conld pull the trigger; that McGhee fell to the floor, and appellant immediately dropped his pistol onto the floor, left the house, turning off the front room light as he departed; that a short distance from the house he saw one Clark and Bussell attempting to start an automobile, and he approached and told them that he wanted them to take him to the police; that he had had a little trouble with McGhee; that “there had been some shooting in the house”; that he did not tell them he had killed anyone; that Clark and Bussell, being skeptical or curious, instead of taking him to the police, proceeded with him to the house; they entered the front, turning on the light, and viewed the body of McGhee on the floor in the right hand corner of the middle room; that within a few moments Clark carried him in the automobile to the police.

He also testified that when McGhee got from the bed he thought he observed that his pants were open; that from all of this he concluded McGhee and his wife were engaged in illicit relations; that he did not know when, or whether, his wife left the room; that there was no outcry and not a woi’d was said during this affray; that some two weeks prior to this he saw McGhee come from his home and he told him not to come back, else he, appellant, would give McGhee trouble, , and McGhee replied that he would not come back but that he could give Webster as much trouble as Webster could give him.

Clark and Bussell testified that about eleven o’clock that night, as they were proceeding in an automobile about one hundred yards from the home of appellant, he flagged them to a stop, and asked them to take him to the police, and when they inquired why, he said he had killed' his wife and McGhee, and when asked for a reason, said he had caught them in the bed, and when they expressed doubt, told them to come to his house and he would show them; that they immediately went to the house; it was *388 dark; turned on the front light and proceeded to the middle room. There they saw McGhee on the floor- in the right hand corner of the middle room, groaning and bleeding, and when spoken to by one of them, he did not answer; that appellant stood near the feet of McGhee and had in his hand an open knife and in his hip pocket an ice-pick, both of which had blood upon them; that they inquired of appellant the whereabouts of his wife and he made no reply. Clark then carried appellant to the police in the automobile and Russell proceeded to the home of the father of McGhee to notify him.

People began to gather at the house. A doctor arrived within some thirty minutes but McGhee was dead. A search was made for the wife. Her body was found behind the toilet and beyond the back fence. She was dead. The undertaker testified that McGhee had received one pistol shot in the head and one in the abdomen; two cuts in his chest and two stabs in his right shoulder and two stabs in his right jaw and there was a knot on his left forehead; that the cuts appeared to have been made with a knife and the stabs with an ice-pick. The- doctor said “there were two bullet holes just above his heart and just below there were two more and one bullet struck his ribs,” and, as he recalled, there was a pistol bullet wound in the head; that, as he remembered, McGhee had been shot five times with a pistol and there was a gunshot wound in the chest, but he did not think any of the wounds were made with a knife or ice-pick.

The undertaker testified that Ruth Webster had received six pistol bullet wounds in the chest, and a shotgun wound in the right shoulder; that he removed some of the shot from the shoulder. The doctor testified that the woman had foui pistol shots in the chest and a deep gash in the top of her head, which could have been made by a lick with the gun. Some of the discrepancies in the testimony of the undertaker and the doctor as to the number and nature of the wounds may be accounted for be *389 cause of the fact that the examination by the doctor was hurriedly made, with a crowd about, and when the victims were completely dressed, and that by the undertaker was made later when they were completely undressed. They appear immaterial except those claimed to have been made by knife and pick. Other witnesses testified to the wounds as they saw them while the bodies were dressed and lying on the floor in the middle room after Ruth Webster had been brought into that room.

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Related

Parham v. State
229 So. 2d 582 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1969)
Pitts v. State
51 So. 2d 448 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1951)

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Bluebook (online)
12 So. 2d 533, 194 Miss. 381, 1943 Miss. LEXIS 80, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/webster-v-state-miss-1943.