Woodward v. State

177 So. 531, 180 Miss. 571, 1937 Miss. LEXIS 127
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 13, 1937
DocketNo. 32991.
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 177 So. 531 (Woodward 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
Woodward v. State, 177 So. 531, 180 Miss. 571, 1937 Miss. LEXIS 127 (Mich. 1937).

Opinions

Winston Woodward, appellant here, was tried in the circuit court of Calhoun county on an indictment charging him with the murder of Walter Roberts; convicted of manslaughter; and sentenced to serve ten years in the State Penitentiary, from which this appeal is prosecuted. Walter Roberts was shot in his leg, which shot severed the main artery.

There is a great deal of conflict in the testimony. It appears from the evidence that on Sunday afternoon, April 19, 1936, Lillian Griffin, one of the witnesses, was riding around with appellant and others in an automobile belonging to John Roberts, father of the deceased; that later in the evening she went with Walter Roberts and others to church, leaving the church with them, and Roberts was driving; she was on the front seat with him, and Annetta Griffin and Leonard Jamieson were on the back seat; that they stopped and parked in front of the house of Willie Woodward, and while there Taylor Woodward and Winston Woodward, appellant, drove up behind them and stopped, got out, and started into the *Page 577 house; that Walter Roberts turned his lights on them; that when this happened, appellant asked him why he did so; nobody answered, and Walter Roberts turned the lights out, and in a few minutes they drove off and in about five minutes came back and parked in the same place; that then appellant came up and again stopped right behind them; that appellant came up in front of their car with a shotgun in a shooting position; that she thought it was time to leave, and got out of the car and ran into the house, after which she heard two shots; that the louder shot was the first one.

Annetta Griffin testified to these same facts, stating that Lillian Griffin started out of the car and appellant told her to get back in, but instead she jumped out and started towards Willie Woodward's; that she then got out of the car and proceeded to leave too, and, when she got in the house, she heard two shots; that the first shot was the louder of the two.

Leonard Jamieson testified that he was with Annetta Griffin on the back seat of the car when it was parked in front of Willie Woodward's house, and Walter Roberts and Lillian Griffin were on the front seat; that a car parked behind them and Winston Woodward, appellant, Oren and Taylor Woodward got out of it and started in the house; that Walter Roberts turned the lights on them, but, upon being asked not to, he turned the lights off; that they then drove off and returned in 30 minutes to the same parking place, and a car parked behind them, and appellant came up with a shotgun in his hands in a shooting position, and fired it at Walter Roberts, who, at that moment, had his hand over the back seat and got his pistol out of the car pocket, but just as he did so he was shot by appellant, and Roberts shot his pistol through the board of the car into the ground; that appellant, Oren and Taylor Woodward then left, and he carried Walter Roberts to the physician's house.

E.L. Moore testified that Leonard Jamieson lived *Page 578 on his place, and that, after the killing, Jamieson took him to the place where Walter Roberts' car had been parked, and he found a bullet hole, on making an examination of Roberts' car, in the floor board, and dug up a bullet out of the ground, which bullet was offered in evidence.

E.S. Cook, marshal of Calhoun City, testified that he talked to Jamieson, who told him he did not know who killed Walter Roberts.

Tolley Williams said that three or four days after the homicide Lillian Griffin told him that Taylor Woodward shot Walter Roberts, and Evaline Deloach said that she told her the same thing on the day after the killing.

Taylor Woodward testified that he left the church with Winston Woodward; that they parked in front of Walter Roberts' car and the lights were turned on them; that appellant said, "Don't turn those lights on," and Roberts said, "You country son of bitch, if you dont like it I will shoot hell out of you;" that Walter Roberts had a shiny pistol in a shooting position; that they had gone to get Oren, and that he (the witness) came out and drove off to a CCC camp, and on the way overtook Oren, and they returned to James Holland's house for appellant, and parked behind the Roberts car; that he (witness) started after appellant, Winston Woodward, walked up to the Roberts car and said, "Good evening, how are you all," and that nothing was said in reply; that in about two minutes appellant walked up and asked who was in that car, and some one told him Walter Roberts; that appellant and the witness started off and Walter Roberts said, "Hold on there, I want to see you," and about that time a pistol fired and the blaze from the pistol went right out toward Winston, who was neither saying or doing anything to Walter Roberts.

James Holland testified he heard two shots outside his house and that the first one sounded like a pistol because it went "bow" and the last one was a shotgun because it went "boom." He further testified that, when Roberts *Page 579 found out earlier in the evening that Annetta Griffin had gone off with the Woodward boys, he said, "If the Woodward boys ever crossed his trail he was going to kill them," and that Roberts then had a shiny pearl-handled pistol.

Willie Sam Chandler testified that on the night before the killing Walter Roberts came to her home with Lillian Griffin and asked her where she had been all the evening, and, when she told him she had been with the Woodward boys, Roberts said, "Some one is going to get killed tonight." In rebuttal, Lillian Griffin testified that Roberts did not exhibit a pistol at that house, nor did he make any such statement as testified to by Willie Sam Chandler.

James Holland signed a statement, and in arguing the case the district attorney started to read this statement, to which objection was made and sustained.

At the September 1936 term the first term of the court after the killing, application was made for a continuance on the ground that Oren Woodward, who seems not to be related to appellant, was absent, and process was issued to several counties to secure this witness, but he was not found. The case was continued, and when tried the witness, Oren Woodward, was sick, and there was testimony to the effect that he was unable to attend court, and it was thought he was afflicted with tuberculosis. The court appointed the county health officer to make an examination of Oren Woodward and report to the court, which report showed that Oren Woodward was able to attend court, having been suffering from pleurisy, which had cleared up considerably, and it would not endanger his health or life to attend court. The court thereupon offered to furnish a conveyance to bring Oren to court, but this was not accepted, and motion was made for another continuance, which motion was overruled. It was stated that an affidavit of the sick witness was attached to the motion, and that said Oren Woodward, the sick witness, signed this affidavit *Page 580

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Bluebook (online)
177 So. 531, 180 Miss. 571, 1937 Miss. LEXIS 127, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/woodward-v-state-miss-1937.