Wootton v. State

337 S.W.2d 651, 232 Ark. 300, 1960 Ark. LEXIS 403
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedMay 30, 1960
Docket4975
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 337 S.W.2d 651 (Wootton 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
Wootton v. State, 337 S.W.2d 651, 232 Ark. 300, 1960 Ark. LEXIS 403 (Ark. 1960).

Opinion

Paul Ward, Associate Justice.

Richard Wootton, appellant herein, was convicted of murder in the second degree and sentenced to 15 years in the State Penitentiary allegedly for killing one Ulice Miller in the late evening of October 17, 1959.

About noon on the above mentioned date appellant and the deceased, after completing a business transaction, planned to have a fish fry that evening at a designated site. It was also mentioned that others might be invited. Pursuant to this plan the deceased and one Dow-ell Clark went by appellant’s home around 3 o’clock that afternoon and loaded appellant’s boat on Clark’s pickup truck and then returned to the home of the deceased. Appellant purchased the necessary groceries and drove by deceased’s home about 4 o’clock when the three white men decided to send three negro men ahead to the “water hole” in Clark’s truck to make preparation for the fish fry. The three white men had some liquor, or one of them had some liquor, when they left the home of the deceased for the fish fry, and on the way they bought and drank some more liquor, arriving at the designated site around 5 o’clock. Appellant took along a .351 caliber rifle, Clark took a .22 caliber rifle, and the deceased took a 12-gauge shotgun. Later, around 8:30 o’clock while supper was being served appellant and Clark engaged in a controversy, and presently in a fight, over a cup of coffee. It seems that one of the negro men filled appellant’s cup too full of coffee after being told to only partially fill it. After this difficulty was apparently settled temporarily appellant and Clark engaged in one or two more fights in which the deceased intervened in behalf of Clark for the alleged reason that Clark was physically handicapped. The outcome of these difficulties was that appellant shot the deceased twice with his .351 rifle.

On appeal appellant relies on four designated grounds for a reversal of the judgment of the trial court. One challenges the sufficiency of the evidence, and relates to an Instruction refused by the trial court. The other three grounds challenge Instructions given by the court.

One. We cannot agree with appellant’s contentions that the evidence is insufficient to support the conviction of murder in the second degree. Appellant’s main point, in this connection, is that there is no evidence from which the jury could find the necessary element of malice. It is pointed out that the three white men involved had been the very best of friends up until the time this unfortunate occurrence took place. We agree that malice is a necessary element to constitute murder in the second degree. In Ballentine v. State, 198 Ark. 1037, 132 S. W. 2d 384 (at page 1039 of the Arkansas Reports) this Court said: “Malice, however, is a necessary element of murder, either in the first or second degree, and it must be either express or implied.”

The testimony relied on by appellant in his brief is substantially as hereafter set out. One of the negro men, known as “Sundown”, testified: We were all sitting around eating and I started to pour Mr. Wootton a cup of coffee; lie said lie just wanted a half a cup and I had it a little fuller than he wanted — he squeezed the paper cup a little too tight and some of the coffee ran out on his hand; I started pouring him some coffee in a glass cup and Mr. Clark spoke up and said “He don’t want no whole cup”; appellant looked around to Mr. Clark and asked what he had to do with it; they talked around a little bit but I don’t know just what they said; I looked around when appellant reached up and snatched Mr. Clark off the bumper of his truck and Mr. Clark just lay there with his legs crossed; the deceased said “You all quit that”; then the deceased pulled appellant off of Mr. Clark, and they started back to eating. Later while I was standing with my back to them I looked around and saw that appellant had Mr. Clark down again; the deceased walked up and said “You boys stop this, we want to have a good time”; the deceased caught Mr. Wootton in the back of his shirt collar and said “Get up off of that boy, Richard” (meaning the appellant); we started eating again when appellant reached for Mr. Clark again and the deceased ran up to stop him and the next thing I knew appellant and the deceased were “tussling” around; the deceased walked toward the fire and appellant walked between the trucks — he took a gun out of a scabbard and said “I am going to kill both of you s — of—h—.” I saw Mr. Miller as he was falling and he didn’t have anything in his hands. Howell Clark’s testimony was substantially as follows: We were eating and “Sundown” was pouring coffee; the cup he poured for appellant was too full and he said “I told you to pour me a half a cup”; “Sundown” got a glass cup and poured appellant coffee in it — I told him to pour a half a cup and appellant jerked me down; the deceased talked to appellant and got him to get up; I got up and appellant ran into me and knocked me down and the deceased helped me up; the deceased got between us and he and appellant scuffled; the deceased got up and started walking toward the fire, and appellant got up and went to his truck and pulled the rifle out and said “I am going to kill both of you s— of-b------.” One of the negro men named Easter testified in substance: Appellant told “Sundown” to get some coffee — he didn’t want a full cup; from then on I don’t know what happened until I saw appellant on Mr. Clark; and I didn’t pay much attention; in a little while I saw appellant had Mr. Clark down again and about that time the deceased got on appellant; the next thing that came to my attention was appellant taking a gun out of a scabbard and when I heard the shooting I was gone. The other negro man, Anthony Herron, testified: It seemed like Clark hit appellant on the head with something and then appellant grabbed him around the leg and they went down — the deceased wasn’t in it then but he got up and pulled appellant off of Clark and said “Don’t fight that crippled man”; the deceased got appellant loose from Clark, but they all continued fighting again; while they were out there I heard a gun fire and I left • — ■ later I heard two shots. Appellant testified substantially as follows: About 8:30 o’clock we had just finished eating and a negro poured a cup of coffee — I reached and got my cup; I reached and got the one mug of coffee and Clark said: “I want that cup” and I said your wife ought to have fixed you a cup if you wanted one and the next thing I knew he hit me with a bottle, I just reached and knocked his feet out from under him and we piled up there — we were all three fighting; we fought over an area as big’ as 10 or 15 feet and when I knew anything Clark had got to his pickup and fired a shot; I broke loose from Miller and made for my pickup and Miller ran around to where Clark was — and I came to my truck and opened the door and drug my rifle out and said “S — o—b------ put your guns down and come out” and they said “You put yours down and come out.” I said “No, it’s two against one”. They didn’t say a word and when I knowed anything Miller came around within 50 feet and that is when I shot — it was dark; I fired two shots although I had more cartridges in my gun; I quit shooting because I saw Miller fall. I had known the deceased six or seven years and we were friends; when I first saw the man that I shot he was between the trees and he squared himself with a shotgun; I couldn’t tell in the dim light who it was; I fired the shot at the man I shot to save my life; I saw the gnn and when he fell I quit shooting.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
337 S.W.2d 651, 232 Ark. 300, 1960 Ark. LEXIS 403, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wootton-v-state-ark-1960.