Court Opinion

ID: 7995122
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-09-09 01:35:54.157092+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:35:31.181110
License: Public Domain

Cqoic, J.,
delivered the opinion of the court.
The appellant, Eddie Lee, was convicted in the circuit court of the Second district of Hinds county on a charge of murder, and was sentenced to be hanged, and from this conviction and sentence he prosecuted this appeal.
This is a companion case to that of Lester Hurd v. State, 102 So. 293, which was decided by this court on December. 15th, and the testimony is, in part, the same. Eoosevelt Richardson and Walter Johnson were witnesses in both cases, and their testimony is practically the same in both cases, and reference is made to the opinion in the Hurd case for a statement of the substance of the testimony of these two witnesses. The additional material facts testified to by these witnesses in the present case were that they both positively identified the appellant as being, one of the party of three men who robbed the said witnesses on the train near Edwards; that the appellant was at that time armed with an automatic pistol; and that, at the point of his pistol, he made them leave the train at Edwards; and that he was aboard this train when it pulled out through Edwards.
*340J. M. Moore was also a witness in both cases, and his testimony in both cases is the same, and the substance thereof will be found set out in the opinion in the Hurd case.
/ Will Hamilton testified that he followed Moore down the south side of the train; that when the shooting started on the north side of the train, and some distance in front of him, he came forward and crossed over the train to where Lancaster was; that he then met Lancaster, and was told by him that the parties they were after were in the, car just ahead of them; that they went forward and stepped or jumped upon the car, the witness being just slightly in advance of Lancaster; that just as he straightened up on the car the parties in the car again began shooting, two of the shots taking effect in the witness; that he could only see the form or bulk of two men doing the shooting; and that, if there were others in the car, he could not see them in the dark. He further testified that he did not recognize the men in the car, and could not tell whether they were negroes or white men, and did not know when Lancaster was killed; that as soon as he, Hamilton, was shot he crossed back to the south side of the train where Moore was; and that Moore was then shooting at some one running away from the train.
John Simmons, the chief of police of the city of Jackson, testified that he arrested the appellant at the home of? his mother in the city of Jackson on.Sunday afternoon following the killing of Lancaster on Saturday night; that when he found the appellant he was in bed, claiming to be sick; that when he made him get out of bed he discovered that there was a wound in his foot which appeared to be a bullet wound; that there was also a hole through his shoe which in position corresponded with the wound in his foot; that appellant stated that he shot his foot while cleaning his pistol the evening before, and that he was sitting in a swing on *341the front gallery of his home at the time he wounded himself; and that at the time of the arrest he secured from the appellant’s home an automatic pistol which he claimed belonged to his mother.
The witness was then asked a question concerning a statement or confession made to him by appellant after his arrest, and as to whether the statement was free and voluntary. An objection was interposed on the ground that the question as to whether the statement wus free and voluntary should be determined by the court. The court thereupon stated: “If it is uncontradicted, it is a question for the court. If it is a question in dispute, it is a question of fact for the jury.” Thereupon the jury was retired, and the court examined the witness upon the point. He testified that there was no hope or promise of reward held out to appellant; no duress or any kind of force used to coerce him, and that no promise was made to him that if he would make a statement or confession it would be to his advantage, but, on the contrary, that he told the appellant “all the way through that anything he said would be used against him.” At the conclusion of this examination the appellant renewed his objection, but the objection was overruled, the court stating: “The court’s view is that, if the state’s testimony shows it was voluntary, and the defendant’s testimony refutes that, that would raise a question for the jury to determine whether that statement was competent.” The witness then repeated before the jury his testimony to the effect that the statement made to him by the defendant was free and voluntary, and he testified that the appellant told him, in the presence of C. C. Gilmore, the jailer, that on the night of the killing he, the appellant, and Clarence and Lester Hurd were coming; from Vicksburg on a freight train; that they robbed two negroes on the train near Edwards; that they came on the train to Bolton; that when the train reached Bolton it went on a side track, *342and then some white men came in' and told them to throw up their hands and consider themselves under arrest; that when they did that Lester Hurd and Clarence Hurd commenced shooting; that he, the appellant, had an automatic pistol, but did not shoot; that he threw up his hands and ran, and was shot in the foot when he was running-; that he came on around east of Bolt on and caught the same train and rode to a tank near Jackson, where he got off the train and went to his home.
The jailer, Gilmore, testified that he was present when < the appellant made this statement to the chief of police; that there was no offer of reward or inducement of any kind made to him to induce him to make the statement, and that no threat or intimidation of any kind was used toward the appellant to induce the statement, and that he stated that he was in company with Clarence and Lester Hurd at the time of the shooting; that he, Gilmore, did not hear or remember the entire conversation, but that he heard him state that when the shooting began he threw up his hands and ran, and was then shot.
With the testimony of this witness the state closed its case, and thereupon the appellant moved the court “to exclude the evidence offered by the state and direct a verdict for the defendant, because the alleged confessions were not shown beyond a reasonable doubt to have been free and voluntary; and for the further reason that they fail to show who actually committed the crime with which the defendant is charged; and for the further reason that, if the alleged confessions were true and properly admissible as evidence, they fail to connect the defendant with the crime charged in the indictment, either as principal or as accessory before the fact; and for the further reason that, if the alleged confession proves anything, it proves that he was an accessory after the fact, and as such can’t be convicted on the indictment charging him with murder.”
In passing on this motion.the court said:
*343“On the question as to whether the confession was voluntary, according to the proof, I think it is shown by the testimony of these witnesses beyond any question that the admissions made by the defendant were voluntary; it is certainly within the rule laid down by any authority I know anything about.
“On the question of the sufficiency of the testimony to justify the jury in finding’ the defendant guilty, it is shown by the evidence here that this -defendant and others had recently and at a short distance away committed a felony; that the officers had been notified of this fact, and, as was their duty, were undertaking to apprehend the alleged felons. A clear inference from this testimony is that this defendant was present. The evidence shows that in the car there were two or three persons. The evidence is clear th^t the shooting was done by at least three different pistols. In addition to that the evidence is that the pistol of this defendant had been recently fired. I think, in view of all of these facts, it is for the jury to say whether or not this defendant did or did not participate in the killing of Ollie Lancaster, and for these reasons the motion will be overruled. ’ ’
The appellant introduced a number of witnesses to establish an alibi covering the entire period of time from Friday, the day before the killing, up to the time of his arrest on Sunday afternoon. The several members of appellant’s family testified that he was sick and in bed at his home all day on Saturday preceding the killing Saturday night; that about nine o’clock Saturday night he got out of bed and took his mother’s automatic-pistol and began greasing it before the fire in the room; that he carried the pistol out on the front gallery of the house, and shortly thereafter they heard a pistol shot; that the appellant returned to the room, saying that he had shot himself in the foot; that upon examination they discovered a pistol wound in his foot; *344that they called a doctor to treat this wound the following morning; and that he remained in bed until his arrest that afternoon. Another witness testified that she visited the home of appellant on this Saturday afternoon and that he was then in bed, claiming to be sick. Other witnesses, living near the appellant’s home testified that about nine o’clock on this Saturday night they heard a pistol shot at or near the appellant’s home.
The appellant as a witness in his own behalf testified that he was sick and in bed at his home all day Saturday preceding the killing Saturday night, and his version of the manner in which he was wounded was1 the same as that of the other witnesses. He testified that while he was greasing the pistol he went on the front gallery to. cool off; that he thought he had removed all the cartridges from the pistol; that he laid down in a swing and placed his foot up in the chains thereof; that he snapped the pistol and it fired, wounding his foot. He further testified that he was not on the freight train on the night of the killing; that he did not board this train at or near Vicksburg; and that he had never been in the city of Vicksburg.
On cross-examination he was asked if he was'not at Pantherburn on the line of the Yazoo & Mississippi Valley Railroad on Friday afternoon preceding the killing, and if he did not see certain employees of the railroad there, and he denied that he was at Panther-burn on this occasion or that he had ever been there. Upon the question of the admissibility of the alleged confession he testified that he made the statement testified to by the chief of police, but claimed that the statements were made in response to leading questions which suggested to him the desired answer; that he was at the time laboring under great fear of being lynched; that the confession was made after repeated attempts on the part of the officers to secure from him some *345admission of guilt; that on the occasion when he made the confession the chief of police said to him, “You had better come on down and tell something. If you keep on trying to tell this kind of a lie they will hang you. If you say you don’t know anything about that killing of the white man, they will pull a rope around your neck, nigger; but if you go ahead and say you did the robbing of the two negroes, I will get you out of it light. Tell me who did the shooting and the killing, and if you will tell me that I will probably get- you a life sentence in the penitentiary or a few years, and you will be out.” He further testified to other similar statements made to him at the time by the chief of police; that there were several men present at the time, including the jailer, Gilmore; that previous to that time certain parties had come into the jail and identified him as being present on the train; that the night jailer, J. W. Young, had stated in his presence that they were going to hang the appellant. The other inmates of the jail also testified that the night jailer made this statement in the presence of the appellant.
On cross-examination of Martha Ann McMullen, the mother of appellant, and Mose McMullen, his stepbrother, they were asked if, on the occasion of the arrest of the appellant, they did not state to Mr. Simmons that the appellant came home that morning between three and five o ’clock and that he was wounded when he came home. They denied making the statement, and in rebuttal Simmons, over the objection of the appellant, was permitted to testify that they did make the statement.
In rebuttal P. W. Mulverhill, a freight conductor on the Yazoo & Mississippi Valley Káilroad, was asked whether he had ever seen the defendant before, and, upon answering, in the affirmative, he was then asked where and when he had seen him, and he replied, “It was Friday before Christmas.” Counsel for the de*346fendant thereupon stated: “The defendant object^ to this,” and the court in ruling upon thé objection stated: “I think the scope of the alibj., as undertaking to be laid by the defendant, began with Friday; it seems clear to me that the evidence in this case, and the establishment of the alibi, began with Friday evening” and the objection was overruled. The, witness then testified that about three o’clock on Friday afternoon before the killing on Saturday night, he saw the defendant, with two other negroes, at Pantherburn, about sixty miles north of Vicksburg, and that he was about three or four car lengths from him. The witness was then examined as follows:
“Q. Was he facing you? A. Yes, sir; he shot at me.
“Q. You called him to get off? A. That is why he shot at me.
“Q. How many times did he shoot at you? A. He shot at me- one time. ’ ’
Thereupon counsel for the defendant announced':
“We move to exclude this evidence on the same ground,” and this motion was overruled-. Other witnesses were also introduced in rebuttal to deny certain statements of the appellant and other witnesses as to threats directed at the appellant, but this testimony is not particularly .material to a decision of the questions raised by the assignments of error and argument for the appellant.
The assignments of error which we deem it necessary to notice here are those which are argued at length by counsel for the appellant. The first of these is that the court erred in admitting evidence of the robbery committed by the appellant and his companions a short while prior to the killing, and for which crime the officers were attempting to arrest him; and also- in admitting testimony showing the presence of the appellant at a point north of Vicksburg on the day before the killing, and that he then and there shot at a man.
*347The admissibility of the testimony tending to show that the appellant and his companions had committed a robbery a short time before the killing was considered in the companion case of Hurd v. State, decided by this court on December 15th, and not yet reported, and it was there held that “in the trial of a person for murder for the killing of an officer attempting to arrest the parties who had committed a robbery, evidence of the commission of such felony by the defendant and his companions is admissible, where it tends do show that the defendant was’present at the time and place of the killing, and tends to establish the identity of the defendant as a participant in the killing, and that it is also admissible as tending to show motive for resisting arrest, and that the defendant and his companions were confederated together for the felonious purpose of robbery and resistance to arrest, and that in furtherance of this common design the officer was killed by one of the conspirators, in which case the killing of the deceased, by whichever of them done, would be the act of each and all of them,” and also that it was admissible “for the purpose of showing that the officers were justified in going to the place for the purpose of arresting the participants in the robbery, and as tending t<3 show that the appellant, with his confederates, and armed with a pistol, was on the train and present at the time and place of the shooting, and had an opportunity to participate therein. ’ ’ This holding is applicable and controlling here, and disposes of the'content] on that the testimony in reference to this robbery was inadmissible.
In view of the fact that the appellant offered testimony to show that he was in the city of Jackson from Friday morning until his arrest after the killing, and the testimony of the appellant himself that he had never been at Pantherburn, and that he had never been in the city of Vicksburg, and did not board the freight train at *348or near Vicksburg and ride thereon toward the city of Jackson on the night of the killing, and the further fact that in traveling by rail over the direct route from Pantherburn to the city of Jackson one would pass through the city of Vicksburg and the towns of Edwards and Bolton, we think that under the rule announced in the Hurd case the testimony in reference to the Panther-burn episode was admissible as tending to identify the appellant as a companion of the slayers and to show that he was armed with a pistol, and to contradict the testimony of the appellant and his witnesses that he was in the city of Jackson on Friday afternoon and night, and as tending to contradict his testimony that he had not been in the city of' Vicksburg and had not traveled from that place to Jackson during the period covered by the alibi which he sought to establish. The The contention of the appellant now made that, in any event, that portion, of the testimony of this witness stating’ that "he shot at me one time” should have been excluded cannot be maintained for another reason. After the witness testified that he saw the appellant on Friday before the killing on Saturday, a general objection was interposed to this answer of the witness. After testifying in detail as to the circumstances under which he saw him and as to his identification of the appellant, he was then asked this question: "Was he facing you?” To this he answered, "Yes, sir; he nhot at me.” He was then asked the further question: "You called him to get off ? ” He answered, £ £ That is why he shot at me. ’ ’ In both of these answers the reference to the shooting was injected by the witness, and was not responsive to the questions, and no motion was then made to exclude this portion of the testimony of the witness. The witness was then asked the following question: "How many times, did he shoot at you?” and he replied: "He shot at me one time.” Thereupon a motion was made "to exclude this evidence on the same grounds.” This-*349general motion to exclude covered the entire testimony of the witness, and no specific motion was made to exclude that part in reference to the shot, and, as held hy this court in the case of Magee v. State, 21 So. 130, error in admitting certain portions of the testimony of a particular witness is not reached by a motion to strike out the whole of the testimony of such witness, other parts of which are perfectly material and competent.
’ The next assignment of error argmed by counsel is that the court erred in admitting in evidence the purported confession without first having fully examined into the evidence ■ in the absence of the jury and determining whether or not it was beyond a reasonable doubt free and voluntar}*-.
It is undoubtedly true that the court erred in his statement of the rule to be applied in determining the competency and admissibility of a confession, but in the application of the rule and in the conclusions and result reached we do not think there was any prejudicial error. The rule for determining the competency and admissibility of confessions is clearly stated in the case of Ellis v. State, 65 Miss. 44, 3 So. 188, 7 Am. St. Rep. 634, as follows:
“Before a confession is received in evidence against a defendant in a criminal trial, it should be shown that it was voluntary; that is to say, made without the influence of hope or fear being exerted on the accused by any other person. Whether it was so made or not, is a preliminary matter for the court and not for the jury to determine. The jury have nothing to do with the competency of evidence; that is a question exclusively for the determination of the court. The court should decide in the, first place, after investigation, whether a proposed confession shall be heard by the jury or not, and, if it is deemed competent by the court, and is permitted to go to the jury, they are the exclusive judges of its weight and value as evidence. When it is proposed *350to introduce in evidence a confession of the accused against himself, the court should, upon a preliminary investigation conducted out of the presence and hearing of the jury, if requested by the defendant, determine whether it is competent or not. If satisfied, after hearing all the testimony pertinent to the inquiry, that the confession is admissible, it should go to the jury, but, unless it plainly appears that it was free and voluntary —if there is a reasonable doubt against its being free ■or voluntary—it should be excluded from the jury. Simmons v. State, 61 Miss. 243.
“After a confession has been admitted by the court, either party has a right to produce before the jury the same evidence which was submitted to the court when it was called upon to decide the question of competency, and all other facts and circumstances relevant to the confession, or affecting its weight or credit as evidence; and if it should be made to appear at this point, or any other, during the progress of the trial, that the confession was made under such circumstances as to render it incompetent as evidence, it should be excluded by the court.”
In the case at bar, at the request of the defendant, the court conducted a preliminary investigation as to the competency of the confession, out of the presence and hearing of the jury. At this hearing the defendant did not ask to be permitted to cross-examine the witness, and did not offer, or ask to be permitted to offer, any testimony bearing upon the competency of the confession. The testimony of the witness before the court, if believed, undoubtedly showed that the confession was 'competent, and it was admitted by the court. The same evidence which had been submitted to the court was then produced before the jury; and at the cbnclusion of the testimony for the state, in passing upon a motion to exclude the confession because it was not shown beyond a reasoable doubt to *351have been free and voluntary, the court held that—“On the question as to whether the confession was voluntary, according to the proof, I think it is shown by the testimony of these witnesses beyond any question that the admissions made by the defendant were voluntary.”
Upon the testimony before ■ the court it is manifest that no other conclusion could have been reached than that the confession was free and voluntary, and in the result reached we think the law as announced in the Ellis ease was followed. At the preliminary investigation conducted by the court to determine the competency of this confession' the defendant did not offer to introduce any testimony bearing upon this question, and did not suggest to the court that he desired to introduce any such evidence, or that he had any to offer, and having failed so to do, he cannot now complain that, upon the evidence before the court, it was held to be competent.
The next assignment of error argued by counsel is based upon the action of the court in permitting the chief of police of the city of Jackson to testify in rebuttal that, on the occasion when he arrested the appellant, Mose McMullen and Martha Ann McMullen told him that the appellant came .to his home about four or five o’clock on the morning after the shooting, and that his foot was then wounded by a pistol shot. On cross-examination these witnesses had denied that they so stated, and it is the contention of the appellant that this matter was collateral, immaterial, and irrelevant, and that it is not competent to impeach or contradict a witness about a collateral or immaterial matter. In support of this rule counsel have cited many authorities, but rely principally upon the case of Williams v. State, 73 Miss. 820, 19 So. 826, in which many authorities are collated and the subject is exhaustively discussed, and we agree with counsel that the holding’ of the court in this case is sound, and that the court there laid down the proper test to be- applied in determining what evi*352deuce offered in contradiction of a witness is admissible. We think, however, that the contention here is based upon a misconception of the nature of the fact embodied in this unsworn statement of these witnesses. These witnesses, as -well as others, had testified that the defendant was at home on day preceding the homicide on Saturday night, and that he spent the entire night there, and was wounded by a pistol accidentally discharged at the home. The movements of the appellant on the night of the homicide were vitally material as shedding lig*ht on the question of whether or not he was present at the place of the homicide, and if the state, in connection with the other testimony in the record, had offered testimony to show that the appellant did not reach his home until four or five o’clock on the morning after the homicide, and that he was wounded from a pistol shot when arrived at his home, it clearly would have been material and admissible. The sworn statement of these witnesses was that the appellant was at his home at the time the homicide was committed, and that he received the'wound in the foot from a pistol accidentally discharged by him while at or in his home. The unsworn statement of the witnesses, as testified-to by the officers, was " that he did not reach his home on this night until four or five o ’clock a. m., and that when he came home he was wounded in the foot, and we- think that this was a material matter about which it was clearly competent to contradict the witnesses, and that it comes within the rule laid down in the Williams case, supra, that— “Whilst the unsworn statement out of court may be used to contradict the sworn statement in court, whether the statement sought to be contradicted is made by the witness on his direct examination or on his cross-examination, in either case the statement in court must be one embodying a fact substantive in its nature and relevant to the issue made in the case.”
Finally, it is argued that the testimony is- insufficient to support the verdict of the jury, this question having *353been raised in the court below by a motion to exclude the evidence and direct a verdict of not guilty, which was made at the conclusion of the testimony for the state, and by a request for a peremptory instruction at the conclusion of all the testimony.
If the testimony of the state’s witnesses is believed, the conclusion is inescapable that the appellant was on the freight train at the time and place of the homicide, and there is ample testimony to warrant the conclusion that a short while before the shooting, a robbery was committed on this train by the appellant and his confederates, and that they were all armed with pistols, and we think these facts, in connection with the admissions of the appellant, and with the fact that the officers were greeted with a fusillade of shots when they approached the train for the purpose of arresting the parties who had committed the robbery, and all the other facts and circumstances surrounding the killing, as testified to by the witnesses, were sufficient to warrant the jury in finding that the appellant was present at the time and place of the shooting, and that he and his companions were confederated together for the unlawful and felonious purpose of robbery and resistance to arrest, the natural and probable consequence of which involved the contingency of taking human life, and that in furtherance of this common design the officer was killed by one of the conspirators, in which case the killing of the deceased, by whichever of them actually done, was the act of each and all of them.
We do not think there is any merit in any of the other assignments of error, and consequently the judgment of the court below is affirmed, and Friday, January 30, 1925, is fixed as the date for the execution of the sentence.

Affirmed.

Anderson, J., dissents.