Carroll v. State, 44326
| Decision Date | 20 March 1967 |
| Docket Number | No. 44326,44326 |
| Citation | Carroll v. State, 196 So.2d 878 (Miss. 1967) |
| Parties | George Denman CARROLL v. STATE of Mississippi. |
| Court | Mississippi Supreme Court |
Robert B. Smith, Robert W. Elliott, Ripley, for appellant.
Joe T. Patterson, Atty. Gen., by Guy N. Rogers, Asst. Atty. Gen., Jackson, for appellee.
Appellant, George Denman Carroll, shot and killed Marshall Drewery at about 3:00 o'clock on the afternoon of January 25, 1966, at the Village of Faulkner in Tippah County.
He was indicted for murder and was tried and convicted in the Circuit Court of Tippah County, and sentenced to serve a life term in the Mississippi State Penitentiary.
A summary of the facts, as disclosed by the record, stated most favorably to the theory of the prosecution follows.
The homicide occurred in the office of a small filling station, photographs of the interior of which are in the record.Appellant concedes that these pictures give a 'fair representation' of the inside of the station at the time of the fatal difficulty.
Appellant testified that some ten years previously he and his father had engaged in a quarrel or difficulty with Drewery, in which Drewery had 'beat up' his father and had shot at appellant.
On the afternoon of the homicide, appellant had arrived first at the filling station, where he had gone to make a telephone call and to get some clothes that the laundry had left there for him.Shortly afterward Drewery arrived and sat down on a stool.Appellant was sitting on a desk.
Robertson, a witness for the prosecution, testified that he was in the station when appellant and Drewery arrived.He said:
'The first I heard, Denman (appellantDenman Carroll) asked him, said, 'What do you think about whooping (sic) an old man'?And he(Drewery) said, 'What'?And he said, 'You remember the time that you and Lyman (Drewery's brother) whooped Daddy over there in the bottom.'He(Drewery) said 'Lyman didn't have nothing to do with that,' and says, 'I was the one that done that,' and says, 'I thought that was over and forgotten.'And he(Drewery) said, 'You going to bring that up again'?'
Appellant replied that he'hadn't forgot it.'When appellant said that, Drewery took off his coat and laid it on a counter and appellant'he out with the gun.'
The witness testified that, when appellant pulled the gun out of his pocket, Drewery 'was standing there with his hands down baside him.'He said that Drewery had nothing in his hands, that his hands were outside of his pockets, and that he was not making any move toward appellant.When appellant drew the gun, according to his own testimony, 'all of the rest of them (other than appellant and Drewery) got up and run out.'
As they left the filling station, a number of shorts were heard.Appellant testified that he emptied his automatic pistol, which contained four cartridges, at Drewery.A doctor and an undertaker stated that there were thirteen bullet wounds on the body of Drewery, but did not undertake to state which were caused by the entrance and which by the exit of bullets.
The testimony of other witnesses tended to corroborate the version of Robertson as to what occurred immediately preceding the shooting.
At least one witness testified that, within two or three minutes after the shooting, appellant, when told that he had killed Drewery, stated: 'I aimed to, * * *' Another witness said to him, 'Denman, you shouldn't have done that.'Appellant replied, 'You can feel sorry for the son of a bitch, if you want to, I don't.'Appellant further said, 'He mistreated my Daddy here years ago and I said then I would get him for it.'
It is undisputed in the record that Drewery had no weapon, unless an ordinary pocket knife which was still in his pocket, unopened, after his death, may be so classified.Also, appellant was heard to say that he had 'got him (Drewery) to admit that he was the one that hit his Daddy at one previous time and said that was what he wanted to know about it.'Appellant then said that he had told his Daddy that he was going to get him.
Appellant denied making these statements, but his testimony regarding the events preceding and at the time he pulled his gun is substantially the same as that of the witnesses who testified for the prosecution.After some discussion as to certain shirts belonging to appellant, which had been laundered and were at the filling station, appellant took offense at a remark made by Drewery about them.Appellant said that he then told Drewery that he did not have to 'whip an old man to get the money' to buy the shirts, referring to the difficulty which had occurred some ten years previously.He said it was then that Drewery took off his coat and stood up and said: 'Let's settle it right now and be done with it.'At that moment, appellant also stood up, drew his pistol from his lefthand pocket and placed it in his right hand.
Appellant admits that it was he who introduced the subject of the old quarrel and admits that Drewery replied, 'I thought that was all forgotten Denman.'Appellant concedes that when Drewery took his coat off that it was then he pulled out the gun, saying, 'I took it out of my left pocket and put it in my right hand.'
He was asked this question: Appellant answered:
Appellant said he wasn't 'paying any attention' and couldn't say whether Drewery had anything in his hands at that time or not, but that his hands were down by his sides when he drew the gun.The reason given by appellant for shooting and killing Drewery was that he was afraid of him and that, although appellant had already drawn his gun, Drewery advanced toward him 'and was moving his hands behing him, I couldn't see what he was going for or anything and he had shot at me once before and whooped my Daddy up with a pistol and I just started shooting and running backwards.'He also said that just before he fired, Drewery said, 'You haven't got guts enough to use that damn gun * * * I'll just stomp the hell out of you right now and be done with it, get it over with.'
On direct examination, appellant had denied that, some two years previously, he had made a threat against Drewery in the presence of witness Rowland and others.In rebuttal, Rowland testified that, on the occasion in question, appellant, in referring to Drewery, said, 'I have a little score that I need to settle with that fellow there.'
Appellant assigns and argues that the trial court committed a number of prejudicial errors, any one of which requires the reversal of this case.The first of these is to the effect that the trial court was in error in permitting the witness Rowland to testify as to this threat made by appellant against Drewery some two years prior to the homicide, for the reason that it was too remote.
In support of this assignment appellant cites Myers v. State, 167 Miss. 76, 147 So. 308(1933)andMackmasters (McMasters) v. State, 81 Miss. 374, 33 So. 2(1902), in which, under the facts in those cases, alleged threats were considered too remote and thus were held inadmissible.
In the case now before this Court, it is conceded by appellant that it was he who introduced the subject of the beating administered to his father by Drewery some ten years previously, and that this remark brought on the fatal quarrel.There is also testimony that immediately following the homicide, appellant stated that he had promised his father that he would 'get' Drewery for that old affront and injury and that in killing Drewery he had done it.It is also clearly in evidence that Drewery's response to appellant was that he thought that the old incident was over and forgotten, and it was appellant who replied then that he hadn't forgotten it.
Under the circumstances in evidence, the jury was warranted in finding, and apparently did find, that the bitter memory of this old quarrel, when Drewery had beaten his father, years ago, had continued to smoulder in the mind of appellant for the ten years intervening and that this threat, uttered against Drewery and testified to by Robertson, was an expression of his long entertained animosity toward Drewery and of his intention eventually to 'settle the score' and to 'get' him for it.These facts distinguish this case from Mackmasters (McMasters)...
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