Parker v. Tullos

Decision Date09 April 1928
Docket Number27115
Citation150 Miss. 680,116 So. 531
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
PartiesPARKER v. TULLOS, SHERIFF. [*]

Division A

APPEAL from circuit court of Smith county, HON. W. L. CRANFORD Judge.

Habeas corpus by Wilson Parker against C. J. Tullos, sheriff. Judgment for defendant, and relator appeals. Reversed and rendered.

Judgment reversed.

R. S. Tullos and S. R. Parker, for appellant.

We submit, that in our candid judgment of the law in this case that the court erred in overruling the motion of appellant asking to be admitted to bail upon the state's testimony, because it is an inherent right under the fundamental laws of the state. The Constitution of Mississippi, section 29. We submit that in this case that the proof is not evident nor presumption great. We contend that the court erred in entering its final order denying him bail and cite for our authority: Ex parte Ray, 30 Miss. 673; Moore v. State, 36 Miss. 137; Ex parte Beall, 39 Miss. 715; Ex parte Bridewell, 57 Miss. 39; Ex parte Patterson, 56 Miss. 161; Ex parte Hamilton, 65 Miss. 147.

We submit that this court, now sitting in judgment of the right of the appellant, appreciates the fact that it occupies the same position as did the judge of the lower court when this case was heard and bail denied and we feel that on this record that the state's theory of this case was not supported by sufficient testimony to exclude every well-founded reasonable doubt as to the relator's guilt, and that the prayer of the petition of the relator should have been granted.

Rufus Creekmore, Assistant Attorney-General, for the state.

Counsel first argue that it is impossible to tell what was the initial cause of the death of the deceased and that unless the blow was the initial cause, then the defendant was entitled to be discharged. I do not understand the law to be this. A blow which may be harmless to a person in good health may be fatal to one who is in a weakened condition, or who, on account of other circumstances, is unable physically to withstand it. So likewise by the infliction of a wound which, if treated properly, would not be fatal, yet, if treated improperly, is fatal, a person may be convicted of murder. I understand the law to be that if the wound which is inflicted, under the circumstances in the case is one of the contributing causes to the death of the deceased, then the person inflicting it is guilty. Crum v. State, 64 Miss. 1.

Counsel next insist that testimony of the appellant shows that he acted in self defense. It is true that his testimony does show this, but merely because his testimony shows the facts to be these, does not necessarily mean that his testimony must be believed. If a story is unreasonable, or if it is contradicted by the physical facts in the case, then the jury or the court, as the case may be, is not required to believe it. The physical facts in this case, the inanimate witnesses, or God's witnesses, as they may be called, are contradictory of the story of the defendant. In Street v. State, 43 Miss. 1, the court discusses at length the question of bail in criminal cases. See Ex parte Bridewell, 57 Miss. 39; Ex parte Hamilton, 65 Miss. 147; Ex parte Martin, 97 Miss. 567; State v. Key, 93 Miss. 115, 46 So. 75.

Argued orally by R. S. Tullos, for appellant, and Rufus Creekmore, for appellee.

OPINION

MCGOWEN, J.

Wilson Parker, appellant, filed his petition for a writ of habeas corpus in the circuit court of Smith county, addressed to the judges of the supreme court, or the chancellor, or the circuit judge, of that judicial district. He alleged that, on a charge of murder, he was unlawfully detained by the sheriff of that county because he had been remanded to jail without bail by a justice of the peace. He prayed for a writ of habeas corpus, and that he be enlarged upon bail.

The sheriff answered that he held the defendant, the relator, by virtue of a mittimus issued by Miller, the justice of the peace, upon his judgment remanding the relator to jail without bail.

The matter was heard before the circuit judge; the relator was denied bail, and was again remanded to jail to await the action of the grand jury. From this judgment, the relator appeals to this court.

The facts in this case disclose that on the 9th day of December, 1927, Poley Ainsworth was killed by Wilson Parker, the said Parker being about twenty-two years of age, and Ainsworth, the deceased, about fifty years of age. On Friday, the 10th day of December, 1927, the body of Ainsworth was found lying close beside the bank of a small stream, with a cut place, just above his ear, about an inch long from which blood had run down over his face and upon his clothes. His trouser legs appeared to be wet from his waist down. In the vicinity was found a stick about the size of a man's arm, and in the pockets of the deceased were found three matches, a handkerchief, a closed pocket knife, and a plug of tobacco.

On the morning of the difficulty, the relator, Parker, went to the home of the deceased; they ate dinner together, were friendly, and later left together in search of mules belonging to the defendant's father. No more was seen of the deceased until his body was found by some small school children. Late that afternoon the defendant, Parker, apparently drunk, stopped a car in which were several young men, and was driven home. On the following day the defendant was questioned about the matter, and admitted having had a difficulty with deceased, and said he guessed he hit him harder than he thought. Then he began pulling some money out of his pocket, and said he could prove that it was his and that he could prove where he got it.

One witness testified that shortly before the relator appeared at Ainsworth's home, he (Ainsworth) had in his watch vest pocket some bills, and especially a one hundred dollar bill.

Defendant's wife testified that he had been carrying this one hundred dollar bill some two or three days, but that she did not see same the day of the tragedy.

A witness testified that on Wednesday, before the homicide on Thursday, he, in company with deceased's daughter, heard Ainsworth say to his daughter that he did not have any money with which to pay her for some corn, and that he gave her a check for more than one hundred dollars.

One physician testified that the night Ainsworth remained out, exposed to the elements, was a very cold night, about twenty above zero; that the blow on his head, being the only mark of violence about his person, might have contributed to his death, and that his drinking whisky might have been the cause; that it was possible for a man to freeze to death when drunk.

Another physician testified that he had seen men walking about with no more severe wound than appeared on the deceased's head.

The defendant, Parker, testified that after leaving the deceased's home, and while they were good friends, they began...

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13 cases
  • Motley v. Smith
    • United States
    • Mississippi Supreme Court
    • February 18, 1935
    ... ... a charge of murder held erroneous, where proof was neither ... evident nor presumption great that he was guilty of murder ... Parker ... v. Tullos, 117 So. 531; Elvin Logan v. State, 53 ... Miss. 430; Ex parte Morman, 112 Miss. 15, 72 So. 835; Ex ... parte Wray, 30 Miss. 673; 19 ... ...
  • Hoye v. State
    • United States
    • Mississippi Supreme Court
    • February 5, 1934
    ... ... manifestly and clearly contrary to the weight of the ... evidence ... Cofer ... v. Sheriff, 131 So. 421, 160 Miss. 53; Parker v ... Tullos, 150 Miss. 680, 116 So. 531; Stokes v ... Terrell, 154 Miss. 230, 122 So. 470; Lee v. Sheriff, 165 ... Miss. 756, 144 So. 240 ... ...
  • Kuebler v. Mason
    • United States
    • Mississippi Supreme Court
    • June 27, 2019
    ...tried the cause upon an erroneous conception of the law, or that the judgment is erroneous upon the facts." Parker v. Tullos , 150 Miss. 680, 116 So. 531, 532 (Miss. 1928). We find that the circuit court neither "tried the cause upon an erroneous conception of the law" nor was the judgment ......
  • Cameron v. Thompson
    • United States
    • Mississippi Supreme Court
    • April 5, 1937
    ... ... decision of the trial judge will be affirmed unless it is ... manifestly erroneous, either as to the facts or the law ... Parker ... v. Tullos, 150 Miss. 680, 116 So. 531; Stokes v ... Sheriff, 154 Miss. 231, 122 So. 470 ... County ... judge's suspension of ... ...
  • Request a trial to view additional results

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