State v. Carpenter
Decision Date | 08 May 1974 |
Docket Number | No. 19820,19820 |
Citation | 205 S.E.2d 141,262 S.C. 401 |
Court | South Carolina Supreme Court |
Parties | The STATE, Respondent, v. Harold CARPENTER, Appellant. |
Sol E. Abrams and Richard N. Tapp, of Abrams, Bowen & Townes, Greenville, for appellant.
Atty. Gen., Daniel R. McLeod and Asst. Atty. Gen., Robert M. Ariail, Columbia, and County Sol. C. Victor Pyle, Greenville, for respondent.
Harold Carpenter, the appellant herein, and his brother, Bennett Ray Carpenter, were tried in the Greenville County Court upon the charge of committing an assault and battery of a high and aggravated nature upon Ed Whitmire, a policeman in the Gantt District of Greenville County. The appellant was found guilty as charged while his brother was found not guilty. The appellant made a motion for a new trial and such was refused. He as thereafter sentenced to serve a term of eighteen months, suspended on the service of six months and three years probation. This appeal followed.
During the course of the trial the appellant requested the trial judge to charge the jury (1) that they could find him guilty of a simple assault and battery and (2) that the fist is not generally regarded as a deadly weapon in the infliction of bodily injury. These requests were refused and error is assigned for such refusal.
In State v. Cunningham, 253 S.C. 388, 171 S.E.2d 159, we said:
There is evidence that the appellant, accompanied by two companions, entered the White Horse Restaurant in Greenville at approximately 1:00 a.m. on January 9, 1972. Shortly thereafter, a controversy arose between a waitress and the appellant as to whether or not he had brought liquor into the restaurant in a plastic glass. The waitress advised the appellant that he would have to either dispose of the liquor or leave the restaurant. The appellant then directed vulgar language toward the waitress. She advised Officer Ed Whitmire, who was present in the restaurant, dressed in full police uniform with a badge on his coat and a pistol in his holster at his side, of the disturbance being caused by the appellant. This officer advised the waitress to request the appellant to leave the restaurant. After the waitress had advised the appellant to leave the restarant and his failure so to do, she then enlisted the aid of Officer Whitmire, who told the appellant that he was not going to be served and to leave the premises. The appellant at that time directed vulgar language toward the officers and the waitress, whereupon the officer informed him that he was under arrest.
There is testimony on behalf of the State that the appellant resisted the attempted arrest and struck the officer with his fist several times about his face, eyes and head, inflicting serious injuries. Photographs introduced by the State, without objection, indicated the seriousness of injuries to the head and face which necessitated medical treatment.
The appellant's version of the incident here involved was as follows. He had been at the Cosmopolitan Club, and there had had two drinks from a plastic clear cup and, thereafter, went to the White Horse Restaurant carrying this cup. While in the restaurant a controversy arose with a waitress as to whether this cup contained liquor, because she advised him that a customer was not permitted to drink liquor there, and he explained that there had been liquor in the cup but it was now empty. He then asked another waitress to taste the contents in the cup, and she said there was nothing in the cup but water. He says that he did not know Ed Whitmire was in the restaurant or that he was a police officer. He says that while sitting at the counter some unknown person, without a word being said, shoved him from behind from the stool into the lap of his wife, and he then got up and 'shoved back.' At this point, the appellant was grabbed by his brother, Bennie, and the officer pulled his pistol out of his holster and said, 'I'll below your brains out.' The appellant says he was going to turn and leave the restaurant but that the police officer started beating him in the head with his pistol, and at that time he said to his brother, When the appellant was turned loose by his brother, he then attacked and struck the officer with his fist and did strike other blows while the two were fighting and scuffling. The appellant says that Whitmire never identified himself as being an officer or told him he was under arrest.
It is the position of the State, which is supported by evidence, that the appellant was guilty of an assault and battery of a...
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State v. Littlejohn, 2014-UP-118
... ... Morlan suffered a complex concussion. Furthermore, our ... jurisprudence holds injuries of the type suffered by Agent ... Morlan constitute "serious bodily injury" as a ... matter of law. See State v. Carpenter, 262 S.C. 401, ... 405-06, 205 S.E.2d 141, 142-43 (1974) (finding "there ... [could] be no doubt here that the [victim] received serious ... bodily harm as a result of being struck numerous times by the ... [attacker]" and the victim was struck "several ... times about ... ...
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State v. Foxworth
...and battery since there was no evidence tending to show assailant was only guilty of the lesser included offense. State v. Carpenter, 262 S.C. 401, 205 S.E.2d 141 (1974). The possibility that the jury might have disbelieved the State's evidence as to the circumstances of aggravation and on ......
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State v. Brown
...the assault and battery was accompanied by circumstances of aggravation, namely, the resistance of lawful authority. State v. Carpenter, 262 S.C. 401, 205 S.E.2d 141 (1974); State v. DeBerry, 250 S.C. 314, 157 S.E.2d 637 (1967), cert. denied, 391 U.S. 953, 88 S.Ct. 1857, 20 L.Ed.2d The tria......
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State v. Littlejohn, Appellate Case No. 2011-192126
...injuries of the type suffered by Agent Morlan constitute "serious bodily injury" as a matter of law. See State v.Carpenter, 262 S.C. 401, 405-06, 205 S.E.2d 141, 142-43 (1974) (finding "there [could] be no doubt here that the [victim] received serious bodily harm as a result of being struck......