State v. Allemon
State v. Allemon
Opinion of the Court
Three accused, namely, Jules and Ovey Allemon and Forestier Meyer, were charged by indictment with having struck Bernard Richard with an iron pump with intent to murder him. Jules Allemon pleaded guilty. The other two were tried, convicted and sentenced, and have appealed.
At a ball at the house of a Mr. Castille, some one had stolen a cake belonging to Mrs. Richard, the wife of the man who was struck; and from some cause or other the accused Ovey Allemon began fussing with this lady, and using vulgar language, and singing and saying that no one could put him out. Among other offensive expressions used, he called Mrs. Richard a s-of a b-. Mr. Castille came in, and with the assistance of others put him out. This was half an hour, or an hour, before the assault upon Richard,, and was, moreover, in the ballroom, whereas the assault took place in the kitchen. Some 10 or 20 minutes before this assault, some one unknown threw ’a bottle at a Miss Meyer
The judgment appealed from is set aside, and the case is remanded for trial.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- STATE v. ALLEMON
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- 1 case
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- Syllabus
- (Syllabus by Editorial Staff.) 1. Homicide In a prosecution for assault with intent to murder, committed by three persons by striking the person assaulted with an iron pump at a ball, evidence that one of defendants had been disorderly and was put out of the ballroom, that he used offensive language to the wife of the person assaulted, that some one threw a bottle at a girl in the ballroom, and that an altercation ensued, wherein one of the defendants stated, in effect, that he had companions who would back him, to which another defendant agreed, held not admissible, as showing a conspiracy among the defendants to commit the assault. 2. Criminal law >@=3363 — Evidence inadmissible as res gestee in prosecution for assault with intent to kill. In a prosecution for assault with intent to murder, committed by three persons by striking the person assaulted with an iron pump at a ball, evidence that one of the defendants had been disorderly and was put out of the ballroom, that he used offensive language to the wife of the person assaulted, that some one threw a bottle at a girl in 'the ballroom, and that an altercation ensued, wherein one of the defendants stated, in effect, that he had companions who would back him, to which another defendant agreed, held> not admissible as res gestae. 3. Homicide In a prosecution for assault with intent to murder, committed by three persons by striking the person assaulted with an iron pump at a ball, evidence that one of the defendants had been disorderly and was put out of the ballroom, that he used offensive language to the wife of the person assaulted, that some one threw a bottle at a girl in the ballroom, and that an altercation ensued, wherein one of the defendants stated, in effect, that he had companions who would back him, to which another defendant agreed, after having been improperly admitted, held not cured by an instruction to disregard.