Turner v. United States
Opinion of the Court
The defendant, William H. Turner, was convicted of murder in the first degree and sentenced to death. The assigned errors relied on are in the admission of testimony and the refusal to set aside the verdict as contrary to the law and the evidence. These facts are not in dispute.
At about midnight of May 22, 1920, Thomas M1. Moore and Miss Pearl Clark, his fiancée, were sitting in an automobile on the side of the road from Washington to Alexandria at the end of the bridge. The defendant came up, and after exchanging a few words he and Moore shot two or three times at each other. Moore was killed almost instantly, and the defendant was slightly wounded in the right thigh and thumb. Miss Clark and the defendant were the surviving witnesses of the tragedy. '
The real issue was made by the conflict in the testimony as to defendant’s purpose in approaching the car and during the altercation with Moore, as indicated by his words and actions. According to Miss Clark, defendant came to the car, presented a pistol at Moore, sitting in the rear seat of the automobile, and demanded what Moore had, saying that he wanted a dollar; Moore answered he had nothing; Moore, on defendant’s demand, got out of the car, and Miss Clark also got out; Moore, in response to her request to give defendant what he had, repeated that he had nothing; defendant then demanded what Miss Clark had, threatening her if she made an outcry, and she took
The defendant gave this account:
“At that time I was in a lady’s house, sitting around about 2% hours, and started away from her house, and came down on the road, and some boys were shooting crap, and they had a quart of whisky, and I saw the bottle of whisky, and I stopped and joined them, and lost a couple of dollars, or something like that, and after that they stopped and come back up, and I started back to "Washington to the south end of the. bridge. X had three car tickets in my pocket, but did not have a penny to pay my way, and as I was walking along the electric railroad track X could see a car sitting there between two trees, and I walked over to see what was the matter. I thought It was an accident. When I got there the party raised up and sat down in the seat, and when they raised up I said, ‘I beg your pardon, I thought you had an accident;’ and they said, ‘No, nothing was the matter.’ X said, ‘Sport, you cannot give mo a dollar?’ and I thought he was getting the dollar, and he got out a gun and shot at me, and shot again and hit me in the hip, and when he shot the second time I pnliod on him and shot, and he said to the lady, ‘Pearl, he has shot me.’ She was standing about a foot and a half from him, and he was standing at the radiator, three feet rrom the rear, when I got the second shot, and X pulled out my gun and shot back again the second time, and he fell, and J said, ‘Here is where he shot me, about.’ I did not know that I had shot him that bad. I went back to see if I could take him in the car to Washington, and that is the time she gave me the rings, and she went on towards Washington to the south end of the bridge, and I had to go south, and she went on hollering, and I came south, and she went north.”
The testimony of Dr. Swain that in his opinion Moore must have collapsed immediately upon being shot tends to support defendant’s statement that Moore fired the first shot. Defendant on cross-examination admitted that Miss Clark handed to him her rings and watch before any shot was fired, but insisted that she did so in response to his mere begging request for a dollar.
Testimony as to this act of the defendant, following the homicide with scarcely a break in continuity, is clearly competent as a part of the res gestas, and as evidence that defendant’s motive, when he accosted Moore and his companion and throughout, was not innocent, but malicious. Even if the defendant had not testified at all, the evidence would have been competent as part of the res gestae, showing felonious motive. It does not affect the admissibility of the testimony that the evidence may show another crime. The rule, we think, is too familiar for extended discussion. 10 R. C. L. 105, 164. The court carefully instructed the jury that the evidence of Miss Clark as to the assault on her could have no weight, except on the issue of motive. Defendant had the benefit of his denial of the assault.
Affirmed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- TURNER v. UNITED STATES
- Status
- Published