People v. Muse
Before: Wood
WOOD, P. J.
Defendant was convicted, in a non jury trial, of assault with a deadly weapon. Probation was denied and she was sentenced to imprisonment in the county jail for 180 days. She appeals from the judgment.
Appellant contends that there "was ample unrebutted evidence of the defense of self defense”; and that there was ample evidence of “the defense of prevention of a felony,” namely, the prevention of false imprisonment.
[663]
John Jimerson and the appellant had been friends five or six years, and occasionally they stayed at night in his hotel
room. She
kept some of her clothes in his room, and she had stayed in his room the night before the incident involved herein.
In the evening of November 20, 1960, they, Euth Austin (Jimerson’s sister), and Moses McDaniel (Euth’s friend) were in Jimerson’s room. At that time an argument started between Jimerson and appellant. Jimerson testified that he did not know how the argument started, but he did remember that he told her to
go home
and that she said she would not go; the appellant removed a knife from a sheath (which was hanging on a bookcase) and said she was not going any place; Jimerson asked her to close the door; she said she would not close it; he said he would close it; when he started to close the door she stabbed him with the knife; he was stabbed
‘ ‘
just below the abdomen. ’ ’ The knife blade was 6 inches long. As a result of the stabbing, two surgical operations were performed on him and he was in a hospital about eight weeks.
He also testified that he wanted the door closed because he did not want the noise of the argument to disturb the other tenants; he did not have anything in his hand when he was stabbed; he did not strike appellant that evening; on prior occasions he had struck her with his hand but not with his fist; he asked her to go home because he wanted to avoid an argument.
Officer Benell testified that he arrived at Jimerson’s room about 8:40 p.m. on said day; two other officers, who arrived there previously, had possession of the knife and sheath; later that evening, he (witness) had a conversation with appellant, in the presence of Officer Keil, wherein appellant said that every time she and Jimerson had an argument he was always right and she was wrong, and she “was tired of this and she had stabbed him once and she didn’t care if she hung for it”; she said the reason she did not cut him more was that he would not “fight back”; when the witness (officer) asked her what caused the argument, she did not reply.
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