NameAVEN, Lucius Eglon , 5G Grandson
Birth Date20 Jan 1907
Birth PlaceCalhoun County, Mississippi
Death Dateabt Feb 1973 Age: 66
Death PlaceSarah, Panola County, Mississippi
FlagsServed in the Military, Tragic Life, World War II
Misc. Notes
Charged with Murdering Brother
Appellant, Lucius E. Aven, was indicted by a grand jury of Tunica County for the crime of murder.
Upon the trial of the case, the circuit judge granted defendant an instruction apprising the jury that the evidence was insufficient to sustain a charge of murder. However, a manslaughter instruction was given to the jury by the court at the request of the State, defining the crime of "manslaughter."
The jury returned a verdict finding defendant guilty of manslaughter; whereupon, the trial judge sentenced defendant to serve a term of two years in the Mississippi State Penitentiary.
Defendant has appealed from the sentence and judgment of the trial court to this Court, and has complained of several errors alleged to have occurred during the trial. We deem it necessary, however, to discuss only one assignment of error.
This is an unusually sad case. Defendant was charged with having murdered his brother. He admitted that he shot his brother but asserted that he did so in necessary self-defense. There were no eye-witnesses to the actual homicide; in fact, there is very little conflict in the evidence.
The record reveals that deceased, Archie Aven, left his home when he was about fifteen years of age and remained away thirty-six years. During his absence, his mother and father died, and his family never heard from him. He came home in June 1959 and advised members of his family that he had spent twenty-three years in the Army, the last thirteen years in Alaska.
At first, he lived with his sister. Later, he loaned defendant money to go in business and he was furnished a room in the living quarters attached to the store building. Defendant claimed he repaid deceased the money he had borrowed. Deceased drew retirement pay and usually he remained away from the store until he had spent his monthly income. He purchased a Cadillac automobile and defendant paid twenty-two payments on the car. Defendant finally advised his brother Archie that he could no longer make payments for him. It was undisputed that thereafter Archie attacked and beat defendant four times before the altercation which resulted in the fatal shooting.
On August 5, 1962, about five o'clock in the afternoon, at a time when defendant's family was absent, Archie drove his Cadillac automobile to the back of the store, and entered his living quarters through a back door. He came through the store and motioned to defendant to come inside the store. When he entered, Archie advised him that he had heard that he was about to sell the business, and began cursing and abusing him, and finally knocked him down and stomped him, breaking his wristwatch. Defendant attempted to call the sheriff but his brother took the telephone away from him. However, the wife of a deputy sheriff answered the phone and heard curses and abusive language on the party line at the time when the altercation was in progress at the store.
Witnesses for the prosecution and defense testified that the defendant came outside into the service station area in a bloody shirt and his face was bleeding. Defendant went into the living quarters and returned wearing a clean shirt. The evidence further shows that Archie came out in front of the store and began to ask questions of the bystanders in order to determine whether or not they had summoned the sheriff. Although some of the witnesses did not hear all that he had said, it is clear that Archie told defendant that "I am going to do what I came to do", "I am going to get even with you", "You had just as well make up your mind where you want it at — where you are going to get it out here or in the house." Deceased struck defendant and the bystanders became apprehensive and walked away. Defendant went into the store and in a short while he was followed by Archie.
There were no eye-witnesses to the fatal event which happened inside the store. Defendant testified that his brother followed him into the store, and while threatening his life, he approached him with a butcher knife, wrapped in a rag. Defendant said "I tried to get him to stop. I said `Please don't come on me with that knife. I can't fight you physically. I can't run.' If I could, I would have tried to get away. I was hemmed in behind there where I couldn't get away without him cutting me." He then testified that he got the pistol out of a cabinet drawer and shot once to let his brother know the gun would fire, but that he would not be deterred. Whereupon, defendant shot his brother.
The only circumstance from which an unfavorable inference may be drawn to the testimony of defendant, is the fact that immediately after the fatal shooting, witnesses who came to the scene did not at first see the butcher knife near the body of the deceased. Defendant explained this apparent inconsistency by testifying that the knife fell under the bread rack and he raked it out with a stick. There is another circumstance which appears to this Court to be more significant: The meat block on which the butcher knife was kept was adjacent to the meat counter where the beer was kept, and there can be no doubt from the testimony that the deceased was openly threatening to do physical violence to defendant and that he was getting beer from a place next to where the butcher knife was usually kept.
Testimony of competent medical doctors, verified by X-ray pictures, showed defendant to be crippled from advanced rheumatoid arthritis in his knees, hip joints, both hands, both ankles and shoulder joints. The testimony further reveals that deceased was five feet, nine inches tall, and weighed about 170 pounds, while defendant is five feet, seven inches tall, and weighed 138 1/2 pounds.
Spouses
Birth Date29 Aug 1912
Birth PlaceStrayhorn, Tate County, Mississippi
Death Date13 Apr 1997 Age: 84
Marr Date24 Nov 1943
Marr PlacePhillips County, Arkansas