211 P. 484 | Wyo. | 1922
The alleged homicide out of which this proceeding in error arises took place near Green Mountain, in Fremont County, Wyoming, on the evening of August 20th or 21st, 1920, when one Nancy Wales was shot two or more times through the legs, between the ankles and knees, from the effects of which she died on August 25th, 1920. On August 25th, 1920, William D. Johnson filed a criminal complaint before the Justice of the Peace charging the defendant, Henry V. Johnson, Charles Coleman and Ray Thomas, with the crime of murder in the first degree. The defendants were arrested and placed in jail; preliminary examination was held before the Justice of the Peace and all the parties were boiuid over without bail for their appearance at the next term of the district court. November 10th, 1920, the county and prosecuting attorney filed an information charging that Henry V. Johnson, Charles Coleman and Ray Thomas, on the 21st day of August, 1920, unlawfully, feloniously, purposely and with premeditated malice, did kill and murder one Nancy Wales, and on the same day the prosecuting attorney presented his written motion asking the court for an order that the above named defendants be tried separately without assigning any cause or reason for such motion, and on the same day the motion was granted, over the objection and exception of counsel for the defendants, and on the 2nd day of December, 1920, the defendant, Henry V. Johnson, was placed on trial charged with the crime of murder in the first degree.
Motion for arrest of judgment was made on the 9th of December and the same overruled and exception taken by defendant. On the 11th of December, 1920, the defendant was sentenced to imprisonment for his natural life. On December 10th, 1920, the defendant presented to the court his motion for a new trial, alleging, among other things: First, that the court erred in requiring the defendant to be tried separately from his co-defendants, upon the application of the state; Second, mis-conduct of attorneys for the state in making the opening statement to the jury; Sixth, that the verdict is not sustained by sufficient evidence; Nine, the disqualification of two jurors to serve as trial jurors in the cause. This motion was, on the 31st of December, 1920, overruled, and defendant excepted, and on the 27th of December, 1921, the defendant filed in this court his petition in error, alleging, among other things, error of the trial court in overruling said motion for a new trial. There were a great many objections and exceptions taken to questions propounded during the trial that we do not deem it necessary in this court to make reference to. As this case is here on the petition in error and the transcript of all the evidence is before us, altho a number of the exhibits are not here, this court will consider the entire record in this case, but we do not deem it necessary to pass upon all the points raised by counsel for the defense.
The defense alleges that the court erred in sustaining the motion of the county attorney to separately try the defendant and especially so because there were no reasons or grounds given for the ordering of a separate trial of the defendant ; counsel for the defense seriously contending that
Section 7534 of Wyoming Compiled Statutes, 1920, provides for an order for separate trial of defendants and reads as follows:
“SEPARATE TRIALS IN CASE OP FELONY. When two or more persons are indicted for a felony, each person so indicted shall, on application to the court for that purpose, be separately tried. ”
It can be readily seen from the above section that if one of the defendants asks for a separate trial that it cannot be refused by the court and that he is entitled to a separate trial as a matter of right on his application when timely made. But in this case the defendant did not request a separate trial, but the prosecuting attorney made the application to the court for an order to try the defendant separately. This motion was granted and it is the granting of this motion which the defendant alleges as error.
The practice of trying separately persons jointly indicted upon the application of the prosecution grew out of the great inconvenience which resulted from the exercise by each joint defendant of the several rights to challenge jurors peremptorily, each being entitled to the same number of challenges that he had on the separate trial. The venire was frequently exhausted and trials were prevented from the deficiency of jurors. At common law the prosecution had the right of election subject to the control and discretion of the court, whether to arraign and try persons jointly indicted, separately or jointly, and the defendants could not raise their voices in opposition thereto. Now, however, the law is changed and the defendant is given rights that he did not have under the common law and ordinarily now the application for a separate trial comes from the defendant. We do not think, however, that the statute contemplates the defendant only is entitled to request a separate trial. We believe the state is entitled to the same rights that the
Kentucky has a statute quite similar to ours, which reads as follows, Section 237, Criminal Code of Practice:
“If two or more defendants be jointly indicted for a felony, any defendant is entitled to a separate trial. ’ ’ .
In deciding a question similar to the one here being discussed, as to whether the defendant should have a separate trial at the instance of the state’s attorney, the Kentucky court says, in the case of Hoffman v. the Commonwealth, 134 Ky. 733:
“The language of this section is mandatory as to the right of a defendant, jointly indicted with another or others for felony, to a separate trial. The court is without power to refuse it to him when demanded. The section is, however, silent as to the right of the commonwealth to separately try one of several defendants jointly indicted for felony. But, in the absence of any statute denying the commonwealth the right to try separately one of several defendants so indicted, there is, in our opinion, no obstacle in the way of its exercise of such right. It must not be overlooked that at the common law, the commonwealth, not the defendant, in cases of joint indictments, had the right of election, subject to the discretion of the court, whether to try defendants jointly or separately. The code only changes the common law to the extent of also allowing the defendant, in cases of joint indictments for a felony, the right to demand and have a separate tidal, but does not take away from the commonwealth the right to separately try each of several defendants, jointly indicted for felony. In other words, the common law, in respect to this right of the common*135 wealth, has not been abrogated by the code. It will further be observed that, although Section 237, Criminal Code Practice, gives to a defendant, jointly indicted with another or' others, the right of separate trial, it does not confer upon, him the right to a joint trial, nor does such a right exist at the common law. It follows, therefore, that a severance may be ordered at the instance of the commonwealth, as of the defendant; and, where justice so requires, the court may order separate trials of its own motion, without application therefor by either party.” together with the numerous authorities sustaining this opinion cited in this decision.
Indiana has passed on this question several times and their statute is somewhat similar to ours, which reads as follows: Section 2135, Burns Annotated Indiana Statutes, 1914:
“When the indictment or affidavit is for a felony charged against two or more defendants jointly, any defendant requiring it, before the jury is sworn, must be tried separately.”
In the ease of Woodsmall v. State, 181 Ind. 613, the court says :
“Although 237 Burns 1914, 237 R. S. 1881, had the effect to abolish common-law crimes, it neither excludes common law procedure in criminal causes, nor prevents resort to common law practice in matters not covered by statute, so that the common law rule that separate trials of persons jointly indicted may be had on demand of the prosecution remains and is unaffected by 2135 Burns 1914, Acts 1905 p. 584, 259, providing for separate trials in certain cases at the instance of a defendant. ’ ’
And the court further says on Page 618 in said opinion, quoting from another Indiana case:
“It is a mistake to suppose that one jointly indicted with another has a right to a joint trial; on the contrary, at common law the prosecution might demand separate trials, and under our statute any defendant may demand that a separate trial be awarded him. The court, when justice re*136 quires it, may suggest in express words the propriety of separate trials.”
The defendant in this case complains of alleged misconduct on the part of one of the attorneys for the state in the making of his opening statement to the jury and has taken up considerable space in his brief on this subject, but we do not find that counsel for the state committed any error under the record in this case on this point. Counsel for the defendant contends that the attorney for the state, in his opening statement, made numerous and divers statements that would be incompetent and inadmissible, if he attempted to prove them, and especially in reference to alleged shooting affrays that the parties implicated in this case had engaged in with the deceased and her household. We think that it is the duty of the attorney for the state to outline to the jury in a brief and concise manner what he expects to prove and to confine himself to facts and circumstances that will be competent as evidence, but we do not believe that the rule should be so strict that where the attorney for the state fails to introduce evidence mentioned in the opening statement, or where parts of the evidence might be incompetent, and he acts in good faith and has reasonable grounds to believe that he can introduce certain evidence pertinent to the case and does not use abusive, inflammatory and scurrilous language toward the defendant, that it should be held error.
These matters lie largely within the control and discretion of the trial court and the prosecutor should be kept within reasonable limits in his statements and he should not allow his zealousness to carry him to the extent of making wild or reckless statements, or mention matters that are foreign to the case that might prejudice the minds of the jury.
It is difficult to lay down a rule and strictly adhere to it as the facts and circumstances surrounding every case are different.
“It would be'going a great distance to hold that every time the district attorney happens to state in his opening more than he is able to prove, the judgment should be reversed for misconduct; and there is nothing in the present case to show such an extreme disregard for the truth and such a clear intent to influence the jury by false statements, as would warrant the reversal of the case upon that ground. Usually such an over-statement is prejudicial to the party making it. ’ ’
Again, in 16 Corpus Juris, 890, that author says, in effect :
“The prosecuting attorney may generally, in opening his ease to the jury fully outline facts which he expects and which it is competent for him to prove; and, although he states facts which are not followed by proof because the facts themselves are irrelevant, or because he fails to introduce any evidence or introduces incompetent evidence to support them, his statement is not error, if he acts in good faith and with reasonable grounds for supposing that he can prove the facts as stated, especially where they relate to the transaction or act directly resulting in the consummation of the crime. ’ ’
Counsel for the defendant takes up a good deal of time and space in his brief contending that the attorneys for the state took undue advantage of the defendant Johnson and assumed the role of persecutors rather than prosecutors. We do not find that to have been the case. However, we do think that the county and prosecuting attorney should refrain from acting as a witness except when necessary to prove something that may have come under his direct observation and could not be proven by some other witness without great expense or inconvenience. The county attorney in this case was on the witness stahd a half dozen times and still he made serious objection to the defendant going' on the stand more than once. We think the practice of
The defendant further complains because the court denied the defendant’s offer to prove certain facts, which offer was in brief as follows: “That the defendant now offers to prove that on the night of the 20th of August, 1920, John Wales, Nancy Wales and William Johnson quarreled practically all the night long; that on said night five shots were heard at or about the Wales ranch; and that the defendant offers to prove at this time by competent evidence that during the year 1920 and for two years prior thereto, John Wales slept in a separate bed in his home when he stopped there, and that William Johnson and Mrs. Wales occupied the same bed and that she was in the habit of calling him “Buddy” and frequently went around with him, leaving her husband at home, and slept with him at other ranches where they stopped, etc.”
The theory of the state throughout the trial was that the defendant and the Wales family were continually having trouble and shots had been exchanged at different times and litigation was quite frequent between them; that the defendant and two other men shot into the house of the deceased on the night of August 21st, and hit the deceased in the leg, from the effects of which she a few days afterwards died.
The theory of the defense throughout the trial was that the defendant and the other two men were not near the Wales ranch during the night of the 21st of August and that they were at their own home and later at a certain saw mill and that they had proved an alibi; and further, their contention was that the shooting of Nancy Wales was done either by John Wales or William Johnson on the night of August 20th and not on the 21st and that the shooting grew out of the continual trouble that existed beween John Wales and William Johnson from their jealousy over Mrs. Wales
The defense in this offer undoubtedly wanted to show the continual illicit relations between Nancy Wales and William Johnson and the jealousy and anger that it would inspire in John Wales, and the quarrelling on the night of August 20th, 1920, at the Wales ranch and the firing of five shots at the Wales ranch on the night of the 20th.
These facts and circumstances that the defense offered to prove we believe material to the defense and might have thrown considerable light upon the shooting of Nancy Wales.
Taking into consideration all 'the evidence and the peculiar circumstances in this case, and the fact that John Wales had a 32-20 six-shooter, and a Krag-Jorgenson rifle (30-40) and a 30-30, and that Nancy Wales was shot twice through one leg and once through the other and no blood or bullets were found, and the evidence that the holes in the wall could have been made by a 32-20 pistol or a 30-30 or a Krag-Jorgenson, and the wounds could have easily been made by either gun, we are of the opinion that the trial court should have allowed the defense to introduce the evidence under their offer.
Counsel for the defense further object to the manner in which the jury was secured ancl complain particlularly about the selection of two trial jurors for the reason that their names did not appear upon the last assessment roll of the county. An examination of the record discloses that two of the jurors were secured under the open venire ’and that these two jurors and some fifty or sixty others, after being sworn and examined collectively by the prosecuting attorney as to their qualifications as jurors and as to whether their names appeared on the last assessment roll of Fremont County, did not receive a negative reply from these two jurors. Each of the jurors had paid their 1920 poll tax and one had paid a 1920 tax on personal property.
The defendant, questions the right of the court to complete the jury by issuing an open venire when the statute regulating the manner for impaneling jurors has been exhausted.
This question has been before this court before and was decided in the case of Carter v. the Territory, 3rd Wyoming 193, and the case of Gunnell & Elder v. The State, 21 Wyoming 125, and in which opinion Justice Beard takes occasion to go into the selection and impaneling of a jury in detail, and this court has held that when Jury Boxes 3 and 4 have been exhausted, and the statute not providing a method of securing a trial jury after the exhausting of Boxes 3 and 4; then in that case the court possesses the inherent power to cause an open venire to issue for the purpose of completing the jury. That is what was done in this particular case we are now considering, and we see no reason for changing the rule that has heretofore been laid down by this court on this question.
We think, however, that especially in capital cases, the practice of county attorneys examining a large number of jurors en masse should be discouraged, as there is too great a likelihood of a juror not answering or not understanding a question, and the county attorney not realizing the fact that he has failed to answer or understand the question propounded.
The only evidence in the case in the slightest manner identifying the defendant Henry Y. Johnson as being implicated or in any manner connected with this shooting affray is that on the evening of August 21st, 1920, he, in company with Charles and Robert Coleman, left the Jesse Johnson ranch house to go to the Johnson saw mill, some five miles or more distant from the Jesse Johnson ranch and several miles distant from the Wales ranch, and that they took with them a 30 Government Winchester rifle. The nearest any of these men were found to the Wales cabin was one and one-half miles distant and while traveling on the road from Jesse Johnson’s ranch, the home of Henry Johnson, to the saw mill.
There is no evidence in the record whatever tending to show that Henry Johnson was even near the Wales cabin except the testimony in reference to a shoe print in which Henry Johnson’s shoe fitted. The evidence on this question is not very satisfactory and the fact that the print of this shoe remained the same for two or three weeks after it was discovered, even during several rains, and no evidence as to
The testimony is all to the effect that the defendant did not wear the particular pair of shoes that the state contends fits the track, on the night of this homicide; a number of witnesses testifying to this fact. As to the rifle shells found 660 feet west of the Wales cabin and near where the foot prints were found, there is some evidence that Johnson owned a 30 Government rifle, and shows beyond question that Edward Walsh was in this immediate vicinity in charge of a band of sheep for the ITadsell Live Stock Company a few days prior to the shooting, and a couple of days after the alleged shooting, and this witness testifies that he shot a 30 Springfield several times in this immediate vicinity where these shells were found during the time that he was therewith his sheep; that he was shooting to scare coyotes, and that the shells that were found and exhibited in court fitted his rifle.
The state’s evidence in reference to the bullet holes and the manner in which Nancy Wales was shot 'is so improbable that we cannot conceive of her being injured in the manner that John Wales and William Johnson testify the shooting occurred. The evidence of Wales and William Johnson is to the effect that they were all sitting at a table eating supper in the south room and that a volley of shots were fired, not less than three shots in a volley; when the first volley of shots was fired, John Wales was creased across the nose and William Johnson was creased across the back of the neck and that immediately Wales knocked out the light with his hand, and that they got up from the table and another volley of shots was fired and Nancy Wales was shot through the legs and that she was facing north and fell in the door way, and that after she was shot William Johnson didn’t touch her or pay any attention to her, but he went out and got a truck
It might be well at this time to mention the fact that notwithstanding Wales’ testimony that he thought Thomas was the third man that came out of the saw mill cabin, the state, recognizing that Thomas had proven a complete alibi, dismissed the charges against him and released him.
It is admitted that at the time of the alleged shooting, all the Wales household were in the kitchen and that the doors and windows were all closed; that on an examination of the house and the interior thereof, there was found a bullet hole through the west door casing in the middle room and a bullet hole through a log on the west wall in the kitchen. It is very apparent that both of these bullets could not have hit Nancy Wales. A minute and careful search of the entire interior of the rooms by a great many witnesses for the defense and state was unable to bring to light any trace or indication or any bullet marks anywhere in the rooms or any blood stains whatsoever on the floors. If she was shot while in the kitchen, it would make it necessary for one bullet coming through the log to crease Wales on the nose, Johnson on the neck when they were sitting at the table, and a few moments afterwards practically sever Nancy Wales’ left leg in two .places and also bore a hole through her right leg, and also circle around and come from the east instead of the west in order to hit her.
On the other hand, if she was struck by a bullet after passing through the west door easing in the middle room, then that one bullet would necessarily have had to bore a
The doctor who dressed the wounds and cared for the deceased, testified in part as follows:
(C # # w
Q. Refreshing your memory from the memoranda which you have, which was made at or about the time, you may describé the wound? By Mr. Dillon: Wound or wounds?
Q. Wounds; whatever wounds you found on that body?
A. On the right leg, there was a hole about the lower portion of the middle third of the leg.
Q. Doctor, get it into English just as close as you can ?
A. Well, we will divide the leg into three thirds — to the right of the median line about an inch; and another hole on the left side of the median line about the same location— lower third of the middle third. Then there was another wound a little above that, the back of the leg; sort of furrow, I would say, approximately one-eighth of an inch deep' —just a groove.
Q. Now, Doctor, in the right leg; what were the facts with reference to any bones being broken?
A. There were no bones broken that I know of.
Q. Now, what about the wound in the left leg?
A. There were two holes (indicating), in the lower portion of the middle third, and probably an inch and a half to the right of the median line; one hole about an inch lower than the other, and both in the lower portion of the middle third of the leg. On the left side, there was a hole approximately three inches in diameter — a ragged hole.
Q. What was the fact with reference to the bone in the left leg ?
A. It was torn away — both bones — for probably two and a half to three inches.
*145 Q. What was your opinion from the appearance of the wound, as to whether or not that leg had been'hit by more than one bullet ?
A. Two holes.
Q. What is your opinion?
A. My opinion is that there was more than one bullet — • more than one missle.
Q. What, if any operation did you perform on Nancy Wales?
A. We amputated her leg.
It is a mystery to us what became of all those bullets, some 15 in number, as testified to by Wales and Johnson as having been fired, and especially so under the circumstances that only one gun has in any manner been accounted for in the possession of Henry Johnson and the two Colemans, and it was not an automatic, so that the firing of shots in volleys from this one gun was out of the question, as neither a Springfield or Winchester can be worked that fast. Another thing that seems peculiar; the evidence is very conflicting as to which direction the bullet was travelling when it entered the room, whether up or down. A great many witnesses testified that by looking through the bullet hole that they saw the ground within fifty feet of the cabin and others that in looking through the bullet hole they looked over the tops of the trees and into the hills a half a mile-away. Another peculiar thing in this case is why there was no evidence of blood, anywhere in the house. Surely this woman bled with one leg practically severed and the other badly lacerated from bullet wounds. The state has been unable to explain in any manner to our satisfaction how all this damage could be done in a closed room by one bullet with no more evidence of blood and the entire lack of any lead or bullet holes, excepting the one in each room.
The testimony of Wales was so thoroughly impeached by a number of credible witnesses and also that of William Johnson that we do not feel that the defendant in this case