13 Utah 58 | Utah | 1896
The defendant was convicted of the crime of murder in the first degree, and, on motion for a new trial having been denied, he was sentenced to be executed. From this order and judgment of the court below he has appealed to this court.
The facts upon which the verdict was found, so far as we deem it necessary to state them, are that John M. Harrington, who was sheriff of Summit county, upon being informed on the 12th day of July, 1895, that Patrick Coughlin, the defendant, and one Frederick George, with whom the sheriff was acquainted, had stolen two horses in his county, and that they had stolen, berries from a fruit peddler, commenced to search for them; that, being informed on the 26th of the month that they had been seen on the Weber river, he obtained a warrant for their arrest, and deputized one Earl Williamson to aid in their pursuit and arrest; that Williamson had also heard that Coughlin and George had recently stolen horses from a man in Salt Lake City; that about 6 o’clock on the evening of the same day they came to a sheep wagon on Crandall creek, and, looking into it, they saw defendant, with his gun leveled upon Harrington; that the latter then told him to “quit his foolishness, and drop his gun;” that defendant fired immediately at Harrington, the ball passing through the horn of his saddle; that Harrington then shot at Coughlin; that defendant and George continued to shoot at the sheriff and his deputy until they had wounded the latter, and until both officers had retreated out of the range of their guns. It also appears that Thomas Stagg, a constable of Summit county, was informed of their alleged larcenies, and requested to arrest them, and that they were near Evanston, Wyo.; that he went to that place, and with Robert Calvarly, a deputy sheriff of that place, and William Taylor and
The refusal of the court to give certain requests to charge the jury, based upon the presumption that there was evidence tending to prove that Dawes, when killed, and the others with him, were attempting illegally to arrest Coughlin and George, is assigned as error. It is true that Calvarly, the deputy sheriff, was out of his state, and that the constable, Stagg, was out of his county, and that the other two were not officers. But section 4855 of
The refusal of the court to- give other requests asked by the defendant, based upon the assumption that the jury ought not to find defendant guilty of murder in the first degree, because the deceased and others with him were attempting to arrest him without informing him of their intention, is also assigned as error.. Section 4859, Comp. Laws, is as follows: “The person making the arrest must inform the person to be arrested of the intention to arrest him, of the cause of the arrest, and the authority to make it, except when the person to be arrested is actually engaged in the commission of, .or an attempt to commit an offense, or is pursued immediately after its commission, or after an escape.” On the morning of the 30th of July, the time of the killing, Coughlin was first seen with his rifle leveled on Taylor, who was at a spring for water, about 550 feet away, and Calvarly shot at him to save Taylor’s life, and immediately, and before any opportunity to give them any information,
Complaint is also made of the ruling of the court admitting evidence of the killing of Stagg. The general rule is that one crime cannot be offered to prove a similar offense committed against another person at another time. The conflict at Palmer’s cabin may be called a combat in which Coughlin and George were engaged on one side, and the four men who had gone to the cabin to arrest them on the other. The conflict was continuous, consisting of all that was done by the respective parties, including the various acts of the different parties emanating from their different motives and intentions, all intimately connected. In characterizing the act of Coughlin in killing Dawes, it was proper for the jury to view it in the light of all the influences to which he was subject at the time. It was proper for the jury to consider all his expressions at the time he fired the fatal shot, and before or after, indicating a malicious intent, or the absence of it. Along with the principal facts, the jury should have been given the surrounding facts constituting part of the res gestee. Greenleaf says: “There are other declarations which are admitted as original evidence, being distinguished from hearsay by their connection with the principal fact under investigation. The affairs of men consist
But defendant’s counsel assigns as error the ruling of the court permitting a witness to describe to the jury the wound upon Stagg’s body, from an examination made hours after the killing, and after the body had been moved to the city of Evanston. The evidence objected to was not a description of an act or its consequences occurring at a time subsequent to the killing, but concomitant with it, and constituting, as we have seen, a part of the res gestee. The wound described was made at the time of the killing of Dawes, and so connected with it as to afford some inference of the coexisting motives of the defendant at the time he fired the fatal shot mentioned in the indictment. If proof of the shot that killed Stagg was
The ruling of the court in permitting a witness to state that Coughlin said, five days before the killing, at Park City, when told that the officers were after him, “Let ihem come; I am ready for them,” is also alleged as error. This threat against the officers indicated an intention to resist them if they should come to arrest him. It did not indicate malice against any particular officer, but against all persons who might attempt to arrest him.
The defendant also alleges that the court erred in permitting Sheriff Harrington and Williamson to testify that Coughlin and G-eorge shot at them at the sheep wagon, four days before the killing of Dawes and Stagg. It will be remembered thatwhenHarringtonandWilliamsonfirst saw Coughlin at the wagon he had his gun leveled upon them, and when Harrington told him to “put his gun down, and quit his foolishness,” he fired at the officer, and continued shooting until he had wounded the deputy, and until both officers had retreated out of reach of his bullets. The conduct of Coughlin on this occasion indicated a purpose to kill any person who might attempt to arrest him. It manifested a deliberate intention to kill all such persons.
Mrs. Hamilton, daughter of Mr. Stagg, testified that' her father received a telegram on the 11th or 12th of July
Other errors are assigned, but we do not think them of sufficient importance to require a special examination in