66 Neb. 497 | Neb. | 1902
The information upon which this case was tried charged Charles Russell with having killed Alois F. Staudenmaier unlawfully, purposely, feloniously and of deliberate and premeditated malice. The jury found the accused guilty of murder in the second degree and the court sentenced him to imprisonment in the penitentiary for a term of twenty years.
There are a very unusual number of assignments in the petition in error, but only a few of them have been much discussed by counsel, either orally or in the briefs.
The deceased, a Sioux county ranchman, was found dead on the range about three miles from his own home and about six miles from the home of Russell. No one witnessed the tragedy, but from the wounds upon the body, marks upon the ground and other circumstances, it is certain the killing was intentional and highly probable that it was felonious. Both the slayer and his victim were on horseback.' The latter went out, as he usually did, between six and seven o’clock in the morning, to look after his cattle and, according to the theory of the state, the former was lying in wait and shot him. A peculiarly shaped horse-track was found near the body, and was followed close to a point where Russell rode at about eight o’clock on the morning of the day that Staudenmaier was killed. The track of Russell’s horse was noted and it was found to be strikingly similar to the other track. The probability that the same horse made both tracks brought Russell under suspicion and led to his arrest and prosecution.
In this case there was evidence upon which there might bave been a conviction of murder in the' first degree, and if there was error in instructing as to murder in tbe second degree it was favorable to tbe defeildant and against tbe state. This is tbe meaning of tbe decision in the case of Kastner v. State, 58 Nebr., 767.
It is also urged as error that tbe court permitted witnesses for tbe state, over objection, to testify in regard to tracks supposed to bave been made by tbe horse which defendant rode on tbe day of tbe homicide. While it is earnestly insisted that tbe rulings upon this class of evidence were prejudicially erroneous, it is admitted that they do not go quite to the extent of violating the rule laid down in tbe opinion reversing tbe former conviction. This admission vindicates the action of tbe court. The decision in tbe case of Russell v. State, 62 Nebr., 512, is based upon a dictum in Clough v. State, 7 Nebr., 320, and goes to as great a length in excluding opinion evidence as we are willing to go. It is frequently impossible for a witness to lay before tbe jury all the pertinent facts so as to enable them to see tbe thing that- be is describing just as be saw it. His conclusion and tbe facts from which it is drawn can not always be separated. In such cases opinion evidence is competent, because a mere description, without an opinion, would convey a very imperfect and inadequate idea of tbe thing described. 1 Greenleaf, Evidence,, secs, 440,
In our judgment, all the evidence relating to the tracks made by defendant’s horse and by the horse supposed to have been ridden by the murderer of Alois P. Stauden-maier was rightly received. Much of this evidence was, as counsel suggest, unsatisfactory and inconclusive, but that was not sufficient to require its exclusion. It was the business of the jury to estimate its value, and it must be presumed that their estimate was a just one.
It is claimed that the court erred in permitting the witness Dickman to testify to instructions given him by the public prosecutor with respect to the seizure of the horse which Russell rode on the day Staudenmaier was killed. It is also insisted that it was error to receive the witness’s account of what he did in identifying the animal. Counsel have not clearly indicated their objection to this testimony and it seems to us to be altogether unobjectionable. The evidence of identification of the horse by his peculiar hoof and footprint, and the fact that he was found in defendant’s pasture, was certainly proper. The instructions of the county attorney were explanatory of Dickman’s conduct and in no possible view of the case prejudicial.
It is contended that the court committed serious error in allowing the state to prove that the accused was in the habit of carrying firearms, a lariat and a spy-glass. It is said that the object of this evidence was to show that he
The state offered in evidence as an inculpatory fact a pair of old shoes belonging to defendant. The offer was objected to on the ground that the evidence was incompetent, irrelevant and improperly obtained. The objection was overruled and the ruling is assigned for error. It is claimed that by the admission of this evidence defendant was deprived of his constitutional right to be secure against unreasonable searches and seizures and was virtually compelled to give evidence against himself. This assignment can not be sustained. It does not appear that there was any unreasonable search or seizure. The record merely shows that on the day of the preliminary examination, while the defendant was at the court house, the shoes were found in the county jail and removed without his permission having been first asked or obtained. It does not even appear that the shoes were in defendant’s cell, or that he had any rightful control or dominion over them at the time they were taken. The case in this aspect is quite like Gindrat v. People,
In. the closing address to the jury Mr. Harrington, who was assisting the county attorney, exhibited the revolver of the accused, together with a bullet found in the body of the deceased, and used a piece of black crayon to illustrate his contention that there was a correspondence between a defect in the muzzle of the weapon and a defect in the bullet. The revolver and bullet were in evidence, but the crayon was not. It seems that counsel was endeavoring to
The next assignment of error that we shall notice relates to the action of the jury in taking to their consultation room the pair of old shoes that had been introduced in evidence. The trial court was, perhaps, justified in finding that the shoes were taken with the knowledge and implied consent of defendant’s counsel, but in any view of the matter, it did not, in our judgment, constitute misconduct. The modern practice, as we understand it, both in civil and criminal cases, is to send to the jury room all instruments, articles and documents, other than depositions, which have been received in evidence, and which will, in the opinion of the trial judge, aid the jury in their deliberations. 12 Ency. Pl. & Pr., 591; 2 Thompson, Trials, sec. 2575. In Langworthy v. Connelly,
Another assignment of error is grounded upon the conceded fact that the jury were, after the submission of the .
The claim that the jury were guilty of misconduct in discussing the previous trial and conviction of defendant is not sustained by the evidence, or, to use a more conventional form of expression, the trial court was warranted in so finding from the testimony given by the five jurors who testified at the hearing upon the motion for a new trial. Where the evidence is conflicting, the finding of the trial court upon an allegation of misconduct will not be disturbed. Hill v. State, 42 Nebr., 503; Carleton v. State, 43 Nebr., 373.
Some other matters briefly discussed by counsel have received due attention, but we do not regard them as sufficiently important to justify us in further extending this opinion by giving them special consideration.
The evidence points convincingly to the defendant as the murderer of Alois F. Staudenmaier, and, there being-no material error in the record, the judgment should be
Affirmed.
Note. — Argument of Counsel — Use of Easel and Crayon. — On the trial of Roland B. Molineux before Recorder Goft' (1899-1900) for the murder of Katharine J. Adams, in the city of New York, the question
Search and Seizure — Constitutional Right. — For a full discussion, see Cooley, Constitutional Limitations [7th ed.], pp. 424-434; Works of John Adams, vol. II., pp. 523-525; Quincy’s Beports [Mass.], pp. 469-482; Paxton’s Case, Quincy’s Beports, pp. 51-57; Appendix to Quincy’s Reports, by Horace Gray, afterwards judg-e.
Merger of the Lesser Offense in the Greater. — One may be convicted of either of two felonies which are so merged that, if the proper plea were interposed, he could not be convicted of both. State v. Buzzell, 59 N. H., 65.
The crime of being an accessory before the fact in the perpetration of a felony, merged in the crime of being a principal in the same felony. State v. Buzzell, 59 N. H., 65, 68.
Section 3 oe oue Criminal Code was borrowed from Ohio. Indiana has substantially the same statute. But the constructions of their respective courts are widely apart. The statute and respective constructions follow. The parts of the one statute not found in the other are enclosed in brackets.
OHIO.
Statute Adopted in 1885.- — -If any person shall purposely,
Construction Given in 1857. — Purpose to kill is an essential ingredient of murder in the first degree by administering poison. Robbins v. State, 8 Ohio St., 131, 190. Dicta in the same case make purpose to kill essential to any degree of murder.
INDIANA.
Statute Adopted in 1843. — If any person [of sound memory and discretion
Construction 1876. — Purpose to kill is an essential ingredient in an indictment for murder by poisoning. Bechtelheimer v. State, 54 Ind., 128.
18S0. — The killing of a human being in the perpetration of a robbery, is murder in the first degree, notwithstanding the absence of purpose to kill. Moynihan v. State, 70 Ind., 126, 128.
In view of the fact that length of time is non-essential in the question of deliberation and premeditation, is not the distinction between this term and purpose so occult and metaphysical that it would require the assistance of telepathy to distinguish the two? — W. 3?. B.
19 Am. Rep., 401.
27 N. E. Rep., 1085.
45 Am. Rep., 117, 121.
13 Am. Dec., 452.
9 Am. Dec., 203.
See Appendix.
This comma was inserted by Judge Swan in his compilation of 1841. — W. F. B.
Words in brackets held not essential in -an indictment. Jerry v. State, 1 Blackf., 395-396. — W. F. B.
Worden, J., called attention to this patent syntactical error in an opinion delivered in 1880, 70 Ind., p. 128. The legislature corrected it the following year. It has also been corrected in Ohio. — W. F. B.