118 Neb. 84 | Neb. | 1929
Henry Sherman was tried and convicted of murder in the first degree. The jury fixed the penalty of death. From a judgment on the verdict the defendant prosecutes error.
The case as now briefed and argued orally presents unusual features in this: While counsel for the defendant tried the case well and preserved his record of objections to evidence, incorporated all legal exceptions in the motion for a new trial, set them forth in his petition in error and duly grouped them in his assignment of errors in his brief, yet none of these are authoritatively invoked save that the .judgment is excessive because it exacts the death penalty' against a defendant as to whose sanity there is asserted at least a grave doubt. We quote a part of the conclusion of the brief:
“In conclusion let me repeat: I would not have this defendant turned free if I could do so. Neither do I argue that, the case be reversed and sent back for another trial. T believe the defendant to be a dangerous person and that he would always be a menace to those with whom he might associate. But with a firm conviction in mind that this .poor wretch is a maniac, and that it would be a judicial ■wrong, to .kill-him,, I : ask that the evidence be carefully con
We commend the ethical and professional attitude of defendant’s counsel maintained throughout the trial and review of this case. It was reciprocated by counsel for the state. All connected with the case seemed to unite in a desire to discover the truth and to apply the law. In the same spirit we approach our own duty and exercise our own responsibility.
Before complying with defendant’s request to review the evidence, we deem it .proper to record that we have considered the errors assigned and are convinced that, even if they were argued and insisted upon, they are not such as to predicate a reversal. The rulings on evidence and the instructions of the court show no prejudicial or reversible error. The legal rights of the defendant were carefully guarded by the trial court. ■ ■
The information was drawn in the old-fashioned and involved way much in vogue prior to Nichols v. State, 109 Neb. 335, in which a brief form of information for murder in the first degree was set out. We commend its adaptation and use. The information in the instant case charged, in effect, that in Sheridan county, Nebraska, on May 18, 1928, the defendant; Henry Sherman, feloniously, purposely and of his deliberate and premeditated malice, shot Hattie Pochon with a shotgun, and as a result thereof Hattie Pochon died on said day; and; that defendant .thus1. committed murder in the first degree.
Roger Pochon and his wife, Hattie Pochon, both about 36 years of age, resided in Sheridan county, on a farm
At the time of the trial the oldest surviving member of the Pochon family was the eldest daughter. She was a witness for the state and her statement of the facts is not in any way impeached. On the night of May 17, 1928, she had accompanied Felix and Clementine De Poorter, son and daughter of their neighbor, heretofore mentioned, to a dance at the schoolhouse some miles away. They brought her home late at night, and she went to bed in her room, which was also occupied by two of the younger children. About 6 o’clock in the morning she was awakened by a shot downstairs. It was followed by two or three other shots. She heard her mother cry, “Don’t shoot, don’t shoot,” and then her mother screamed. Then she heard the baby cry. She was frightened and ran to the head of the stairs. She saw her father lying face downward at the foot of the stairs; she could not see her mother, grandmother or the baby. Thereupon the defendant came up the stairs, ordered her to her room, pointed the shotgun, which belonged to her father, at her and said he would kill her if she did not go into her bedroom. She entered her room. He went downstairs, but came back right away. While he was gone she heard a sound as if “he
Prior to May 18 defendant had on several occasions made improper proposals to her and she had- always rejected them. He had tried to take liberties with her and she had repelled him. Twice she had told her- mother. The last attempt was two or three days before the 18th of May. She had told her mother about it and her mother had told the father right away.
Clifford Davis testified that when the defendant drove up to his house he called to witness and said: “I have had a crazy streak and killed the Pochon family and I want
Felix De Poorter was ordered by defendant to “Get in the car” from which the Pochon daughter had just alighted at the De Poorter home, and he did so when she nervously said: “You had better get in.” Witness thought Roger Pochon or somebody at the ranch was hurt and so he entered the car and defendant drove it toward Rushville, saying he was going to town to give himself up. He had
Dr. W. IT. Crawford, physician and surgeon, of Rush-ville, testified that he went out to the ranch, arriving about 8 o’clock, the morning of May 18. Roger Pochon had died of his gunshot wounds just before he arrived, Roger Pochon’s mother was dead, Hattie Pochon had been dead about two hours. She had a slight wound, but not fatal, through the right breast; “the second shot was evidently through the right eye and the brain, taking about half the brain out, and the eye, and tearing the ear some; it was a mortal wound instantly fatal.” The baby was in a semiconscious state. She had no external and visible wounds, but the doctor on examination discovered a depression at the base of the skull. He took the eldest daughter back to town with him and examined her, with the result, without details, that he discovered complete evidence of recent penetration and rupture, supporting her testimony relating to her criminal assault by the defendant.
Lawrence Lulow had driven over to the Pochon ranch about sundown May 17, 1928. There the defendant asked him to go to Rushville and offered to pay the expenses. They went, attended graduation exercises a while, visited a pool hall, ate at a restaurant, were entertained by two girls at their place, got his tank filled with gasoline and went home. While in town defendant inquired if the hardware store was open, but it was not.
Defendant’s brother testified that defendant was born October 6, 1906. If that be the correct date of his birth, he was between 21 and 22 years old when the crime was committed. His father lives in Burwell. His mother died when defendant was 10 or 11 years old. There were'.eight children living. For about a year after his mother’s death the defendant lived with a brother eight or ten miles from Burwell, and from that period has lived at different places, frequently with others than relatives. The testimony would indicate that he was a good worker. He never went to school very much, as he did not like it. Stime years ago
Defendant’s brother and brother’s wife testified that, when a boy 10 or 11 years old, he would go in the dark among the hills and pretend that he had been pursued by imaginary enemies, and that this argues insanity. Those who have been fortunate enough to have children, those who have taught children, those who understand children, all know that a belief in fairies, sprites and hobgoblins is inherent in many children and does not have to be inculcated. To those who do not comprehend them, such children are rivals of Munchausen; to those who understand child life their stories are but normal manifestations of the creative literary instincts of rational childlike minds. But romancing or lying in childhood does not connote insanity in maturity. Nothing strange or queer in the defendant has appeared in his own personal history that would condone his homicidal act and deprive it of guilty intent. Mere atrocity does not, of itself, prove a disordered mind.
Various witnesses introduced on behalf of the defendant testify to eccentricities on the part of uncles of the defendant. One incident relating to defendant’s mother was told wherein she is depicted as losing her temper without good cause and threatening a prospective daughter-in-law with a pair of scissors. Thus the defendant sought to present to the jury a history of insanity in the family. Physicians testified both on behalf of the state and of the defendant on the subject of defendant’s mental condition. The asserted hereditary taint was presented to them in
“The test of insanity, urged as a defense to a charge of crime, is the capacity of the accused 'to understand the nature of the act committed and his ability to distinguish between right and wrong with respect to it.” Kraus v. State, 108 Neb. 331.
In Carter v. State, 115 Neb. 320, the rule was correctly stated on page 324, but in the first point of the syllabus, where the opinion quoted from the first point of the syllabus in Kraus v. State, 108 Neb. 331, it inadvertently omitted the last four words, “with respect to it.” It is clear that the test of the capacity of one to commit a criminal act must be applied to the particular act as of the time when it was committed.
The appeal to us to reduce the penalty from death to life imprisonment is based on the authority to do that under section 10186, Comp. St. 1922. The defendant cites cases in which such a sentence has been so reduced by the court. Neither he nor the state cites the many instances where such action has been denied. The state declines to discuss the question on the theory that the responsibility is for the court. There can be no criticism of either the defendant or the state for their respective positions. We accept the responsibility, realizing that precedents' are not of value and that in every instance the matter of judicial leniency is to be resolved on the facts and circumstances of the individual case.
To us it seems as if the jury arrived at a proper conclusion under the facts and under their oaths. No suspicion of error attaches to their verdict or to the judgment of the trial court. Under the law the test is that of criminal responsibility. This was correctly submitted to the jury. The case was taken to Dawes county on a change of venue. The jurors had no local prejudice. They found
Affirmed.