120 P. 234 | Mont. | 1911
delivered the opinion of the court.
The defendant was convicted of murder in the first degree and sentenced to death. He has appealed from the judgment of conviction and an order denying his motion for a new trial. The assignments of error upon which he relies are predicated upon rulings in admitting and excluding evidence, and the action of the court in giving and refusing instructions. The contention is also made that the verdict is contrary to the evidence.
The circumstances attending the homicide, gathered from the uncontroverted statements of eye-witnesses, are the following: It occurred at the village of Wibaux, Dawson county, on August 26, 1910. The main street of the village extends north and south. Upon the west side of the street is situated a blacksmith-shop. About 100 yards to the south, and on the opposite side of the street, is a livery barn where the deceased was employed. Further to the south is a garage. The defendant had been working as a hired hand at various places in Dawson county until a few days before the homicide, the last place being at the cattle ranch of one Parsons. Leaving there he went to Wibaux. He had spent two or perhaps- three days there, a part of the time in the village lockup under a charge of creating a disturbance on the street. He was" addicted to drink and sometimes drank to excess. When drinking, he was quarrelsome. ' His brother had a ranch across the state line in North Dakota. Having been informed that his brother needed help at his ranch, the defendant had during the day hired a horse at the livery barn, intending to ride to his brother’s ranch to work. He hitched the horse in front of a saloon on Main street, some distance to the north of the barn and the blacksmith-shop. The evidence does not disclose how long it remained there, nor who took it
1. "We shall consider, first, the assignment that the verdict is contrary to the evidence. The defense was insanity. Evidence was introduced tending to show that during the year 1907, and subsequently, the defendant, when sober, was irritable and subject to violent momentary fits of passion which he would vent upon the tools or machinery with which he was working, sometimes to the peril of those associated with him, and that after the paroxysm had passed away he was apparently oblivious of what he had done. His disposition to yield1 to passion was aggravated by drink. The witness Peters had known him intimately .from as early as the spring of 1905. The two were employed in logging camps at Yisalia and Truekee, Cal., in the spring of 1907. Peters stated that at the latter place he himself was foreman and had the defendant employed as engineer to run the logging engine; that during the latter part of the season defendant sustained an injury to his head from a fall of several'feet from the door of a cabin while intoxicated; that thereafter he seemed changed in his disposition to such an extent that if anything went wrong he would throw the tools off the engine and out of the tool-box, or would jerk the throttle wide open and turn on full steam, without regard to the safety of the machinery or the men who were working along the line of the logging' cables, and that, though he had theretofore been efficient, the witness was finally compelled to discharge him because “he would get these mad spells, and did not know what he was doing, and I was afraid he would cripple somebody.” The witness testified to other injuries sustained by defendant, and illustrated the change observed in his conduct by the relation of instances when he seemed to have no consciousness of what he was then doing or subsequent recollection of it. He expressed the opinion that defendant was insane.
Other witnesses testified to the same effect touching his conduct on other occasions after he came to Montana in 1909, and prior
Defendant himself testified concerning the injuries received by him at the time mentioned by Peters. He stated that they had affected his head permanently, inducing a condition from which there were recurring headaches, followed by discharges of pus through his nose, whereupon the pain subsided; that when he hired the horse at the bam he rode it up the street to the north and tied it at the saloon; that at the request of Baker, the saloon-keeper, he lent him the horse to ride to his home; that he did not know what then became of it; that he at once began to drink; that he had no recollection of anything that occurred thereafter during the day; that he had never met Nelson, and did not know that he had killed him, until he was afterward informed of the fact by others. He denied emphatically that he had shot Nelson. He first stated that he was able, ordinarily, to distinguish between right and wrong, and then said that he did not know whether he could or not.
To a hypothetical question embodying substantially the facts testified to by the witnesses, Dr. Hathaway, who qualified as an expert, declined to express a definite opinion as to defendant’s mental condition. He stated that the facts as related to him would in some cases indicate insanity, but that he would not venture an opinion without an opportunity to make a careful examination and observation of the particular person, which he had not done in this ease. He stated that some of the symptoms indicated by the facts narrated were present in ordinary insanity, while others were present in what is recognized as alcoholic insanity; but that the conduct of the defendant as related to him could be the result of an “ordinary drunk.” Several lay witnesses were permitted to state their opinions that the defendant was insane at the various times about which they were questioned, giving their reasons therefor. Some of them had made their observations immediately before or at the time of the shoot
The contention is that the verdict is contrary to the evidence, in that it does not show the existence of a deliberate purpose to take the life of Nelson, proof of which is essential to establish murder in the first degree. Counsel assumes that there should be evidence tending expressly to show the deliberate purpose; but this is not necessary. Indeed, it is not generally susceptible of proof in this way. It is generally to be inferred from facts and circumstances attending the killing. Here the killing is shown to have been done under circumstances wHich, aside from the alleged mental condition of the defendant, leave no room for an inference other than that it was a willful, deliberate murder.
The attempt was to show that the defendant was insane generally, or that he was suffering from momentary alcoholic insanity to such an extent that he did not know what he was doing, and hence could not have entertained a deliberate intent to take life. The court, as we shall presently show, fully and fairly instructed the jury, both as to insanity generally, and as to the purpose which proof of intoxication may serve the defendant as a palliative or extenuating circumstance, and, to this extent, as excusatory of the crime charged against him. The jury, having found that the defendant was not suffering from insanity rendering him irresponsible, and that he was not so far intoxicated as to render him incapable of forming and acting upon a deliberate purpose, were justified in inferring such purpose from his threatening conduct immediately prior to the killing, the character of the weapon used, search for the deceased, the absence of provocation and the manner of the killing; and having so found it was their duty to render the verdict they did. The correctness of their conclusion is not affected by the fact that the evidence was in conflict or in such a condition that they might have reached a different result. Under our system it is exclusively the province of the jury to find, not only upon the
The facts narrated by Jeffries and the other eye-witnesses,
It is said that there is no evidence showing malice. This contention is predicated upon the idea that, since the defendant did not know the deceased, he could not have sustained feelings
2. We have examined all of the eighteen assignments based on rulings upon questions of evidence. Three of these require special notice.
It is well settled that the declarations of one accused of crime, [3] made either before or after the criminal act, may be given in evidence on the question of sanity or insanity, for the purpose of enabling the jury fo ascertain the condition of his mind. (1 Wharton & Stille’s Medical Jurisprudence, see. 323; Lake v. People, 1 Park. Or. (N. Y.) 495; McLean v. State, 16 Ala. 672; Cawley v. State, 133 Ala. 128, 32 South. 227; State v. New
The witness Lee Wethers had been employed at various places
The court also erred in permitting the witness George Albert to express an opinion that the defendant was sane. According
3. We do not find error in any of the instructions given. The court properly defined insanity, telling the jury explicitly in
The instructions requested by the defendant were all fully and
Reversed and remanded.