23 N.M. 652 | N.M. | 1918
OPINION OF THE COURT. .
The appellant, Frank McG-hee, was convicted of murder in the second degree in the district court for Socorro county, and has perfected this appeal.
The evidence on the part of the state tended to disclose that a controversy arose between Francisco Sanchez and IT. O. Webb concerning the ownership of a certain calf: An action in replevin to recover the possession of the calf was begun by Sanchez in a court of a justice of the peace and the calf ■was delivered to Sanchez with the understanding that he was to retain possession therefore until July 21, 1916, the day set for the hearing before the justice of the peace. Late in the night time of the 20th of July, 1916; the -Sanchez household was awakened by noises indicating that men on horseback were approaching. Shortly thereafter the inmates of the Sanchez house heard noises indicating that some one had entered the Sanchez corral. Sanchez and two companions arose and discovered appellant in the corral in the act of driving away the calf over which the replevin suit arose. At the. point of a pistol in the hands of Sanchez the appellant, who was unarmed, was taken -into custody. Between 20 and 30 minutes after this time shots were heard near a gate in the vicinity of the Sanchez house. At the same time some one said, “Hands up!” and cursed. A number of shots were then exchanged between Alvaro Aragon, one of the companions of Sanchez, and some other person not ■identified by the evidence of the state except by the statement made by appellant at the time that the person who exchanged shots with Aragon was IT. O. Webb. Aragon received a bullet wound in the thigh. Blood poisoning subsequently set in, and on July 26, 1916, he died. Tracks of the person supposed to have fired the fatal shot were discovered in the vicinity of the Sanchez property the day after the shooting occurred. Empty cartridge shells were also found there. The shells were of 30-30 caliber. Francisco Sanchez testified, among other things, as follows:
“I told him to raise up his hands, and he raised them. Then he told me not to kill him for the love of my wife and my family; not to do him any harm. Then I asked him what he was doing there, and he told me that he had went over there because they had sent him to see if that calf was there. And I says to him, ‘Who sent you?’ and he says, ‘Bob Lewis,' and I says to him, ‘Didn’t Bob Lewis told you that something may happen to you if you come around to see about this calf; didn’t Bob Lewis told you to come right straight to ask me, and. then I would show it to you?’ Then he says, ‘No, I made a mistake, pardon me.‘ Then I says, ‘Get out of the corral; let’s go in the house.’ .Then he kind of held up and he says not to put him inside of the house; then he was crying and begging me that he greatly ashamed of my family. * * * I kept on trying to walk toward the house, but he would keep us from advancing, and let himself down on the ground and got up, and I was trying to urge him to go inside of the house. That way he kept us for quite a long while. Q. Just a moment. When he would lay down on the ground, did he remain silent, or did he make any noise? A. He was making noise, all the time. Q. Well, what kind of a noise did he make? A. He says, ‘Let me go for the love of your father, for the love of your mother;’ that he had made a mistake. * * * Q. Well, when you got Prank McGee — what occurred? A. Then I told Alvaro Aragon that his wife was delaying, and you better go and see what become of her, and about the other two men, and he went down below, and when he went to the gate of the fence, then I hear them start to fire somes hots.”
Sanchez then threatened appellant with death if he did not divulge the name of the person who had shot Aragon, and appellant pleaded for his life, and declared that if Aragon had been killed that Webb had done it because he had accompanied the appellant to the Sanchez house. Other witnesses testified to facts tending to disclose that Webb and Yotaw were present at the time Aragon was wounded, and that both of them fired at Aragon. Before the trial of this ease Yotaw pleaded guilty to murder in the second degree on account of his participation in the action which resulted in the death of Aragon and had been sentenced to serve a term in the penitentiary. A motion for a directed verdict was made by the appellant at the close of the state’s case in chief, which was overruled by the court. It was renewed at the close of the case made by appellant and again overruled.
The case made by appellant tended to disclose that he and Yotaw journeyed to the Sanchez corral for the purpose of ascertaining whether the calf was penned with a certain cow. Before appellant had reached the corral Sanchez had demanded his surrender, at the point of a pistol. Appellant surrendered. Votaw concealed himself behind some trees. After hearing Sanchez threaten the life of appellant Votaw concluded that he should protect his companion. He thereupon left the Sanchez premises and journeyed to the house of a neighbor, where he obtained a gun upon the pretense that he desired to use it the following day. Votaw returned to the Sanchez house, and some one demanded that he throw up his hands. At the same time some one fired at Votaw. Votaw thereupon returned the fire, and continued to fire until his antagonist fell to the ground. Votaw testified that several men fired at him, because he could see the flash from their guns. Votaw then returned to his horse and went to the town of Kelly.
The appellant contends, among other things, that the court erred in admitting in evidence the dying declaration of Aragon, because other witnesses had testified to all the facts contained therein, and there was consequently no real necessity for the introduction of the declaration, and that the evidence is insufficient to support the verdict.
“ * * * While necessity was no doubt the reason which relaxed the rule excluding hearsay testimony in favor of dying declarations, yet it is not indispensable that such necessity exist in each individual case. Thus, though there were many witnesses of the fatal encounter, that fact would not exclude the dying declarations of the deceased. Indeed, the admisibility of dying declarations in prosecutions for homicide has become an established rule of evidence, and such testimony is competent and is received independent of any question as to the paucity or abundance of other testimony.”
Numerous eases are cited by the author under the foregoing quotation which sustain the doctrine announced. The trial court, therefore, did not err in admitting in evidence the dying declaration.
For the reasons stated herein, the judgment of the trial court will be reversed, with instructions to award a new trial; and it is so ordered.