222 P. 447 | Mont. | 1924
delivered the opinion of the court.
On the morning of April 11, 1923, Hale Talbot, a neighbor of the defendant, was shot and killed by the latter. There were no eye-witnesses to the homicide other than the defendant, and the testimony against him consisted chiefly of his admissions made to various persons after the tragedy and circumstantial evidence in connection therewith.
After investigation so made the body of the deceased was put into a wagon and hauled to his home, about two miles distant, where it was placed in a granary and left there overnight and the day following. While there it was viewed by several persons, including the sheriff, county attorney, and coroner. No powder marks were visible upon the body. On April 13 the remains were taken to Glasgow and an autopsy held. The bullet wounds upon the body of the deceased were described by Dr. Hoyt, who performed the autopsy, as follows: “We found bullet wounds; one entered eight inches above the knee and below the center 'and came out on the outside of the thigh of the left leg about five inches below the hip-bone. It * a * did n0£ break the bone. There was another bullet wound. The point of entrance was an inch and a half above
The defendant was charged by information with the crime of murder, and upon his plea of not guilty was tried by a jury which returned its verdict finding him guilty of manslaughter, and fixing his punishment at imprisonment in the state penitentiary for not less than five nor more than ten years. Judgment was entered accordingly. The defendant has prosecuted this appeal from the judgment and from the order made denying his motion for a new trial.
The assignments of error present three questions for determination, which will be considered in their order.
1. Did the court err in refusing to permit the defendant to recall the state’s witness Haydon for further cross-examination after the close of all of the evidence? At the trial it appeared in the state’s case in chief that on April 13, 1923, the scene of the homicide was visited for further investigation by Milton Talbot, a brother of the deceased, John Alexander Watson, George Clark, Fred Knott and others. All of those named testified in substance that there was a large blood spot about a foot in diameter where the head of the deceased had lain, filled with particles of bone, brains and
A witness for the defendant, Otis A. Hallett, one of defendant’s attorneys on the trial, testified that he, together with Sheriff Haydon, and several others named, visited the scene of the homicide on the afternoon of April 12, 1923. He says: “The area the blood stain -covered probably was ten or twelve inches wide, and possibly eleven to fourteen inches long; as I remember, it was slightly oval in shape.- At that time the blood stain was still wet; there were clots of blood there, of course, and small particles of matter that looked like brains or tissue or something.
“Q. At that time did you, or not, see anybody digging down underneath about the middle point of that blood stain? A. I first noticed Sheriff Haydon; he was stooping down, rather in this fashion, and he appeared to have a match in his hand scratching around through it, and, -as I stated I was there to see what I could see, and I -stooped -over his shoulder and watched him, standing in this -position, leaning over his shoulder; he apparently scratched all through it, and turned over particles of blood, by seeing what was in there, so; I don’t mean blood, but clots and particles that looked like brain and tissue. Mr. Haydon and I came there to that point, together. I saw the beginning of what examination was made at that place. At that time there was no hole. After Mr. Haydon had made the investigation I made an investigation of the same point. I took a short piece of sage-brush I picked off, and after Mr. Haydon left the spot I stooped down and
After the defendant had rested his case Sheriff Haydon was recalled by the state in rebuttal and testified: That he was present “on the twelfth day of April, 1923, at a place where a blood spot was found. I heard Mr. Hallett’s testimony with reference to that blood spot yesterday. I heard his statement that he and I had dug through the blood spot and what was upon the ground. That is not a fact. I did not dig into it. Mr. Hallett in my presence did not dig into it. Q. Did you see anybody els-e picking into what is there— that crust — while you were there? A. No, sir.” He was them subjected to cross-examination by defendant’s counsel.
The state recalled three other witnesses in rebuttal, and then rested its case. Whereupon George E. Hurd, of counsel for the defendant, requested to b'e permitted to recall the witness1 Haydon for further cross-examination, for the purpose of showing contradictory statements made by him relative to his having dug in the blood stain, which request was by the court denied. Mr. Hurd then made offers of proof, which the court denied as follows: “At this time the defendant asks the court for leave to recall for further cross-examination the witness J. W. Haydon, who testified in rebuttal this morning, 'and in that respect the defendant offers to show and by the sworn evidence that after the witness Haydon left the stand in rebuttal on this morning there came to the attention of counsel for the defendant for the first time certain statements materially affecting the testimony which was given by the witness, Haydon, which statements have reference to his contradiction of himself, and which are, as follows: To a witness James H. Stephens on yesterday, after Mr. Hallett had testified in the case concerning the place and the looking at the blood spot as shown by the evidence in this case, and Mr. Haydon made the following statement to Mr. Stephens, ‘Damn it, Hallett did me a great injustice; he
The statute provides that, after the examination of a witness by both sides has been once concluded, a witness cannot be recalled without leave of the court, and such leave is granted or withheld in the exercise of a sound discretion. (Sec. 10667, Rev. Codes 1921.) Murder, the crime with which the defendant was charged, is the unlawful killing of a human being with malice aforethought (Id., see. 10953), and such malice may be express or implied. “It is express when there is manifested a deliberate intention unlawfully to take away the life of a fellow-creature. It is implied, when no considerable provocation appears, or when the circumstances attending the killing show an abandoned and malignant
Assuming the further cross-examination of -the witness Hay-don to have been for the purpose of impeachment, as is inferred from the offers of proof submitted, yet there is no showing made of whether Mr. Stephens would testify, or, if called, what his testimony would be. Granting that Stephens would have testified that Haydon stated to him that which is shown by the offer of proof, it would not, in our opinion, materially affect the credibility of Haydon’s testimony. The proposed cross-examination, as shown by the offers of proof, relates to a wholly immaterial matter, and it is evident that the finding -of the bullet imbedded in the ground at the spot where the deceased’s head had lain was given no consideration by the jury, a-s is demonstrated by its verdict. The testimony respecting the finding of the bullet could have been offered by the prosecution only on the theory of proving malice; that is to say, that the defendant fired the fatal shot while the deceased lay prone and helpless on the ground. We are clearly of -opinion that the court committed no abuse of its discretion in refusing to permit the defendant to recall the witness Hay-don for recross-examination under the circumstances.
2. The next assignment of error to be considered relates to the -admission in evidence of the bullet, state’s Exhibit 6.
3. The third and last error alleged is with reference to the court’s refusal to give to the jury defendant’s proposed instruction to the effect that the evidence is insufficient to justify the return of a verdict of manslaughter, and that therefore that charge is withdrawn from the jury’s consideration.
The evidence amply warranted the submission to the jury of the question of whether the defendant was guilty of the crime of manslaughter, and therefore, in our opinion, no error was committed by the court in denying this proposed instruction. Where, as in the case before us, there is evidence tending to show the defendant to be guilty of murder in the first or second degree, or of the crime of manslaughter, it is the duty of the court to explicitly instruct that a verdict of manslaughter may be returned. (State v. Shadwell, 26 Mont. 52, 66 Pac. 508.)
Whenever the evidence warrants it, the duty of the court is to instruct the jury upon every offense included in the crime charged. (State v. Calder, 23 Mont. 504, 59 Pac. 903;
Finding the assignments of error made by the defendant without merit, the judgment and order are affirmed.
Affirmed.