176 P. 188 | Or. | 1918
The defendant contends that he was entitled to change of venue and bases his motion upon an affidavit of one of his attorneys, to which are attached as exhibits two copies of the “La Grande Observer,” a newspaper published in La Grande, and a copy of the “Eastern Oregon "Weekly Republican,” published in Union; another affidavit by the same attorney and one by another of his attorneys, supported by the affidavits of Clark Leiter and Dr. M. H. Hall, from which it appears that a crowd of about two hundred people assembled after the shooting, saying, “Drive them all out of town”; that the talk became general; that on March 15th a mass meeting of about one hundred and fifty people gathered at the city hall, attended by the city commissioners and other prominent citizens, culminating in the appointment of a committee for the holding of another meeting on the
The state filed counter-affidavits of Fred B. Cur rey showing that there was another Chinese society in La Grande named the Hop Sing Tong, of which the defendant and codefendants were supposed to be members; of Fred J. Holmes, a prominent citizen of La G-rande; L. Rayburn, chief of police; L. J. Terrall, an attorney; Thomas Brashear, a resident of Union County for forty years; W. T. Wallsinger, a resident of Union County, and John S. Hodgin, district attorney; in all of which it was claimed and asserted that there was no prejudice against the defendants; that they could have a fair trial in Union County and that anything which had been said or done was for the purpose of enforcing the law and punishing the guilty.
It was a cold-blooded murder. While running from his pursuer the deceased received two fatal shots in his back, and after he fell mortally wounded his assailant stood over his prostrate body and tried to shoot him in the head, left him and then returned and again snapped his empty gun at his victim’s head. All of this happened at noon in front of the postoffice, on one of the main streets of the City of La Grande, and in the presence of a number of its reputable citizens who were pursuing their daily vocations. In the shooting an innocent woman received a stray bullet in her ankle.
“The determination of an application for a change of venue is a matter for the exercise of the discretion of the trial court, and its decision will not be reversed unless it appears that an injustice has resulted. In the present instance it is clear that the refusal to change the place of trial was not error. * * There was apparently no effort or design, even inferentially, to prejudice the cause of the defendant or to declare what should be his fate or to indicate to the public or those who might be called upon to dispense justice, what their verdict should he in the premises. ’ ’
The same rule is also announced in State v. Humphreys, 43 Or. 44 (70 Pac. 824); State v. Smith, 47 Or. 485 (83 Pac. 865), and other decisions of this court. We think that no error was committed in overuling the motion for a change of venue.
Second, it is claimed that under Section 1531, L. O. L., the court erred in refusing to discharge the co-defendants of Chin Ping so that they might testify as witnesses in his behalf. The record shows that when the prosecution rested the defendant asked that the state be required to say whether it had any further evidence connecting either of the remaining codefendants with the crime, hut did not indicate the purpose for which the request was made. The court refused to
“The state can only secure a conviction of the defendant in this case upon the acts of the defendant alone, and not jointly with any other of the codefendants named in the indictment, and the jury must be satisfied from the acts of the defendant alone, and not from the acts of any other defendants named in the indictment, that he committed the acts set forth in the indictment, before they will be justified in bringing in a verdict in this case.”
“Each of the defendants was granted a separate trial and Goff was on trial when this motion was made; but Colvin and Clark were not on trial and there was no way in which the court below could know what evidence would be produced against them prior to their being put on trial, unless the prosecution had stated to the court what evidence it expected to produce against them. * * The trial court could not properly assume that there would be no evidence produced against Colvin and Clark except what was given on the trial of Goff. * * The grand jury had indicted them and that was prima facie evidence that there was sufficient proof to justify their indictment. Official duty is presumed to have been duly performed, and hence we must assume that the trial court was not of the opinion that there was not sufficient evidence to put Colvin and Clark on their trial, and hence denied said motion.”
There was no error in denying the motion to discharge the codefendants.
Assuming that the title to the lot was vested in the United States for governmental purposes, yet it appears from the record that the crime was committed on one of the principal streets of the City of La Grande and that the street was then used and occupied by the public as such, and there is no pretense that the United States claimed or exercised any right of dominion over the surface of the street. While it was used for and remained a public thoroughfare, that right would be vested exclusively in the City of La Grande and through it in the state. Counsel for the defendant have not cited any authority and none can be found
After a careful examination of all the testimony we are of the opinion that the defendant had a fair trial and that the judgment of the Circuit Court should be affirmed.
Affirmed. Rehearing Denied.