114 P. 112 | Mont. | 1911
delivered the opinion of the court.
The defendant was convicted of murder in the first degree and ■sentenced to undergo punishment by confinement in the state prison for life. He has appealed from the judgment and an order denying him a new trial. Two contentions are made in his behalf, viz.: That the evidence is insufficient to justify the verdict, and that the verdict is contrary to law.
The evidence is entirely circumstantial. The defendant at the time of the homicide was residing alone in a cabin a few miles northeast of the village of Giltedge, in Fergus county. He was
This brief description of the locality where the homicide occurred and the surroundings is necessary to an understanding of the evidence, of which the following is a summary:
On June 28, 1910, Thomas Burke was in the employ of Mellor, and engaged in doing discovery work on the Hertford claim. Its location seems not to have been completed. He was seen to leave his cabin with his lunch bucket about 8 o ’clock in the morning, taking the trail along the eastern wall of the canyon leading up to the claim. This was the last time he was seen alive by any witness. About 11 o’clock in the forenoon he fired a blast, the report of which was heard by several witnesses at the Spotted Horse and Cumberland mines. About 3 o’clock in the afternoon another report was heard in the direction of the claim, which, in the opinion of these witnesses, was made by the discharge of a shotgun. Mellor was in the employ of the Cumberland Mining Company. He went to the cabin of Burke on the evening of the 28th, but found no one there. He returned the following evening, and, finding no one there, wrote a note to deceased and left it for him. Later the same evening he again returned, and, finding that the deceased was still absent, went to the claim in search of him, thinking he might have been injured. On arriving there in the dusk, he found the body of the deceased lying face downward in an open cut in which he had been at work. He at once notified the sheriff and coroner. An examination made of the body the next morning revealed the fact that the deceased had been killed by a discharge of what appeared to be six buckshot, fired into his breast from the right and somewhat above and from a short distance, and that they all entered within a space of three inches square, tearing his heart into shreds. The nature of the wound and the position of the body indicated that he had probably been called by the assassin and shot down as he turned to answer. There was no evidence of a struggle. The lunch bucket was found empty. The surroundings indicated that the deceased had fired a blast, and that at the time he was killed he was engaged in shoveling the debris out upon the lips of the
The defendant was arrested upon a charge of murder on July 6. At his house was found, among his other weapons, a twelve-gauge double-barreled shotgun. The firing apparatus of the right barrel was out of repair. In the opinion of witnesses who examined it then, the left barrel had been recently fired, and streaks along the bore indicated that the last charge fired from it had consisted of buckshot or other large shot. Scattered about the premises outside the cabin were found several exploded Peter’s Ideal shells, all twelve-gauge in size. The following conversation occurred between him and the sheriff at the time of his arrest: “Q. You were here the other day, wasn’t you? A. No; I was over this way, but I was not here. Q. I heard you were here. I thought you were looking for me. I guess they
The foregoing is gathered from the statements of witnesses introduced by the state. The defendant offered himself as a witness. He did not .controvert seriously any statement of fact made by any witness, except that he denied that he had made any inquiry about buckshot or had purchased any at the time or place mentioned by any of them, or elsewhere, and also that there was any mark or bruise upon his shoulder. He admitted that he had purchased buckshot, but not within two or three years. • He admitted, or did not deny, the conversations had with several witnesses about the deceased and also with the sheriff at the time -of his arrest. He offered the explanation, however, that he had heard he was suspected of the murder because of the strained relations existing between him and the deceased. He stated that he was present at his home during the whole day of June 28, engaged in making preparations for hay harvest, explaining that he did not give the sheriff a definite answer at the time of his arrest by saying that he did not then remember his whereabouts, but that, after thinking over the matter, he had become satisfied that he had not left his place on that day, stating particularly what he was doing. It appears from his own testimony and that of other witnesses examined in his behalf, and upon this point there is no controversy, that he was in the habit almost daily of looking over the range for his cattle which ranged mainly to the north of Maiden and the Spotted Horse and Cumberland mines, and that it was not an unusual thing for him to walk. He usually carried a gun of some sort to shoot coyotes,
In summarizing the evidence we have observed the rule that every conflict in the statements of witnesses as to any material fact must be resolved in favor of the finding of the jury. That the deceased was foully murdered on the afternoon of the day he was seen going to his work at the Hertford claim, there is no room for doubt. Do the circumstances point out the defendant as the murderer so clearly as to exclude all reasonable doubt of his guilt? This question must be answered in the negative, unless the circumstances can bear the test required by the rule applicable to cases where a conviction is sought upon circumstantial evidence, to-wit: That all the circumstances proved must be consistent with each other and with the hypothesis that the accused
The theory of counsel for the state is that the defendant, being on unfriendly terms with the deceased, crept upon him while he was at work, and shot him, having previously extracted a charge of birdshot from a Peter’s Ideal shell, and replaced it with buckshot specially for this purpose. This inference they draw from circumstances which they insist are fully established, viz.: That the defendant had buckshot in his possession on June 15; that exploded Peter’s Ideal shells were found about his cabin; that such wads as are used in loading them were found near the body of the deceased; that there were on one of these impressions of buckshot and upon the other of smaller shot; that the burned butt of such a shell was found in the ashes of defendant’s stove, bearing indications that it had been exploded by defendant’s gun; that a loose wad and two remnants were found in the cabin; that the gun had recently been fired, and that streaks in the bore
Nor do we think that, if it be assumed that the defendant purchased buckshot in Lewistown on June 15, the finding of the gun wads near the body, though they bore the marks they did, should impel a reasonable person to the conclusion that defendant fired the shot. It is not specially significant that exploded shells were found about his cabin.' Such as were found had been exploded long before June 28. It is not likely that having in his possession a single unused shell and at the same time other weapons which would have answered his purpose just as well, together with an ample supply of ammunition for them, he went to the trouble of loading it with buckshot in order to commit the murder, and then taking the precaution to conceal it by burning in the stove. It is true that this may have been done, but that it was done is a speculative conclusion, rather than a legitimate inference to be drawn from the facts established by the evidence.
The testimony of the salesman as to the identity of the man who purchased the shot on June 15 is exceedingly vague and indefinite. He stated substantially that he could not say whether the defendant was the same man, and, though he afterward said that according to his best judgment he was, the features by which he fixed the identity at the trial differed substantially from those upon which recognition was based at the coroner’s inquest. So that, though the testimony of Langdoc be accepted as true, as to the conversation had with defendant on the evening of June 14. the conclusion that the defendant was the purchaser rests upon very unsubstantial evidence. The same may be said of the streaks observed in the bore of the gun.
So, too, the evidence relied on to supply the motive for the murder is of little, if any, criminatory value. The fact that the defendant had the deceased arrested and confined in peace pro
The conversations had with the sheriff at the time of the arrest
Viewed separately, most of the circumstances adverted to are
This conclusion renders it unnecessary to consider the second contention made by counsel.
The judgment and order are reversed, with directions to grant the defendant a new trial.
jReversed and remanded.