10 N.M. 269 | N.M. | 1900
On September 19, 1899, in the district court of the Fourth judicial district of the Territory of New Mexico, within and for the county of Colfax, the defendant, William H. McGinnis, was indicted for the murder of one Edward Farr. On September 21, 1899, the defendant was arraigned and pleaded not guilty. The defendant filed a motion for a continuance, which was overruled. On October 2, 1899, the cause came on for trial, and on October 7, the jury returned a verdict of murder in the second degree against the defendant. He was sentenced to the penitentiary for life. Thereafter the defendant filed a motion in arrest of judgment and a motion for a new trial, which were overruled. Judgment was entered against defendant, whereupon he took an appeal to this court. The record discloses the following important facts in the case: That on July 16, 1899, a posse of seven members organized by the United States Marshal for the District of New Mexico, under telegraphic direction from the Attorney General of the United States, while in pursuit and upon the trail of a band of felons, known to be three or more in number, who, on the night of the nth of July, 1899, held up and robbed of expressage a passenger train carrying the United States mail on the Colorado Southern system of railway in New Mexico, suddenly in a secluded and rugged place in the mountains of Colfax county, New Mexico, came upon the objects of their search; that one of the felons was believed to be a notorious desperado, named Sam Ketcham, for whom the United States Marshal held a warrant, charging him with a violation of the postal laws theretofore committed. The testimony of the witnesses for the prosecution tended to prove that the designated leader of the posse, Wilson Elliott, being the first to see the defendant, McGinnis, called upon him in a tone of voice which he believed loud enough to be heard by defendant from a distance of about fifty yards, to surrender; that thereupon the defendant, who was in motion, instantly stopped and raised to his shoulder what Elliott believed to be a gun, and that instantly, thereupon, shots were exchanged simultaneously between other members of the posse and the defendant and those with him. This the defendant denied, testifying that he was at the time on his way from the camp to a spring of water a few yards distant, for a pail of water and unarmed. The evidence is conflicting upon the question from which side the report of the first shot came, but it is clear from the testimony of all the witnesses for the prosecution that the first report of the rifles from the opposing parties came so close together as to be almost indistinguishable. At first firing the defendant fell wounded. Shots continued to be rapidly exchanged between the posse and the defendant’s associates for about ten minutes. The effect of the shots from the felons was the shooting of Edward Farr through the heart, causing his instant death, and the wounding of two other members of the posse; and the effect of the shots from the posse was the mortal wounding of Sam Ketcham and the wounding of defendant. The shooting having ceased, both parties retired, the posse to care for their wounded and the defendant with his confederates to make good their escape. The continued vigilance of the authorities, however, resulted in the apprehension of the defendant on the sixteenth of August, 1899, by the sheriff of Eddy county, New Mexico, who, with his posse, came upon the defendant at a point in southeastern New Mexico, some three hundred miles from the place where Farr was killed. The defendant then again offered most strenuous resistance to arrest by the officers, wounding by shooting one of that posse and also an old man whom he suspected of having betrayed his whereabouts to the authorities. The prosecution in the course of the trial also proved, besides other material facts, the whereabouts of the defendant and his confederates a few days prior to the assault upon the train; their sudden disappearance, their presence next near the scene of the assault and robbery early on the night of the hold-up; identified the defendant and his dead confederate, Sam Ketcham, as two of the men engaged in that assault; established the flight of the defendant and his confederate from the scene of the assault and the fact that within a few hours thereafter the authorities were in pursuit and upon their trail, which pursuit, with some interruptions and delays, caused by the weather, and formally organizing the marshal’s posse, was continued down to the time of the fatal encounter in the mountains. The first incriminating evidence found was the torn letter addressed to Franks, one of the bandits, discovered early on the day following the assault by Sheriff Titsworth at the place where the defendant and his confederates had been observed camped the day of the hold-up in the vicinity of the scene of the assault; and at the mountain camp of the defendant and his confederates property was discovered which was identified as having been stolen from the car of the train which had been assaulted. The testimony as to what took place at the time of the assault upon the train goes to prove that the defendant himself assaulted the fireman and the express messenger with deadly weapons; that he and his confederates fired many shots into both sides of the train; that they entered the combination baggage and express car and dynamited the safes therein, thereby wrecking the safes and partly demolishing the car, and that they secured and carried away certain express matter therefrom.
We are aware that in the case of the Territory v. Borrego, 8 N. M. 474, views were expressed by this court to the effect that such an indictment charged murder in the first degree exclusively, and will not sustain a conviction of murder in any of the lower degrees. We regret to say that with those views we are constrained to differ, and that we can not follow them as correctly and authoratively stating the law.
Objection is also made to instructions numbered 24 and 25 asked by the Territory and given by the court, whereby the jury were instructed, in effect, that if an agreement had been made to resist arrest by the defendant and his alleged associates, and they were each doing what he could with a common design and intent to resist their arrest, and to kill any or all of the posse so seeking to effect their arrest, and while they were so acting the deceased was killed by either of the defendant’s associates, their act would be as much the act in law of the defendant as if he himself fired the gun which gave the fatal shot.
That the arrest of a felon may be justified by any person without warrant if a felony has, in fact, been committed, has been so often and so «unanimously laid down by all the authori- . ties as the l'aw, as to call for!' nothing more than its reiteration here, to support the action of the court below in refusing defendant’s proposed instruction numbered five. A. & E. Enc. of Law, (ist Ed.) Vol. 1, p. 741, and cases cited; Wharton’s Crim. Law (8th Ed.) sections 433 and 434..
We think from the record before us that the appellant had a full and fair trial and that there was no prejudicial error in any of the rulings of the court complained of in the motion for a new trial or in appellant’s brief. The verdict being fully sustained by the evidence, the judgment of the district court is affirmed.