State v. Jones

Decision Date15 December 1883
Citation17 N.W. 911,64 Iowa 349
PartiesSTATE v. JONES.
CourtIowa Supreme Court
OPINION TEXT STARTS HERE

Appeal from Harrison district court.

The defendant was indicted for murder in the first degree. He was convicted of manslaughter and sentenced to the penitentiary for seven years. From the judgment he appeals.

SEEVERS and ROTHROCK, JJ., dissent.

Scott & Hight, for appellant.

Smith McPherson, Atty. Gen., for the State.

ADAMS, J.

This case is before us on a second appeal. See 52 Iowa, 150; [S. C. 2 N. W. REP. 1060.] The defendant was charged with the murder of one Roberts. In February, 1878, the defendant and Roberts were engaged in farming, and resided upon adjoining farms in the county of Pottawattamie. On the sixth day of that month Roberts was found dead in the road, about 30 roads from the defendant's house. There was a hole in his head near one eye, and a pistol ball was found in his brain. He had left home a short time previous with the avowed intention of going on an errand to the house of one Axtel. The road from Roberts' house to Axtel's led by the defendant's. Circumstances, not necessary to be detailed here, indicated strongly that Roberts was killed by the defendant. His counsel contend that if he killed Roberts he did so in self-defense. They also contend that he was in such an unsound condition of mind that he was not responsible for his acts. Soon after Roberts died, and not far from where he died the defendant was seen with blood running down both sides of his face, indicating that he had received an injury. As to his mental condition the evidence shows beyond controversy that he was suffering under great depression, caused by trouble of the gravest character. His family was broken up. His wife, as the evidence tends strongly to show, had committed adultery with Roberts, and the fact had come to the defendant's knowledge. She had left him and had removed all the furniture from the house except a bedstead, and he had reason to apprehend that Roberts would the next day, or soon thereafter, dispossess him of the house. To the specific evidence of insanity we shall refer briefly hereafter.

1. The defendant assigns as error the admission of certain evidence. One McCuen was examined as a witness in behalf of the state. He testified that the evening before Roberts' death he saw him at Axtel's. For the purpose of showing that Roberts was on legitimate business at the time he was killed, the state sought to show that he had an errand at Axtel's that day. It accordingly asked McCuen a question in these words: “State if any arrangement was made, on the evening prior to the decease of Roberts, by which Roberts was to go to Axtel's the next day.” This question was objected to by the defendant as leading, immaterial, and incompetent. The court overruled the objection and the witness answered: He made an arrangement to be there the next morning between eight and nine o'clock to look at some steers Axtel had to sell.”

The question, strictly considered, called for answer by yes or no, and possibly it might be considered as indicating that the interrogator desired that the answer should be in the affirmative. But the question was only very slightly leading, if at all, and it seems clear to us that the defendant was not prejudiced by the character of the question as leading. He further objects, however, that the question called for a conclusion. He insists that an arrangement is the result of what is said, and that if any evidence upon the subject was admissible the witness should have been asked for what was said and not the result. If the case were to turn upon whether there was or was not an arrangement,--that is, if that were the ultimate fact to be found by the jury,--there would be much force in the defendant's objection. But that was not an ultimate fact. Any evidence of talk indicating Roberts' purpose to go to Axtel's the next morning to buy steers, though amounting to less than an arrangement, would have had substantially the same effect. It would have been a circumstance tending to show that Roberts' journey that morning towards the defendant's house was explainable upon a different theory from that of the defendant, which was that he was out seeking the defendant's life or injury. It is further objected that what was said was at least but hearsay, and inadmissible for that reason, if no other. The talk, it is true, was not concurrent with the journey in point of time. But to render declarations admissible as a part of the res gestœ, it is not necessary that they should be precisely concurrent in point of time with the principal transaction. It is sufficient if they are near enough to clearly appear to be so spontaneous and unpremeditated, and free from sinister motives, as to afford a reliable explanation of the principal transaction. People v. Vernon, 35 Cal. 49;Mitchell v. State, 41 Ga. 533;Handy v. Johnson, 5 Md. 450. The case at bar, we think, comes within the rule. We see no error in allowing the question to be answered.

2. One Orlando Wright, a nephew of the defendant, was examined as a witness in behalf of the state. Having testified that five or six weeks prior to Roberts' death the defendant borrowed a revolver belonging to the witness' brother, he was asked by the defendant on cross-examination whether the defendant was not at that time living on friendly terms with Roberts. The state objected to the question as not in cross-examination, and the objection was sustained. In this we think there was no error. It was not the object of the question to allow the witness to modify or explain his testimony given in chief, nor was it to elicit testimony which should have the effect to discredit the testimony which the witness had given in chief. The object was to prove an independent fact, not explanatory of nor inconsistent with the testimony given, but to render the fact testified to consistent with the defendant's innocence; or, in other words, the object was to rebut the effect which the state intended to produce. It appears to us, therefore, that if the defendant desired to introduce such evidence it was more proper that he should be required to do so in rebuttal.

3. The court instructed the jury that “if the evidence shows that the defendant deliberately formed a design to take the life of Roberts, and sought a meeting with him for the purpose of executing that design, and in that meeting and in pursuance of that design inflicted upon Roberts the wound which caused his death, the crime, if he is responsible for the act, is murder in the second degree.” The defendant assigns the giving of this instruction as error. It is contended by the defendant that there is no evidence that he sought a meeting with the design to take Roberts' life. We think that the evidence is very strong that the defendant took Roberts' life by shooting him with a revolver. That he sought a meeting with that intent the evidence is not so strong. But if he took Roberts' life with a revolver, then it would seem that he must have taken a revolver with him when he proceeded to the place of meeting. The case is quite different from what it would have been if Roberts had been killed with a club, or some weapon which might be supposed to have been picked up by the wayside. We think that there was some evidence that the defendant...

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