Blackburn v. State

254 P. 467, 31 Ariz. 427, 1927 Ariz. LEXIS 233
CourtArizona Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 16, 1927
DocketCriminal No. 642.
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 254 P. 467 (Blackburn v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Arizona Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Blackburn v. State, 254 P. 467, 31 Ariz. 427, 1927 Ariz. LEXIS 233 (Ark. 1927).

Opinion

McALISTER, J.

— Charles J. Blackburn, appellant herein, was convicted of the murder of one Miguel Bernal and the death penalty imposed. From this judgment and the order overruling his motion for a new trial he appeals.

The sufficiency of the evidence to support the verdict is not raised, but the disposition of the questions presented by the assignments will more readily appear if a rather full statement of the facts is given. Miguel Bernal came to Arizona from Mexico in 1919 and located in the vicinity of Mesa, Maricopa county. Upon arrival he began work as a farm laborer, and in the main followed this occupation in that neighborhood up to the time of his death. He met appellant soon after reaching here, and toward the last of April, 1925, entered his employ in this capacity at a wage of $15 per week, this relation continuing, according to the latter, until July 1st following, when he began working appellant’s farm under a crop-sharing contract.

On October 30th thereafter appellant and Bernal, traveling in the latter’s Ford car, went to Safford, Arizona, for the purpose, according to the former.of purchasing dairy cows, and remained there until the afternoon of November 2d, when they returned to their home, the trip being without result so far as the buying of cows was concerned. On the following day they left for Safford again, going over the same road, and arriving there on the 4th, having spent the night of the 3d in Miami, the purpose of this trip, according to appellant, being likewise to purchase dairy cows as well as to ascertain the name of a Mexican living in the vicinity of Safford who knew a party in Casa Grande owning a herd of Jerseys he desired to sell. They left Safford or the Gila *430 Valley for Globe some time in tbe afternoon of that day, it being tbeir intention, appellant testified, to go to Casa Grande to look at tbe berd there, tbis trip to Safford baying also resulted in tbe purchase of no cows, and between four and five o’clock they came to tbe place where tbe road descends from tbe hill to tbe bridge across tbe San Carlos River. Turning abruptly to tbe right or northwest at this point, as one goes toward Globe, tbe road starts down a seven or eight per cent grade, and is dug out of tbe side of tbe hill for two or three hundred yards, there remaining a more or less perpendicular wall to tbe right which prevents a car from leaving tbe road on that side, but there is nothing to tbe left to interfere with one’s going off and falling to tbe bottom of a five or six foot, vertical, dry-rock, retaining wall, and then on down a rocky, rugged, steep incline for twenty-five or thirty feet to level ground, unless stopped by boulders. About halfway down tbis hillside road, or dugout, as it is referred to throughout the record, and about three hundred yards before reaching the San Carlos bridge, Bernal was injured either through an attack by appellant or as the result of an accident and died within a very short time thereafter. The car in which he and appellant were traveling went off the road at this point, coming to a stop near the bottom of the incline, and the state contends that appellant attacked Bernal, wounding him seriously, then dragged him to the edge of the road and dumped him off, and, to make it appear as though he had been injured in an automobile accident, pushed the car off the road in such a way as to cause it to lodge on or as near his body as possible, while the claim of appellant is that the car accidentally left the road and threw Bernal to the ground, producing the injuries from which he died.

*431 A large number of witnesses were placed on the stand by the state, and tbe testimony given by them strongly supports its theory of the case, but it, together with that introduced by the appellant, is very voluminous, and the questions raised do not require an account of the occurrence in detail. It appears therefrom that appellant and Bernal reached the dugout around four-thirty P. M., and that about halfway down it their car struck the wall on the right side of the road and stopped, the damage to it being slight, but the noise from the impact was sufficiently loud to attract the attention of Ambrose Comton, an Apache Indian known as I — 1, who was working on a wire fence below the road some one hundred fifty yards away. Upon hearing the collision he looked up and saw the car standing against the wall and a truck coming down the road some distance above it in which two white government employees were riding. He testified in substance that after the truck went by the Mexican got out on the right side, walked to the back of the car, and wiped his face with a handkerchief. The man at the wheel then backed the car out into the road and up the grade some distance, got out of it, walked about three steps in front of the radiator, picked up a rock and threw it at the Mexican, but missed him, whereupon the latter ran to the man and threw him down, but after a little scuffling he overcame the Mexican, got on top of him, picked up a large rock near by and beat him in the forehead with it, after which the loud talking or screams that were coming from him were heard no more. He then dragged the body to the edge of the road, placed it in such a position that the head and hands hung over the embankment, took hold of the feet and toppled it over, the place of landing being, near the bottom of the incline. Thereupon he drove or pushed the car down the road close to the edge of the retaining wall where *432 the body was thrown off, but, noticing that Bernal was raising up a little on his hands, left the car, jumped off the retaining wall, went where he was, picked up a big rock and hit him three times in the back of the head, no movement by him being thereafter observed. He then climbed up the incline and retaining wall and pushed the car in such a way that it left the road almost at right angles therewith and landed near the body of Bernal, the right front wheel stopping within a foot or so of his head.

This statement was corroborated in part by two Indian women, Mrs. Horace Newman and Mrs. Am-brose Comton, who testified that they were at their respective tepees that afternoon about four hundred yards away from the dugway, and that, hearing a man in that direction scream or cry, they looked up, saw an automobile standing in the road and a man in front of it dragging- something which they at first thought was a dog. He pulled it to the edge of the road, let the hands fall down over the embankment, caught hold of the feet and threw it over, whereupon they realized it was a man and not a dog. After doing this the man went to the car, pushed it to the edge of the road, stopped it, then jumped down to where he had thrown the body, and within a short time climbed to the road again and pushed the car off where he had thrown the man over. They could not see what occurred while he was where the body was because of intervening obstructions; neither did they see anything more of the affair after the car went over the bank, for when that occurred they left their tepees for a neighbor’s.

Certain portions of the testimony of 1-1 were corroborated by an Indian boy named Ralph Casoose, who lived across the river from the hillside road and a short distance below the steel bridge. He was riding horseback up the river that afternoon, with the intention of going to the east side for a horse, *433

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
254 P. 467, 31 Ariz. 427, 1927 Ariz. LEXIS 233, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/blackburn-v-state-ariz-1927.