Boyles v. People

6 P.2d 7, 90 Colo. 32, 1931 Colo. LEXIS 350
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedNovember 30, 1931
DocketNo. 12,854.
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 6 P.2d 7 (Boyles v. People) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Boyles v. People, 6 P.2d 7, 90 Colo. 32, 1931 Colo. LEXIS 350 (Colo. 1931).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Butler

delivered the opinion of the court.

Boy Boyles was convicted of murder in the second degree, and was sentenced to imprisonment in the penitentiary for not less than 15 years. He says that the judgment should be reversed because: (1) The evidence was insufficient to support a conviction; (2) there was improper cross-examination of the defendant; (3) there was misconduct on the part of some of the jurors; and (4) the motion for a new trial was denied and sentence was pronounced by a judge who did not preside at the trial.

1. In April, 1929, Orval Lindburg was engaged in the business of selling sand obtained from the McVane farm in Kit Carson county, under an arrangement with Joe Boyles, who “operated” the farm, and the defendant was helping him. About Monday, the 29th, Lind-burg disappeared. The day before that, he was seen wearing overalls, a blue shirt and tan shoes. In the latter part of May a witness found one of Lindburg’s tan shoes in the field, in a direct line between the farm house and an old sand pit located in a dry creek. This led *34 to a search of the premises. Lindburg’s body was found buried in the old sand pit. A foot or two above his body and parallel with it was the body of a dead hog. The hog’s body was covered with several feet of dirt and sand. The only clothing on Lindburg’s body consisted of underclothes, socks and a. blue work shirt. There were marks on the body that might have been caused by dragging' the body over the g'round. A medical witness testified that the cause of death was a blow with a blunt instrument on the back of the head at the base of the skull. Concealed in patches of weeds and among ashes near the farm house were found overall buttons, square shoe eyelets, coat buttons, shirt buttons, suspender buttons, boot nails, hat eyelets, a Gem safety razor, a ring, a radiator petcock and a pipe ferrule, some of which were identified as the property of Lindburg.

The evidence tended to show the folio-wing additional facts: A day before his disappearance Lindburg had about $70 on his person. No money was found on his body or elsewhere. On Thursday, April 30, the defendant stated for the first time that Lindburg went away on Monday with a stranger, in an-automobile driven by the latter, and that Lindburg said that if he did not return by Saturday he would not return at all. At the time he reported the departure, he had in his possession Lind-burg’s shotgun, his explanation being that Lindburg owed him $19 and, having no money with which to pay, told him if he did not return, to keep the gun. On the witness stand the defendant said the amount was $14. Saturday night preceding Lindburg’s departure the defendant, his wife, Lindburg and one A1 Johnson bottled beer at the farm house. The defendant and Lindburg were there again'Sunday morning, drinking beer. They were there on Monday also, drinking beer. The defendant continued to work on the McYane place, hauling gravel, for about two weeks after Lindburg’s disappearance.

About ten days after Lindburg disappeared a hog *35 owned by the witness Joe Boyles, died. The witness first noticed that there was something wrong with the hog the evening before it died. The witness and the defendant pnt the dead hog on a wagon. Hamilton, another witness, testified that Joe Boyles told him and the defendant to take the hog to the old sand pit. Joe Boyles testified that he did not believe he gavie any such instructions. Hamilton drove the horses, and when they arrived at the old sand pit he inquired, “Why isn’t this as good as any place?” and the defendant answered, “It suits me if it does you.” Thereupon Hamilton stopped the wagon about sixty feet from the sand pit, the hog was thrown out, and the defendant rolled it down the bant. While he was doing so Hamilton went for a scraper. They did not dig a place to bury the hog. It was laid on top of the surface by the defendant, and was covered with dirt by him and Hamilton.

A doctor testified that a blow such as Lindburg sustained would cause purging in the nose, ears and sometimes the eyes; that the amount of blood lost might be anywhere from a tablespoonful up to a pint or more. One witness testified that on Monday night he noticed that the farm house floor had been swept and scrubbed, and that the defendant told him that he had swept and scrubbed it. Another witness said that the defendant told him that the defendant and Lindburg cleaned up the house that morning, before Lindburg left. Three witnesses who saw the floor on Tuesday and Wednesday testified that it had been scrubbed. The defendant denied that he had scrubbed the floor. The defendant and several of his witnesses testified that when it rained the water sometimes came under the door and through the windows, settled on the floor and had to be swept out. But there was no testimony that any such condition existed at any time important in this connection. The evidence was all to the contrary. When asked whether there was any rain on Sunday, and whether the floor was wet on that day, the defendant answered, “Not that I remember *36 of.” He testified that there was no rain on Monday, It did not rain on Tuesday until sometime during the evening-.

"When asked what became of Lindburg’s safety razor, he said that Lindburg had taken it with him, but the Gem safety razor was one of the articles found near the house among the ashes and weeds. He also stated that when Lindburg’ left he wore his tan shoes, but one of them, having- square eyelets, was found in the manner already stated, and square shoe eyelets w-ere among- the articles found among the ashes and weeds.

The defendant made numerous contradictory statements in describing the stranger and his automobile, and with reference to the time of the stranger’s arrival and the time of his departure with Lindburg. At one time he said that the stranger was tallat another time, that he Avas short. At one time he said that he did not know the color of the stranger’'s hair, as the stranger kept his hat on; at another time, that the stranger took off his hat and that his hair was dark. The defendant made the following- contradictory statements concerning the stranger’s automobile: That it was a coupe; that he did not know what kind of a car it was; that it was a Chevrolet coupe Avith a Yuma county license; that the stranger was from St. Francis and had a Kansas tag on the car; that it was some kind of a big car; that, he did not know whether it Avas a coupe, touring car, or sedan; that the car was a Ford. On the Avitness stand he said that it was some ear other than a Ford; that he knows a Ford car when he sees it; that it might have been a Chevrolet. To several persons he stated that the stranger arrived in the morning; to two others he stated that it was “a little after noon, before we ate dinner.” On cross-examination, the defendant stated that the stranger came a little after noon, before dinner, but that the defendant; might have testified at the first trial that it was just a little before noon; that he would not say he did not so testify. On several occasions he said that Lindburg and *37 the stranger left at about 3 o ’clock in the afternoon. On another occasion he said that they left in the forenoon.

On Tuesday the witness to whom the defendant announced Lindburg’s departure noticed that he was very nervous about something.

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Bluebook (online)
6 P.2d 7, 90 Colo. 32, 1931 Colo. LEXIS 350, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/boyles-v-people-colo-1931.