Bryant v. State

40 P. 518, 5 Wyo. 376, 1895 Wyo. LEXIS 27
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedJune 10, 1895
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 40 P. 518 (Bryant v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bryant v. State, 40 P. 518, 5 Wyo. 376, 1895 Wyo. LEXIS 27 (Wyo. 1895).

Opinion

Conaway, Justice.

There is a considerable number of assignments of error in this cause, only four of which we have deemed it necessary to discuss.

1. It is assigned as error that the verdict is not sustained by sufficient evidence.

The occurrences upon which the charge is founded took place in the early morning of the fifth of July, 1893, in a hall where a ball was in progress. Plaintiff in error was there with a revolver in his possession. During an altercation which occurred between him and Chrisman, he drew the revolver from his clothing, and a struggle for the possession of the revolver occurred, during which the revolver was discharged, whether intentionally by plaintiff in error, or accidentally, may not be entirely clear. Why he took a revolver to the ballroom, thé only revolver seen there, is a question upon which there is some testimony.

John Carmoody testifies to a conversation plaintiff had with him in front of the hall and before the trouble occurred when the pistol was discharged. Carmoody relates this conversation as follows:

“I just got through dancing and was a little warm and stepped out on the sidewalk. Bryant was there and we passed the evening, and Prank asked me if I heard that Mrs. Lee and Mrs. Bryant were going to be put out of the hall. I told him I heard Mrs. Lee was, hut I didn’t think there was anything in it. We talked about it a few minutes. He said, ‘Well, I told Rody if they put her out I would help him.’. Then he started talking about his wife. He said she was his [381]*381wife and she had not treated him right, bnt he didn’t care particularly about that if she would treat the child right. I started to move away, and then he spoke again about putting the women out. He said, ‘Well, I am looking for trouble; I am fixed for it. I have one gun of my own and Fiser just gave me another.’ I said, ‘Trouble is a good thing to leave alone.’ We talked a few words and then separated.”

On cross-examination this witness says further of this conversation: “He said he had been talking to Rody about it and -told him he would stay with him. He said Mrs. Bryant was his wife and he did not propose to see her put out. He said she had not treated him right, but he was dissatisfied with the way she treated the child, and went on talking that way.”

The person designated as “Rody” was the escort of Mrs. Lee, and not of Mrs. Bryant. There was no attempt to exclude ■anyone from the ball-room, but later in the evening plaintiff in error found the “trouble” which is the occasion of this prosecution, in a different way. He appeared upon the floor of the ball-room while a waltz was going on, and remarked repeatedly, in the hearing of several of the dancers, and among others of Chester D. Chrisman and Mrs. Bryant, that he ■thought all of certain classes of persons, whom he characterized by very vile terms, indicating both males and females, had been ordered out of the house. None of these facts, so far as stated, are denied by plaintiff in error, who testified as a witness in his own behalf. On his cross-examination he is asked: “Did you make a remark to the effect that the whores and pimps were to be kept out of the hall?” He says he might have made this remark to Tway— don’t know as he madé the remark to keep them out of the hall, but out of town — that he “didn’t refer to any one for certain at the time — and didn’t know where Mrs. Bryant and Chrisman were at the time.” His further explanation of what occurred; just prior to the scuffle in which the pistol-was discharged appears in. the following questions and answers:

■ “Q. Did you make this remark to which I have referred at any time during that evening, in the ball-room, except twice when your wife and Chrisman were passing close to you [382]*382in the waltz? - A. I don’t remember making it. At the time I made this remark I didn’t know where they were at.
Q. To what question was it you applied it — what remark you applied it — when you said to Chrisman, ‘Take it as you like, Chet;’? A.: When he spoke to me the first time I didn’t understand what he said.
Q. Why did you say, ‘Take it as you like?’ A... He said, ‘Hid you mean it.for me?’.
Q. Was that the only remark-up to the time that you had understood? A; It was the only remark Chrisman .made to me. • Q. How did you know what .he was referring to when 'he asked if you meant-him?: A; That..is what I told him, he could take it as he liked: • I .didn’t know what- he wás referring to. That was the reason I told him he. could take ‘it as'he liked.”

■ This explanation- can hardly-be said to explain. ■ It calls to mind, the Hibernian’s- two defenses .to-an action ¡for-damage done :by a.breachy bull: -..First- he had ho. bull. -Second, his bull was not breachy.. As to the remark in question, plaintiff in error says: First, he don’t-remember making, the remark; and second, at the.time he made the remark; he didn’t-;-know where Chrisman-.and Mrs..Bryant were.- This-may-Sometimes be permissible -in -pleading,- but it is-hardly .appropriate in sworn testimony.

Plaintiff in error testifies further, that Chrisman had raised his -hand to strike him before-he reached for his-revolver; and that Chrisman struck-him and seized the.-revolver before he succeeded in getting it-out. . This is-contradicted"by Chris-man .and by the witness Signor. ■ Signor-says :“I saw Bryant start to draw-his gun,-and as he-started to draw-.-the gun Chet, hit.'him'.

“Q. At the.time was--the -gun- out-? A? Yes. '-'.He grabbed the gun and hit him at. the same time.” -And-in answer-to a question-on cross-examination, Signor says i‘The "pistol was out of Bryant’s clothing when Chrisman-grabbed it..”-' ■

' - Gustin, testifies-.that plaintiff in:error. found--fault-with-him for-interfering in the-fight, and- that on Gnstin's replying that any American citizen had a right to interfere-when-, a-man’s [383]*383life was in danger/plaintiff in error replied that he did-not intend to shoot anyone except' Chrisman." This is corroborated by the positive testimony of Dougherty to the same effect. There is an attempt to show by Brower that plaintiff in error did not make such a statement at the time and place fixed by Gustin and Dougherty; hut Brower came in after they had been talking several'minutes, and did not hear what was said before he came in. It.is true Dougherty testified that plaintiff in error made the statement that he'intended to. kill him, not naming the person, hut.in a conversation in which Ohris-mán’s name was mentioned repeatedly, and referring only to. Chrisman, after Brower came in. - Brower, says he. did not hear the statement,: and certainly, would have heard-it if ■ it- had been 'made while he was -there; . Brower’s ..opinion that he would-he certain to hear anything said in-a room in'which there were a.number.of men doing-more-or-less talking, is not sufficient to offset Dougherty’s .-positive -testimony, or to justify an imputation- of perjury om Dougherty’s part.

We are of- opinion- that the evidence" -.sufficient to sustain a conviction;- ■;

Another assignment of' error' is based upon-the refusal-of the court to give the following-instruction:'. - ■ ■

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Related

State v. Buchanan
252 P.2d 524 (Idaho Supreme Court, 1953)
Ross v. State
93 P. 299 (Wyoming Supreme Court, 1908)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
40 P. 518, 5 Wyo. 376, 1895 Wyo. LEXIS 27, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bryant-v-state-wyo-1895.