Carey v. State

429 P.2d 836, 91 Idaho 706, 1967 Ida. LEXIS 251
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedJune 30, 1967
Docket9887
StatusPublished
Cited by53 cases

This text of 429 P.2d 836 (Carey v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Carey v. State, 429 P.2d 836, 91 Idaho 706, 1967 Ida. LEXIS 251 (Idaho 1967).

Opinion

McQUADE, Justice.

A preliminary hearing in the present action was held on February 26, 1966, before the probate judge of Washington County, Idaho, to consider a charge of murder in the first degree alleged in a complaint accusing appellant, James L. Carey, of willfully, unlawfully, feloniously, and deliberately with premeditation and malice aforethought and the intent to kill and murder and of so killing and murdering on December 25, 1965, Jim Alexander, a deputy sheriff of Washington County, with a .22 caliber pistol. Finding a public offense had been committed and sufficient cause to believe the defendant guilty thereof, the probate judge ordered appellant to be held to answer such charge in the district court. Appellant, arguing that no evidence consistent with such a finding had been introduced at the preliminary hearing, petitioned for a writ of habeas corpus. The writ issued, but after a hearing on May 2, 1966, the district court found sufficient evidence in support of the findings of the committing magistrate, and *708 thereupon entered an order quashing the writ. This is an appeal from that order.

The transcribed testimony of the preliminary examination establishes the following facts.

The homicide occurred on Christmas night, 1965, in the K.C. Club, a Cambridge, Idaho, bar and restaurant of which the appellant was part-owner. On the club premises, appellant had living quarters which apparently could be entered from the barroom.

Shortly after ten o’clock p.m., the victim, dressed in ordinary street clothes, entered the barroom. Whether he was then on police duty is not shown; however, appellant, it is implied, and all the witnesses then in the club were familiar with the deputy and knew him to be a law enforcement officer. Alexander ordered a coke, sat at the bar to drink it, and engaged in small talk with three men who had been seated there when he came in, Tom Hubbard, Don Beigh, and Jim Wiggins. Besides these four, appellant and his partner in the club enterprise, Agnes Knight, were present, and also seated at the bar.

The room was dimly lit, apparently to accentuate bulbs on a Christmas tree standing in a corner. “It was dark * * * the room was lit but it is [sic] dark — that night they had Christmas tree lights on and it was darker than usual,” Tom Hubbard testified. After the shooting, he said, “You couldn’t tell” what type of gun had been used because of the darkness.

The following events, which immediately preceded the shooting, all happened within approximately five to ten minutes after the victim had entered the club. After the victim sat down and ordered a coke, he started to chat with some of the people at the bar. Soon appellant began “mumbling and using a little vulgar language,” a witness said, whereupon the victim asked him (not in the exact words) — are you talking to me? Appellant replied, in effect, —yes. The victim then told appellant that he would have to arrest him for disturbing the peace, and immediately stood' and began walking towards appellant. No witness observed whether the victim motioned towards or was wearing a pistol. When the victim had reached a point approximately ten feet from him, appellant drew a .22 caliber long rifle Colt automatic pistol and fired several shots in rapid succession. Bullets entered the body of the victim who slumped to the floor and lay there motionless.

The only doctor who viewed the corpse said that Alexander was dead when he first examined the body at midnight; no witness saw the deputy alive after he had been shot. How many bullets entered Alexander was not precisely established; a mortician, however, said the left arm had two wounds, one outside and one inside, the left chest had two and there were two in the back, between the shoulder blades.

The evidence suggests that appellant had consumed a fair amount of beer on the day of concern, but the record contains no estimates of the precise quantity imbibed or the time span involved, and does not clearly show the alcohol’s effect on appellant’s mental condition. Garth Nelson, a “good friend” of appellant’s “for quite some time,” testified that between 5:00 and 8:30-9:00, all p.m., Christmas day, appellant’s “voice was thick” and “he had a stagger to him,” and Nelson “would say he [appellant] was drunk.” During those three and one-half to four hours, Nelson testified, appellant had a beer in his hands at all times. However, asked if appellant, by 8:30 to 9:00 p.m., when Nelson left the bar, “had reached that point where he was so drunk that he was having a hard time to express his thoughts,” Nelson replied, “No. Not to me. He didn’t seem it to me.”

Thomas Hubbard testified that when he had entered the club, ten minutes before the shooting, appellant was “talking back and forth to Agnes [Knight].” Hubbard said he did not talk to appellant and did not know how much beer appellant had consumed or whether appellant was drunk. Hubbard also testified that after the shoot *709 ing appellant stood up and remained immobile for some time, then walked out and quietly surrendered himself to the sheriff who was standing outside the club. Although the ground was icy, Hubbard did not see appellant slip. He said too that appellant then put his hands against a wall, when so ordered by the sheriff, and stood that way for at least fifteen to twenty minutes.

No scientific tests were administered to determine the amount of alcohol in appellant’s blood.

Appellant does not contest the sufficiency of evidence introduced at the preliminary hearing to establish that he shot the victim; his argument is limited to whether the evidence supports a preliminary finding that the shooting was accompanied by a deliberate and premeditated intent to kill. In this regard appellant contends the evidence conclusively establishes that he was drunk at all pertinent times and that the killing spontaneously happened. Thus, appellant claims, the record is absolutely inconsistent with and cannot support a preliminary finding of sufficient evidence to hold him to answer a charge of deliberate and premeditated murder.

Habeas corpus is a proper means to test the validity of a magistrate’s order of commitment, I.C. § 19-4215(7), Martinez v. State, 90 Idaho 229, 409 P.2d 426 (1965), cf. Idaho Const., art. 1, § 8, but before the accused may be discharged it must be shown that he “has been committed on a criminal charge without reasonable or probable cause”, I.C. § 19-4215(7), and the magistrate’s “discretion should not be disturbed except in a clear case of abuse thereof.” In re Levy, 8 Idaho 53, 54, 66 P. 806 (1901); see Martinez v. State, supra.

Regarding the evidentiary showing necessary to support a magistrate’s order of commitment, the defendant must be held to answer an offense charged if “it appears from the [preliminary] examination that a public offense has been committed, and there is sufficient cause to believe the defendant guilty thereof”. I.C. § 19-815. Under this section of the statute, the minimum standard of proof is less stringent than the conviction judgment criterion of beyond a reasonable doubt, Martinez v. State, supra; State v. Layman, 22 Idaho 387, 125 P. 1042 (1912); In re Squires, 13 Idaho 624, 92 P. 754 (1907); State v. Bond, 12 Idaho 424, 86 P.

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Bluebook (online)
429 P.2d 836, 91 Idaho 706, 1967 Ida. LEXIS 251, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carey-v-state-idaho-1967.