Cate v. State

114 N.W. 942, 80 Neb. 611, 1908 Neb. LEXIS 41
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 6, 1908
DocketNo. 15,205
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 114 N.W. 942 (Cate v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cate v. State, 114 N.W. 942, 80 Neb. 611, 1908 Neb. LEXIS 41 (Neb. 1908).

Opinion

Letton, J.

At the January, 1907, term of the district court for Nuckolls county the defendant was convicted upon the charge of making an assault upon and stabbing one Lee Gress with intent to wound. From this judgment of conviction he prosecutes error to this court.

The information contained two counts; the first charging stabbing with intent to wound, and the second stabbing with intent to kill. The jury found him guilty of the charge in the first count, and acquitted him of the charge in the second count. 1 ' ° defendant, Dr. William A. Gate, is a practicing physician at Nelson, Nebraska. The complaining witness, Lee Gress, is a farmer residing a few miles from that place. Gate had been the family physician for Gress, and had rendered services in that capacity for which a balance was owing him from Gress. The doctor was about to take a trip for the benefit of his wife’s health, and was attempting to collect money due him to produce funds for that purpose. A day or two before the assault Mrs. Gress. was in Nelson, and he spoke to her with reference to the account, asking her to give a note for the balance due. On the day of the assault he met Gress upon the street, told him he would like to speak with him, and led the way to the side window of a drug store on the level of the street, where Gress sat upon the window sill and the doctor stood or leaned at the side of the window. According to the witnesses for the state, the doctor asked Gress to pay his account or give a note for it, and when Glress refused to do this he applied an opprobrious epithet to Gress and struck or pushed his fist in Gress’ face several times. Gress rose to his feet, threw off his overcoat and a blouse which he was wearing, and, just as this was done, was struck a violent blow with a pocket knife in the hands of the doctor. The knife penetrated his clothing, went through a pocket memorandum book, and entered his body, striking a rib near the region of the heart. He was almost immediately again struck a blow [613]*613in the side, which penetrated the pleural cavity. Another blow cut through the front of the cap which he was wearing, and struck about half an inch above and to the right of his eye. Gress, in the meantime, had been trying to strike Cate, but did not succeed until after these wounds were inflicted, when he struck him a severe blow in the mouth, knocking him to the" sidewalk. This terminated the affray. There were a number of persons standing nearby. Enoch Gress, a brother of Lee Gress, at the time the' quarrel began was standing with some others upon the sidewalk toward the east end of the building. He had a pocket knife in his hand, with -which he was figuring on or boring into the wall. When he heard the words applied by the doctor to his brother, he moved toward the combatants, dropping his knife into his pocket as he did so, but before he reached them Cate had been knocked down by Lee. When the doctor was striking Lee Gress with the knife, Gress called out, “Somebody give me a knife,” but did not obtain a knife from his brother, and was unarmed during the assault. The evidence of the defendant’s witnesses, except that of the defendant himself, as to the essen • tial points, varies but little from that of those of the state, the variance apparently depending largely upon their different points of view of the affray. Dr. Cate testifies that, after he and Gress had had some words, while Gress was sitting in the window, Gress arose and threw off his overcoat ; that at that time Enoch G ress came rapidly toward them with a knife; that Lee Gress asked for the knife, and, he thought, got it from Enoch; that Gress then struck him a blow which dazed him; that he then went to fighting, and that he has no recollection or knowledge of having struck Gress with the knife, and that, if he did so, it was done while he was in this dazed condition. Some of the witnesses for the defense say that, after the quarrel began, Enoch went toward Lee, saying, “not to take that off of him”; that Lee then took off his coat, told Enoch to give him his knife, and that the doctor then said, “You will take your knife, will you? I have got a knife too,” and the [614]*614doctor then took bis knife out of his pocket, and the fight, began. But on cross-examination ho witness testified that Lee Gress ever had a knife, or ever received one from his brother, or that Enoch had a knife in his hand when he reached the point tvhere Lee and the doctor were. From a careful reading of the evidence, we are convinced that it was ample to warrant the jury in coming to the conclusion that the defendant was guilty of a malicious assault upon Lee Gress with intent to Avound him.

1. It is contended that the court erred in refusing to continue the case to permit of the attendance of one of defendant’s counsel, Avho resided in Kansas City and who was detained by the sickness of one of his family. The information in this case Avas filed on March 28, 1905. In November of that year a trial Avas had at Avhich the jury disagreed. Prom that time for more than a year the case was pending, and the record does not shoAV the cause of the delay. On November 20, 1906, the case came up for hearing upon the application of the defendant for a continuance, and the case Avas continued until January 14, 1907. On the 15th of January, on defendant’s application, the case was again postponed to January 23 “to alloAV defendant time to procure counsel to take the place of his attorney G. W. Stubbs,” and the sheriff Avas directed to call 35 talesmen to appear at that time for the trial of the case. The record does not sIioav upon Avhat ground the case Avas continued from November 20 to January 14, except that it Avas at the request of the defendant. On the. 23d of January he again applied for a continuance, upon the ground that Honorable G. W. Stubbs, of Kansas City, avIio was his leading counsel, was unable to attend the trial for the folloAving reasons, shoAvn by Judge Stubbs’ affidavit, viz.: That his little daughter Avas taken sick before the 14th of January; that on the 14th the physician in attendance advised him that he might safely leave home; that he reached Nelson on Tuesday morning, the 15th, but Avas immediately advised that his child was much worse and called back to Kansas City; that her condition is [615]*615now such tliat lie cannot at present leave her bedside, but that, if the trial is delayed two or three weeks, he believes he will be able to be present and assist in the trial; that the defendant could not procure other counsel between the time when it was apparent that he could not be present and the date that the case was set for trial, so that such counsel might be of any material value in the trial of the case. This application was overruled, and exception taken. It appears that Mr. H. II. Mauclc, counsel for defendant, who tried the case, had been engaged as one of defendant’s counsel for a long time; that the probability of Judge Stubbs being unable to attend the trial had been anticipated at the time of the application for the continuance on January 15, and that a week’s continuance had been granted, in order to allow defendant to procure other counsel, if necessary. The evidence in the case was simple, consisting mostly of the statements of eye-witneses to the transaction, and, so far as the examination shows, all the facts bearing upon the question of the defendant’s guilt or innocence seem to have been brought out at the trial by Mr. Mauclc.

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Related

Sall v. State
61 N.W.2d 256 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1953)
Fisher v. State
47 N.W.2d 349 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1951)
Uhlig v. Wahl
39 N.W.2d 783 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1949)
Browne v. State
212 N.W. 426 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1927)
Becker v. State
136 N.W. 17 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1912)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
114 N.W. 942, 80 Neb. 611, 1908 Neb. LEXIS 41, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cate-v-state-neb-1908.