Driggers v. United States

104 S.W. 1166, 7 Indian Terr. 752, 1907 Indian Terr. LEXIS 93
CourtCourt Of Appeals Of Indian Territory
DecidedSeptember 26, 1907
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 104 S.W. 1166 (Driggers v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court Of Appeals Of Indian Territory primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Driggers v. United States, 104 S.W. 1166, 7 Indian Terr. 752, 1907 Indian Terr. LEXIS 93 (Conn. 1907).

Opinion

Crayton, J.

(after stating the facts as above). In the assignment of errors filed by plaintiff in error there are 25 specifications. The first and second,,, are the usual ones that the verdict is contrary to the law and the evidence. Four of them go to the alleged errors of the court in admitting testimony over the objection of plaintiff in error; 12 go to the action of the court in refusing requested instructions to the jury; 5 to the general charge, and 2 complain of'the overruling of the motion for new trial.

We ivill first consider the question of the competency and admissibiliti'- of the testimony objected to by plaintiff in error at the trial. The first exception on this point ivas made to the .testimony of the witness, T. L. Kelley, as follows: “Q. What time did you get to Brady’s house on Monday before the shooting? A. It must have been 1 or 2 o’clock. Q. What did you do that afternoon? A. 1 went to McNeal’s place over there, where this killing occurred. Q. Well, who did you see over there? A. I seen Goff there and Tom Potter that evening. Q. ’ Just go ahead and tell the jury all the circumstances that occurred there that evening. A. I went over there with Brady and some work hands. 1 went over there to see Goff about a store account he had. 1 was instructed to tell Goff to get off that place, and to leave some rents he owed on the place. He had rented the place to Brady. Q. What was Brady doing there? A. He was running a fence between some cotton and corn stubble. Q. When did you see Goff with reference to going- over there and building that cross-fence? A. It was a little bit late in the evening. Goff came out to where we were working building the fence. Goff says: What the hell are you fellows doing here? This is my land.’ [758]*758I told him McNeal had rented the place to Brady. I walked on down the lane a piece, and walked on up to where Brady was.- Goff, ' it seems to me, stayed there a while, and went back and came back with an Indian, Tom McCarter. ' Q. What was then said? A. Well, there wasn’t a great deal said, any more than Brady told him. He says he didn’t want to hear any more of his noise. I told him what McNeal told me to tell him. Q. Well, proceed. What was said by Goff? A. Goff cursed a great deal. Q. What did- he say? A. He said: ‘If you put airy cattle in here’ — I understood him to say he would kill the cattle. As we started away, he said: ‘If you put any cattle in here, I will kill you.’ He stood there and talked, and he says: ‘But. them in, and I will be with you, God damn you.’ Brady didn’t seem to pay any attention to him. Q. But went ahead with the building of the cross-fence? A. Yes, sir; I asked Goff if he was going, to pay his account or make any arrangements'to make it safe. He wouldn’t give me any satisfaction.” To this testimony the defendant objected on the ground that it was incompetent, irrelevant, immaterial, and hearsay. -In their brief "counsel for plaintiff in error take the position that this testimony is incompetent, because the actions and threats of Goff and McCarter were made in the absence of the defendant, and at a time before any conspiracy is shown to have existed, 'and therefore cannot be used as against the defendant Driggers. It is clearly not hearsay. The testimony of 'Kellej* is a statement of facts to which he was an eyewitness, to wit-, the conduct and threats of Goff against Brady in the presence of McCarter. There is no doubt but that the conduct and threats of a conspirator, either before the conspiracy has begun, or after its purpose has been consummated, cannot be given in evidence as against a co-conspirator. “Where a person joins a conspiracy already existing, he thereby ratifies anjr acts done or threats previously made by the conspirators in furtherance of the common design; but, in order [759]*759to fasten the guilt of such antecedent acts or threats on such newly joined conspirator, it is a sine quo non to establish the fact that the conspiracy was afoot when the acts were done or the threats made.” State vs May, 142 Mo. 136, 43 S. W. 637; 3 Greenleaf, Ev. 94; 1 Bishop, New Crim. Proc. 1248. Upon this point it is therefore important to determine whether at the time the threats of Goff were made there is evidence that the .conspiracy was afoot; not that the defendant Driggers was a member of it, but had the unlawful combination which resulted in the killing begun? If so, and defendant Driggers afterward entered into the unlawful combination, ho would be hold, in law, responsible for the threats of Goff'to the same extent as if he himself had made them.

When Goff first came to the field where Brady was putting up the fence, he came alone, passed a few words, and then left, and in a short time returned with McCarter, one of the parties indicted jointly with Driggers; Goff, and others, and then it was that he used to Brady the threatening language, and cursed him. Goff and McCarter left together. What purpose Goff had in going for and bringing McCarter to the place, or McCarter had in going with Goff, is not disclosed by the positive proof, and therefore can only be ascertained by the circumstances occurring at the time and immediately following. 'After leaving the field the second time, Goff went at once to defendant Drig-gers’ home. Driggers was absent, and Goff told his wife of the occurrence up at the field, and left word with her to tell Driggers to come and see him as soon as he got home. McCarter, when lie left the field, went home and found the codofondant, Underwood, who had a gun, there. They went at once to the home of a man by the name of McDowell, and there borrowed from him a quarter of a dollar, with which to buy cartridges. McCarter then went to Statler’s store to get the cartridges. This was after dark. Failing to got them, he returned to his home. A short time after McCarter left Statler’s store, Driggers [760]*760and Goff came to the store and Driggers bought three 45 Winchester cartridges and a box of No. 12 BB shot, and informed Statler that he would “probably hear something drop next morning.” Goff got two guns that night, and, after -getting the guns and cartridges, they went to McCarter’s. They were out until 2 o’clock in the morning. Driggers, in his testimony, says: “Goff got up the crowd.” Taking all of these facts together, we think the testimony shows, circumstantially at least, that the beginning of the combination which resulted in the death of Brady was not later than when Goff and McCarter got together after Goff first left the field. They were the first two seen together. When they left'the field the second time, after the cursing and threats, Goff went one way for Driggers, and McCarter another way for Underwood. That both were actuated by the same purpose and with mutual understanding is evidenced by the fact that Goff and Driggers at one place, and McCarter and Underwood at another place, were engaged in the same enterprise of getting together men, guns, and ammunition for the coming conflict. Their actions, tending to the same purpose, could not have been accidental, and must have been understood previous to their separation at the field; and the jiresence of McCarter at the field, followed so shortly by the other circumstances, can only be explained upon the theory of some kind of an understanding between the two men existing at that time, and that being the time the threats were made bw .Goff, we think the testimony was competent.

The fourth and fifth assignments will be considered later.

The seventh, eleventh, twelfth, thirteenth, fourteenth, fifteenth, sixteenth, seventeenth, and eighteenth specifications relate to the refusal of the court to give certain instructions requested by plaintiff in error.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
104 S.W. 1166, 7 Indian Terr. 752, 1907 Indian Terr. LEXIS 93, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/driggers-v-united-states-ctappindterr-1907.