Flege v. State

133 N.W. 431, 90 Neb. 390, 1911 Neb. LEXIS 363
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 28, 1911
DocketNo. 17,136
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 133 N.W. 431 (Flege 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
Flege v. State, 133 N.W. 431, 90 Neb. 390, 1911 Neb. LEXIS 363 (Neb. 1911).

Opinion

Sedgwioic, J.

On the 30th day of June, 1910, Louise Flege was- shot and killed at her home in Dixon county. She was then residing with, and keeping house for, her brother, the defendant, and he was afterwards charged with her murder. Upon trial in the district court for Dixon county he was found guilty of murder in the second degree, and has brought the record of the" proceedings here for review by petition in error.

1. He insists that the evidence is not sufficient to justify his conviction. One Eichtenkamp, a young mail of about 18 years of age, was working for the defendant, and had been living with the defendant and Ms sister for a little more than two months. He had been there for a short time in the preceding year. He continued to stay there for about three weeks after the murder, and about that time he told the officers that the defendant had committed the crime. He was the principal witness for the prosecution, and his testimony is substantially all of the evidence that there is in the record-tending to prove the guilt of the defendant. Immediately after the murder this young man told a very different story. His evidence was taken under oath at the coroner’s inquest, and he there testified to circumstances which; if true, would prove conclusively that 'the defendant is not guilty of the crime with which he is charged. He testified upon the trial that he was plowing corn on the defendant’s farm during the forenoon of the day of the murder, and that the defendant was painting his automobile house, and that they both went to the house for dinner at about half past 11 o’clock. The deceased had prepared the meal, and they all sat down to dinner about 12 o’clock. After they had eaten their dinner, which he thought took about 20 or 30 minutes’ time, he and the defendant smoked, and then took a nap, the defendant lying upon the couch and the witness lying upon the porch, near the front door. [393]*393While they were sleeping, which he thinks might have been 20 or 30 minutes, the defendant was awakened by his sister, and was told that the defendant’s brother wanted to talk with the defendant at the telephone. It appears from the uncontradicted evidence that the defendant and his brother, Fred Flege, who lived-on an adjoining farm, had contemplated going to town with the defendant’s automobile, and that Fred at this time called for the defendant to ask him to go then. The deceased went to the telephone, and told Fred that the defendant was asleep, and was by him told to awaken the defendant and have him come to the telephone. This she did, and the defendant and Fred then completed their arrangements to go immediately to town. This young man further testified that, when the deceased awakened the defendant, he was awakened also, and that they immediately went out to the automobile. The defendant drove the machine up toward the house, and went into the house to make some preparations for his trip, telling the witness to put some water in the automobile. The witness put some water in the automobile, and then went to the barn, where his team was, intending to go to the field to plow corn. In his testimony at the coroner’s inquest he testified that he went and got a milk pail with which to put the water in the automobile. This would have made it necessary for him to go to the house, as the milk pails were kept in the kitchen. If he had gone to the house, he would have undoubtedly known more about what took place there than he afterwards testified that he knew. In his testimony a,t the trial he said that he used the slop pail that was standing at the well to put the water in the automobile, and did not go- to the house. According tp his further testimony at the trial, while he was putting the water in the automobile, he heard some talk in the house between the defendant and the deceased. He could not understand anything that was being said, but testified that they were quarreling, and just as he got [394]*394to the barn he heard the defendant and his sister coming out of the house. The defendant was assaulting her at that time; she was walking backwards to get away from him, and the witness said he heard the deceased say: “Leave me alone, leave me alone. What did I do to you?” The witness went to them, and asked the defendant what he was going to do, and the defendant told him: “That is none of your business. You hurry up and get out of here.” The witness then went back to the barn, and just as he arrived there he heard a shot and saw the deceased on her knees, the defendant before her, or a little to one side, with a revolver in his hand pointed at her. The witness then went on preparing his team to go to work and heard another shot. The deceased was then lying on the ground in the yard, and the witness saw the defendant leave her and drive away with his automobile. As the defendant passed the witness, he threatened the witness, and told him to keep still about it, and then drove on. It appears from the uncontradicted evidence that the defendant went immediately to the home of his brother Fred, arriving there soon after 1 o’clock, and that the two men went to town with the automobile, as they had arranged to do, and returned to Fred’s place at about 4 o’clock in the afternoon. The defendant was a young man about 29 years of age. When he left his’ brother’s place, he stopped at a neighbor’s, and talked with,the girls there. He took one of the girls, with whom he seems to liave been somewhat interested, for a ride, and then arranged with them to wash his machine, which they had done on former occasions. He stayed there some little time, and then stopped in the field where some of his neighbors were at work, and invited the young men to spend the evening with him at his brother Fred’s. He did not arrive home until about 6:30 o’clock. This witness testifies that immediately after the defendant left home that afternoon the witness went into the field to work. He saw the deceased lying in the yard. Hogs were [395]*395running loose in an adjoining yard, and the gate between the two yards was left open. At the preliminary examination he testified that he did not shut the gate to keep the hogs out from the deceased because he was afraid of the defendant. On the trial of the case he testified that the gate was broken and he couldn’t shut it, and that when he came home the gate was still open, but the dog was in the gate keeping the hogs from going through. He further testified that soon after he went into the field he saw an acquaintance, and they had some conversation, in which it appears that the acquaintance asked him some questions about the deceased, and whether the witness liked her, etc. He testified that he told the acquaintance that he saw the deceased on the porch after the defendant went away, and that she was all right. The witness’ home, where his father and mother qnd their younger children resided, was about two miles from the defendant’s home. The witness testified that he was at home several times with his father’s family after the murder, and they talked about the murder, but the witness never told them what he had seen, but told them circumstances tending to show that some one other than himself or the defendant was guilty of the crime. When the witness went home from his work in the evening of the murder, he saw the body of the deceased still lying in the yard, and went into the house to the telephone to call the defendant at his brother Fred’s. The defendant was not there, but he (the witness) informed Fred that the deceased was lying in the yard, and asked him to come over, which Fred immediately did. Fred brought a neighbor with him, and soon after they arrived the defendant also arrived.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
133 N.W. 431, 90 Neb. 390, 1911 Neb. LEXIS 363, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/flege-v-state-neb-1911.