Hadley v. State

212 P. 458, 25 Ariz. 23, 1923 Ariz. LEXIS 105
CourtArizona Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 6, 1923
DocketCriminal No. 547
StatusPublished
Cited by34 cases

This text of 212 P. 458 (Hadley v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Arizona Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hadley v. State, 212 P. 458, 25 Ariz. 23, 1923 Ariz. LEXIS 105 (Ark. 1923).

Opinion

ROSS, J.

Defendant is under sentence of death upon a conviction of murdering Anna C. Johnson, on November 15, 1921, in Pima county. He was [26]*26informed against under the name of William S. Estaver; but during the trial it developed that his true name was Paul V. Hadley, and the proceedings thereafter were carried on under his true name. He appeals.

We do not think it necessary to set out the harrowing details of the crime only as it becomes necessary to elucidate the errors defendant complains were committed in the course of the trial. He was tried twice, the first jury failing to agree upon a verdict. On April 22, 1922, the case was set down for a retrial, May 15th. This setting was later vacated and the case reset for May 19, 1922. Upon the call of the case for trial, defendant’s counsel presented a motion for a continuance on account of the absence of material witnesses. We assume it appeared from the motion and affidavit in support thereof, or otherwise, that the witnesses were out of the jurisdiction of the court at the time, but that they had testified in the previous trial of defendant upon the same charge. The action of the court thereon, as shown by the minutes, is:

“Motion was by the court denied for the reason that the county attorney consents that' the testimony of said witnesses given on the former trial of this case may be read.”

The court’s refusal to grant a continuance is assigned as the first error. The motion and affidavit supporting it are not in the record on appeal, and therefore not available for examination as to the sufficiency of their contents. Although the court’s denial is based upon other grounds, it may be that the showing for continuance was entirely inadequate. Unless the showing was that such witnesses would testify to a different state of facts than in the former trial, or to additional facts material to his case, we think the denial of the continuance was in the exercise- of a proper and sound discretion. At all [27]*27events, the showing not being before ns, we must assume that the court’s ruling thereon was correct.

The next assignment is directed at an order of the court striking out a statement made by. defendant while testifying in his own behalf. He testified that some time after he left the scene of the tragedy he met some Mexicans or Indians, in an automobile, and asked them for a drink of water and some directions. Upon motion of the county attorney, this was stricken, and, we have no doubt, properly so. If the fact that defendant asked for a drink, or directions, was material, he should have proved it by someone other than himself, for coming from him it would be self-serving. Aside from that, it was clearly immaterial; it did not tend to prove any fact in issue.

The introduction of the trousers of Peter Johnson, worn at the time Anna C. Johnson was killed, over defendant’s objection, is next assigned as error. To obtain a clear understanding of this assignment, it will be necessary at this point to set out some of the facts:

Peter Johnson and Anna C. Johnson, his wife, and defendant had never met until November 14, 1922. The defendant, coming from California by train, arrived in Tucson November 13th; and the Johnsons, traveling by automobile, arrived in Tucson the afternoon of the 14th. The Johnsons stopped in front of a service station, Mrs. Johnson remaining in the car, while her husband alighted to make some inquiries. When the latter returned to the car, he found defendant talking to Mrs. Johnson. Defendant told the Johnsons that he was traveling by automobile going east from California; that his machine had broken down between Sentinel and Ajo; that he had come to Tucson for repairs, and expressed the wish to ride with the Johnsons (who were on their [28]*28way from the east to California) to the place where his car had been left. The Johnsons, being fully loaded, declined at that time to allow defendant a seat, but, upon reflection, later found him and told him that if he would pay the expressage on their trunk to Los Angeles they could accommodate him. The defendant gave his assent, and the following morning the trunk was expressed to Los Angeles; he paying the charges. The three of them left Tucson between 8 and 9 o’clock the morning of the 15th. Peter Johnson, who was operating the car, occupied the left front seat, and his wife sat on his right. Defendant occupied the left rear seat, the right side of that seat being filled with bedding and other luggage. In this position they proceeded on their way until they passed Ajo some twenty-nine miles, it being their purpose to reach Sentinel before stopping for the night. It was about eight o’clock, and some time after the sun had set, when, according to the story of Peter Johnson, the defendant, from his position in the back seat, shot him, Peter Johnson, four times, twice in the neck, once through the shoulder, and once through the fleshy part of the right arm; and shot Anna O. Johnson three times, once in the left ear, once in the back of the head just to the right of the median line, and once through the neck.

The defendant’s version of the matter was that they were, ambushed and shot by parties from the roadside.

Peter Johnson, although severely wounded, suddenly started the car (which had stopped during the shooting), and as it lunged forward the defendant jumped, or fell, from the car. Some fifteen miles from this point Johnson stopped the car and discovered that Anna O. Johnson, his wife, was dead.

[29]*29"While Peter Johnson was testifying, and after he had detailed the facts and circumstances as above outlined, he was asked the question as to how he was dressed at the time of the shooting, and, having answered that he was wearing a pair of trousers, a vest and coveralls, the coveralls were produced and offered in evidence, as also his shirt, without any objection. When, however, his trousers were offered, they were objected to on the ground that the evidence was immaterial, incompetent and irrelevant, and had no tendency to prove any issue in the case. This objection was overruled and the trousers were introduced as evidence.

As before stated, this ruling is assigned as error. The principal reason urged against the trousers as evidence is that they did not tend to throw any light upon the nature and location of wounds upon the body of the witness, since all his wounds were upon the upper part of his body. It is said “they possessed not the slightest probative value; they proved nothing.” We think it may be said that while perhaps they proved nothing, it is not shown that they could possibly have had any prejudicial effect upon the jury. While counsel in their argument speak of the trousers being bloody, there does not seem to be a scintilla of evidence to that effect. The reason given by the courts for rejecting clothing that illustrates no point is that they, being covered with blood, can have no other effect than to excite prejudice in the minds of the jury against the defendant. The coveralls were let in without objection, and since, as their name implies, they must have been worn outside of and over the trousers, they, too, should be covered with blood, and yet that part of them that covered his trousers shows only a few scattered spots of blood. The objection made by defendant’s counsel to the introduction of [30]*30the trousers is, not that they would have a tendency to excite the jury’s prejudice by reason of their gruesome or bloody appearance, but that they were, as evidence, incompetent, immaterial and irrelevant.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
212 P. 458, 25 Ariz. 23, 1923 Ariz. LEXIS 105, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hadley-v-state-ariz-1923.