Horn v. State

73 P. 705, 12 Wyo. 80, 1903 Wyo. LEXIS 27
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 30, 1903
StatusPublished
Cited by54 cases

This text of 73 P. 705 (Horn v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Horn v. State, 73 P. 705, 12 Wyo. 80, 1903 Wyo. LEXIS 27 (Wyo. 1903).

Opinion

Potter, Justice.

On information filed in the District Court of Laramie County, charging him with the murder of one William Nickell, the plaintiff in error, Tom Horn, was tried in said court and convicted of the crime of murder in the first degree, and sentenced to suffer the penalty of death imposed by statute upon that crime. Before sentence was pronounced a motion for new trial was filed 'and overruled, to which exceptions were reserved. The grounds of the motion, speaking generally, were the insufficiency of the evidence to sustain the verdict, alleged errors of law occurring in the admission and exclusion of testimony, and in the giving and refusing of certain instructions to the jury, alleged misconduct of the prosecuting attorney in his argument to the jury, and irregularities in the proceedings of the jury. The only specification of error in this court is that the District Court erred in overruling the motion for new trial. This brings up for review each matter properly presented to the court below by such motion, and not abandoned or waived by failure to discuss or refer to the same in the brief of counsel. The points relied on to sustain this assignment of error will be disposed of in their order, as briefly as may be consistent with the importance of the questions involved.

1. It is contended with much earnestness that the verdict is not supported by sufficient evidence. This proposition was presented in brief and upon oral argument with unusual skill, and the same is true of the manner of presentation of the other side of the question by counsel for the State. Indeed, on the whole case the arguments both for the plaintiff in error and the State were not only able and instructive, but displayed immense labor and research, and it is doubtful, to say the least, if in any criminal case [104]*104this court has ever listened to more able or learned arguments.

The deceased, William Nickell/ usually referred to in the record and by counsel as “Willie Nickell,” was a boy fourteen years of age, of average size, residing at the time of the homicide on a ranch in the neighborhood of Iron Mountain, in Laramie County, this State, with his parents, Kels P. and Mary Nickell. The testimony quite conclusively establishes the- fact, and it is not disputed, that he met his death as the result of two gun shot wounds inflicted by some other person on Thursday, July 18, 1901, at about 7 o’clock in the morning-, at or in the proximity of a gate about three-fourths of a mile from his home on the road leading from the latter place to Iron Mountain. The family had breakfast 011 that morning about 6 o’clock, and soon thereafter the father, accompanied by his brother-in-law and Mr. Apperson, a surveyor, left the house for the purpose of doing some surveying. As they were leaving Willie was seen by them at the corral arranging to go on an errand for his father to Iron Mountain, his mission being- the employment of a sheep herder. They went in an easterly direction from the house about a mile and a half, and as they were about ready to commence their work they heard three shots fired, seeming to come from the direction of the gate, where the shooting was afterward found to have occurred. Some remark was made about it. Mr. Apperson testified that Mr. Nickell said something to the effect that he wondered who fired those shots, that the reports were too loud for the gun carried by Freddie, a younger son, but the matter was given no further attention. The)'- all agree that the shots were heard at about 7 o’clock.

Shortly after Mr. Nickell and his companions had departed, and at about 6:30 o’clock, or twenty minutes to 7, according to the testimony of Mrs. Nickell, Willie left, going in a westerly direction, and was last seen by his mother as he was g’oing around the house up the road. He was on horseback. He was not afterward seen alive [105]*105by any member of the household. The fact that he did not return that evening occasioned, as the father testified, a little alarm, but no effort was then made to locate him, for the reason, as stated by Mr. Nickell, that he supposed the boy had failed to overtake the man he was seeking at Iron Mountain, and had continued his journey beyond that point.

The following morning, Frida}'-, July 19, 1901, at about 8 o’clock, Fred, a younger brother, took the cows out, going in the .direction and, as we understand, along the road traveled by Willie the day before, and he soon returned crying, and stated that Willie was killed at the gate. Mr. Nickell and Mr. Apperson started immediately for the gate, and they were shortly followed by the brother-in-law aforesaid and Mrs. Nickell. The body was found lying on its back in the road, with the head turned toward the house. The theory of the prosecution is that the boy had fallen on his face, and that the body had been turned over, owing to its situation, and the fact that the clothing was saturated with blood and gravel was sticking to the face and clothing; and that was the opinion of the witnesses who discovered the body, and seems also to have been the opinion of at least some of the physicians called to give expert testimony. Under the head of the body was a small-stone, or a ‘‘little rock," as expressed in the testimony, which appeared to have been placed there by someone. The body was found at a point sixty-five feet from the gate, which was open and lying down. Near the body was a pool of blood, and another pool was found at or very close to the gate, and between the gate and the body patches or spots of blood were found in the road.

We conceive it to be an undisputed theory in the case, at least every indication seems to point to it, that the boy was shot when he was standing at ,or very near the gate, and that he ran toward the house, falling where his body was discovered or close to that spot. The missiles entered the body on the left side, passing- entirely through it. The [106]*106wounds upon the body were described with accuracy by the physicians who conducted the post mortem examination. One wound penetrated the chest approximately on the axillary line, striking the fifth rib, taking an inward, forward and slightly downward course, producing a large wound of exit at the juncture of the sixth rib with the sternum; and the point of entrance of the other wound was three inches posterior to the left axillary line and two inches above the ileum, taking an inward and slightly downward course, penetrating- the abdominal viscera, making a wound of exit one inch above the crest of the ileum and two inches anterior to the right axillary line.

To connect the plaintiff in error with the murder the prosecution relied upon a confession in connection with circumstantial evidence. The alleged confession was made to one Joe Lafors, a Deputy United States Marshal, in the office of the United States Marshal at Cheyenne, on January 12, 1902, and was overheard by two other witnesses, viz., Leslie Snow, a deputy sheriff of Laramie County, and Charles Ohnhaus, a stenographer, who had secreted themselves in an adjoining room of the marshal’s office behind a closed door separating the two rooms. They had thus secreted themselves in anticipation that Lafors might succeed in causing the plaintiff in error to talk about the murder, and his connection with it. Xo question is involved of duress or threats in respect to the confession, nol-is there any claim that the confession was inadmissible as being- involuntary or for any other reason. Lafors was not an officer of the county, and was not officially charged with an}7 duty to discover or arrest the perpetrator of the crime; but his relation to the affair ivas that of detective.

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Bluebook (online)
73 P. 705, 12 Wyo. 80, 1903 Wyo. LEXIS 27, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/horn-v-state-wyo-1903.