Kaparos v. State

26 P.2d 533, 46 Wyo. 316, 1933 Wyo. LEXIS 42
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 14, 1933
Docket1810
StatusPublished

This text of 26 P.2d 533 (Kaparos 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
Kaparos v. State, 26 P.2d 533, 46 Wyo. 316, 1933 Wyo. LEXIS 42 (Wyo. 1933).

Opinion

*319 Blume, Justice.

The defendant was accused of murder in the first degree, committed at about ten o’clock on the evening of July 4, 1932, upon one George Stavroulakis. Accused with him was one Mike Zinwdikis. Defendant demanded a separate trial. This was granted. Zinwdikis was tried first and he was convicted of murder in the first degree without capital punishment. Defendant, too, was convicted of the same crime, and the same penalty was meted out to him. From a sentence in conformity with the verdict, the defendant has appealed.

1. The main assignment of error herein is that the verdict is not sustained by sufficient evidence. This will necessitate a review of the testimony. It is voluminous and we shall point out only the most salient points. Among the principal testimony is that of the defendant’s alleged accomplice, Mike Zindwdikis. The latter lived at Winton, some distance from Rock Springs; the defendant lived at Rock Springs. They appear to be second cousins. Zinwdikis’ testimony is quite lengthy, and at times somewhat confusing as to just when certain things were said or done. The meaning of his testimony, too, is, at times, somewhat difficult to gather. We shall give the most outstanding points of his testimony, as we understand it, in direct narrative form, and this is as follows:

In the month of April, 1932, Mike Raparos sent word to me several times for me to come to Rock Springs, reporting that he was sick. I finally complied with his request and saw him. He was bruised up considerably and had a black eye. He told me *320 that he had had trouble with Charles Milonis and the deceased; that Milonis beat him up while Stav-roulakis held him. He stated that he would .take his revenge; that after the trouble the deceased had come to his house to excuse himself, but that he, Kaparos, had tried to get out of his bed “to catch the knife to cut the head off and throw out.” I chided Kaparos for getting into trouble, adjured him to give up his idea of revenge, and he promised to do so. After about ten days, I again came to Rock Springs and saw Kaparos. He again spoke of his trouble, and then stated that he would send both Milonis and the deceased to “Rogan’s ranch” (Rogan has a funeral parlor at Rock Springs.) I again saw Kaparos some fifteen days after that, and he then asked me if I were coming to Rock Springs on July 4th; if so, for me to bring in my gun — a Luger — ; that he wanted to use it, to revenge himself; that his own gun was no good. I told him “nobody was going to use my gun.” I went to Rock Springs on July 3rd, 1932, carrying my gun with me. I left it at the house of defendant. In the afternoon, as well as the evening of that day, defendant urged me to stir up a fight with the deceased, which I refused to do. On that day and later, he spoke of having money — about a thousand dollars, which we could take, after the killing, and go away on. On the night of the third, I played “barbutti” all night, which is played with dice. I saw Kaparos the next morning. I said that I intended to play some more “barbutti” that day, and he again urged me to stir up a fight with the deceased. During the day I played at the O. K. Soft Drink Parlor. Many were playing, among them the deceased. Before I started, Kaparos called me over to where he was and said “now is a good time to start trouble,” and I said “I don’t *321 want to start trouble.” Defendant apparently then left. During the game a man from Reliance threw the dice “crooked,” and I said “that’s no dice,” hut everybody said that’s dice, and so I said that if everybody say it’s dice, it is so, and I pay. But I said that “everbody was colored,” because “white men” would not tell a lie. The deceased thereupon said that there were others more white than I. I indicated that there might be trouble, and that some one might get killed, without naming anybody. The deceased told me that I couldn’t kill anybody, that I had no “guts,” and I said to deceased: “Well George, if anybody would like to see whether I have guts, try me some time at some place.” The game lasted until about five or six o’clock. I then went to Raparos’ house, where I saw him. We soon thereafter went to the neighboring house of Mike Varonis, but before going, Ra-paros handed me my gun, saying to take it along, which I did. He took his own gun and put it in his pocket. From then and until about fifteen or twenty minutes after nine o’clock, Varonis, Pete Pikakis, defendant and myself were together, drinking wine, and we became somewhat intoxicated. All of us then went out, to go to town. When we came to R street, Varonis and Pete Pikakis had preceded us. Raparos again commenced to talk of killing Milonis and the deceased, asked me to help him, said I did not love him, etc. I finally said that I would help him and asked him if he had his money with him; he said he did, and I said “let’s go.” Ra-paros wanted to go to Milonis’ house first, to kill him. But about that time, we saw the deceased on R street, on the same side that we were on. Ra-paros said “there is the one,” and I said “All right, keep still.” The deceased crossed R street before we did; defendant was close behind him. Both *322 had crossed before me. I was held up somewhat by a passing car. When the deceased and Raparos had crossed and had come close to a telephone post, in front of the O. R. Soft Drink Parlor, Raparos took hold of the deceased, who asked “Mike, what do you want?” Defendant then called “Help, help,” and I then shot the deceased in the back, seeing nothing more, and ran, but I think defendant went into the O. R. Soft Drink parlor. I ran down R street, Noble Drive, and finally toward the defendant’s house, and found the defendant at home. I asked him if he had the money, and he said he had only a dollar and a half. He proposed that we next kill Charles Milonis, then go to Megeath, and if the sheriff came, to kill him, and then to kill ourselves.I was indignant, because he had no money, and finally went to Winton. I admit that I testified at my own trial, that the defendant and not I did the shooting. I did that to protect myself. I lied in that trial.

The witness Charles Milonis testified that the deceased roomed at his house; that about the middle of April, 1932, a number of men were there, including the deceased and the defendant; that some of the men began to wrestle, at first in a friendly way, winding up in a fight; that most of the men left toward dark. Later the witness and the deceased went out, and some one calling from the house that there was a drunk man in there, he went back and found the defendant. He tried to' take him in a car, or walk along with him, but defendant kicked him and threw him down; that he, the witness, got up; that he choked defendant and hit him with a stick. The witness, however, further testified that the trouble was between himself and the defendant, and that the deceased had nothing to do with it.

Later that evening, after ten o’clock, defendant, *323 according to the testimony of Barbarigos, was found near the house of Milonis, bruised, black, dirty and bloody, and was taken home by Barbari-gos.

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230 P. 678 (Wyoming Supreme Court, 1924)

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Bluebook (online)
26 P.2d 533, 46 Wyo. 316, 1933 Wyo. LEXIS 42, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kaparos-v-state-wyo-1933.