MacIas v. State

283 P. 711, 36 Ariz. 140, 1929 Ariz. LEXIS 107
CourtArizona Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 30, 1929
DocketCriminal No. 703.
StatusPublished
Cited by59 cases

This text of 283 P. 711 (MacIas 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
MacIas v. State, 283 P. 711, 36 Ariz. 140, 1929 Ariz. LEXIS 107 (Ark. 1929).

Opinion

LOCKWOOD, C. J.

Refugio Macias, hereinafter called defendant, was informed against by the county attorney of Greenlee county for the crime of murder. The jury which tried the case found him guilty of murder in the first degree, and fixed the penalty at death. Judgment was duly pronounced in accordance with the verdict, and from this judgment defendant prosecutes his appeal to this court.

Counsel who represented defendant in the trial court filed a brief on appeal which contains some thirteen assignments of error. The Attorney General answered these assignments, and defendant’s counsel replied thereto, and the case was ready for argument. At the last moment a request was made *146 that other counsel he associated in the defense, and that he be permitted to file a supplemental brief. This brief was filed four days only before oral argument, and, instead of being supplemental, it was in effect a new opening brief containing ten assignments of error, only two of which appeared in the original opening brief. Since, however, this is a capital case, we permitted it to stand, and allowed the state twenty days in which to answer the new issues raised therein.

We shall consider the assignments of error in their logical rather than their numerical order, characterizing the assignments of the first brief by their numbers and the letter A, and the assignments of the supplemental brief by their numbers and the letter B. These assignments may be divided into three classes: Objections to the instructions, objections to the rulings of the trial court on the admission and rejection of evidence, and general objections not included in the other two classes. We shall consider the general objections first.

Assignment 1-A is that the court erred in denying defendant’s motion to dismiss the information. This is based on the theory that no proper order holding defendant to answer was made in accordance with section 885, Penal Code of 1913. It appears counsel for defendant is in error regarding the facts on this point, as the record on file in this court shows a proper order made strictly in accordance with the statute.

Assignment 5-A is that the court erred in refusing defendant’s request that the rule be enforced against all witnesses. This is a matter of discretion for the trial court, and a case will not be reversed on this ground unless the discretion was abused. Territory v. Dooley 3 Ariz. 60, 78 Pac. 138; 16 C. J. 841. No abuse of discretion appearing affirmatively from the record, the assignment is not well taken.

*147 Assignment 13-A is that-the court erred in denying the motion to set aside the verdict and for a new trial. The grounds set up in the motion are in most cases general ones using the language of the statute, and are not argued seriously by defendant’s counsel, except in so far as they are presented under the other assignments.

Assignment 9-B is that the verdict of the jury was contrary to law. The only argument presented on this belongs more properly under assignment 10-B, that the verdict is contrary to the evidence, and we consider the two assignments together. It is argued that the. evidence in the case, taken at its strongest against appellant, does not justify a verdict of more than murder in the second degree. These assignments require a consideration of the evidence. Taken in its most favorable interpretation in behalf of the state, as we must do under such assignments, it would justify the jury in believing the following to be the facts in the case. Defendant had for some four or five years been a resident of Morenci, Arizona. For a considerable part of this period he was enamoured with Paula Medina, the niece of Pedro Ornelas, the deceased. She did not reciprocate his affection, and he had endeavored repeatedly to force his attentions upon her. Early in the evening, prior to the killing-of Ornelas, he accosted her on the street, and was at that time told by her to refrain from further molesting her. Shortly after this episode he went to the residence of Cipriano Delgada, her brother-in-law, where she was living, and her sister asked defendant why he was bothering Paula, telling him to leave her alone. Some time after this interview, he met Delgada in company with one Antonio Lerma, who was at that time Paula’s recognized sweetheart. Upon seeing them, defendant applied abusive epithets to' Lerma, and immediately opened fire upon both Lerma and *148 Delgada with a revolver, wounding the former and sending a bullet through the coat of the latter. About 8 o’clock that evening, defendant again came to the Delgada house, and tried several times to break in through the door, but, not being successful, left. Near 1 o’clock in the morning, he returned, pushed on the doors, and tried to open the windows. Mrs. Delgada and her sister screamed, and their uncles, Pedro Ornelas, the deceased, and Julian De Luna, who were sleeping in a room in the lower part of the house, ran out of their room and up on the porch where defendant was standing. There was some conversation between the three, and then defendant fired at least three shots. One of these shots killed Ornelas almost instantly, he falling on the porch. Another mortally wounded De Luna, although he wras able to return to his room before he died. Defendant then left the scene of the tragedy and was shortly after apprehended walking along near the road toward Clifton. Previously in the evening, after his first attempt to break into the Delgada house, and before his return at 1 o’clock in the morning, he left a packed suitcase with a friend, with the statement that, if after a while he did not come for it, he would send for it. These are the facts established by the evidence for the state.

Defendant’s testimony, in substance, was that he had been drinking and was excited that night, so that he was not sure exactly what he had, done, nor could he explain why he returned to the Delgada house at 1 o’clock in the morning. He did, however, state that, when he was on the porch of the house, Ornelas and De Luna attempted to assault him with knives, that he fired one shot into the floor, so they would not come close to him, and that when they continued their attack, forcing him back upon the corner of the porch so he could not well escape, he fired two other shots to defend himself, these two *149 being the ones which took the lives of Ornelas and De Lnna.

It is the theory of the state that defendant was so madly enamoured with Paula Medina that he made up his mind to remove any and all persons who, as he believed, stood between him and the object of his affections; and that the foregoing evidence shows a deliberate intention on his part, persisting throughout the day, to accomplish such designs; and that, believing deceased was about to interfere with him in his amorous desires, he killed him. We are of the opinion the evidence would justify a reasonable juror in believing the state’s theory of the case was the correct one. Does such a theory support a verdict of murder in the first degree?

That the killing of Ornelas was unlawful unless committed in self-defense cannot be denied, and the jury by its verdict resolved this issue against defendant.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
283 P. 711, 36 Ariz. 140, 1929 Ariz. LEXIS 107, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/macias-v-state-ariz-1929.