Marrone v. State

359 P.2d 969, 1961 Alas. LEXIS 74
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 15, 1961
Docket5
StatusPublished
Cited by42 cases

This text of 359 P.2d 969 (Marrone v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Marrone v. State, 359 P.2d 969, 1961 Alas. LEXIS 74 (Ala. 1961).

Opinion

AREND, Justice.

Frank Marrone, the defendant below, was by indictment filed in the District Court for the District (Territory) of Alaska, Third Division, on the 7th day of November, 1959, charged with murder in the first degree. He was tried by jury, convicted of the included offense of murder in the second degree, and sentenced to a' term of twenty years, from which judgment and sentence of the District Court he appeals. 1

As his first specification of error, the defendant claims that the Territorial District Court had no jurisdiction or power to try him for a state offense after the admission of Alaska to Statehood. 2 This Court in a very recent opinion rendered in the case of Hobbs v. State of Alaska, Alaska 1961, 359 P.2d 956, has held that the District Court for the District (Territory) of Alaska was properly established by Congress as an interim court after statehood and, so continued, was accepted and adopted by the people of Alaska by express provision contained in the State Constitution until the state courts should be organized. In line with that decision and the reasoning therein set forth, we here hold that the District Court for the District of Alaska had full jurisdiction to try the defendant for the offense charged against him.

There are eleven additional assignments of error. These will be considered in substantially the same order in which they are set forth in the appellant’s brief. First we shall relate the essential facts of the case as gleaned from a rather lengthy record. We commence with the account given by witnesses for the prosecution.

Don Iannitti, proprietor of the Pink Garter night club located on the Seward Highway and just outside the city limits of Anchorage, Alaska, was shot to death behind the bar of his establishment at about 6:15 o’clock on Friday evening, July 18, 1958. Two bullets fired from a .357 Magnum revolver had entered his body,, one in the back and the other, on bodily contact from the weapon, in the stomach. Either shot would have floored the victim and killed him within minutes. The weapon had been kept on premises by the decedent and was found near his body.

At about 3:00 o’clock, P.M., of the fatal day, the defendant and the victim were engaged in a friendly game of “flipping” silver dollars at the Last Chance night club where the defendant was employed as a bartender. Their bets ran from $20 to $100 “per flip”. Iannitti had won about $300, when the talk turned to betting on a pending prize fight. The defendant offered odds of $800 to $500 on the favorite, and then wanted to “sweeten the pot” to a bet of $1,600 to $1000. Iannitti would not bet until he saw some money; so, at about 3:30 o’clock, the defendant went to his bank and made a withdrawal of $2,500. from his savings account. In the meantime, Iannitti, who was flashing a roll of about $2,000 or $3,000, also left the Last Chance for the tax office where he paid some taxes by check in the sum of $500.

The defendant returned to the Last Chance in about thirty minutes; while Iannitti did not get back until about 4:30 or 5:00 o’clock that afternoon. Talk about *972 the fight bet was resumed, but Iannitti was disinclined to make a bet at that time and insisted that defendant go with him to the Pink Garter as he, Iannitti, had some work to do there. The two men left the Last Chance together shortly after 5:00 o’clock. The victim had been doing considerable drinking up to this point and was described as being “high” but not drunk.

At about 5:45 o’clock the victim called his wife Helen to report that he was at the Pink Garter and would be “coming home in a few minutes.” Helen could detect that he was drinking. She waited about ten minutes and then called him back. He told her that he was at the Pink Garter alone with the defendant. After that the victim’s daughter also talked with Iannitti on the phone from home and he told her that he would be right home. Then Helen called a cab and set out for the Pink Garter, taking with her the three children of the family. Just before leaving home she called the Pink Garter once more and heard a man say: “Hello, hello, who’s there?” Without answering, she hung up.

At the preliminary hearing Helen had testified that she recognized the voice as that of the defendant; but at the trial she stated that after the preliminary hearing she made some test phone calls to the defendant and decided it was not the defendant who had answered her last call on the evening of July 18. She reasoned to the jury that the voice she heard on the 18th sounded like the low, even tone of the defendant as she had heard it in San Francisco several years before; but, with respect to the voice of the defendant she had listened to on her test calls, she stated that defendant’s “voice is too childish now; he talked high.”

At thirteen minutes after six o’clock, Helen and the children entered a Yellow Cab at their home and arrived at the Pink Garter at about 6:19 o’clock, according to the cab driver. Helen estimated the arrival time at the Pink Garter to have been half past six. En route, as they paused at a four-way stop street intersection about two and a half blocks from the Pink Garter, Helen recognized the defendant sitting in the front seat of another taxicab coming from the direction of the Pink Garter towards the city of Anchorage, although she admitted that he “looks like a lot of people.” This other cab was also momentarily stopped at the intersection.

It was quite dark inside the Pink Garter when Helen and the children entered. She called to her husband and, when he did not answer, she picked up a flashlight lying on the customer bar, and searched the building. It was her seven-year old son who first discovered the victim’s body on the floor inside the bar in a “sort of sitting or slumped position.” The body was still warm when Helen touched it, but she could not feel a pulse or heart beat. The gun lay on the floor nearby. She reached for the phone to call an ambulance, but the phone was dead — shot away in pieces. Her screams brought in the cab driver who was still waiting outside. He put in a call for the police at about 6:29 o’clock. They arrived at 6:34 or 6:35. The police found no one at the Pink Garter other than Helen, the children and the driver of the Yellow Cab; nor had Helen seen anyone else there on her arrival. Approximately $50 was found on the victim’s body.

On the evening in question the operator of a tool rental business, located on the Seward Plighway and about 230 feet north of, or towards Anchorage from, the Pink Garter, saw a man of medium build, wearing a short-sleeved sport shirt, without a coat, whom he identified as the defendant. The man was walking fast, almost running, on the opposite side of the road towards Anchorage. Also he was looking around as if he wanted to catch a ride. The weather was misty and cool, and the time was between 6:15 and 6:30 o’clock. Right after that, a two-tone, dark and light, colored taxicab went by towards town. “It slowed down.”

Lyle Warming, an Anchorage cab owner and operator, testified that on the evening of July 18, 1958, at about 6:00 o’clock he took a lady passenger from Anchorage to the Ace-in-the-Hole, a bar and club, *973 situated about 3 and ½ or 4 miles south on the Seward Highway.

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Bluebook (online)
359 P.2d 969, 1961 Alas. LEXIS 74, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/marrone-v-state-alaska-1961.