Mendez v. State

229 P. 1032, 27 Ariz. 82, 1924 Ariz. LEXIS 110
CourtArizona Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 3, 1924
DocketCriminal No. 587.
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 229 P. 1032 (Mendez 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
Mendez v. State, 229 P. 1032, 27 Ariz. 82, 1924 Ariz. LEXIS 110 (Ark. 1924).

Opinion

ROSS, J.

— The appellant, to whom we shall refer as defendant, was indicted and tried in Pima county for the murder of one José Amarillas, and was convicted of manslaughter. He defended on the ground of self-defense and also claimed the killing was accidental.

The defendant testified as a witness in his own behalf. After stating that the deceased’s general reputation was that of a dangerous, turbulent, and violent man, he offered to testify that at the time of the homicide he had been informed of two shooting scrapes that happened in Pima county, or in that part of the state, in which deceased had been involved, one ten years before and one fourteen or fifteen months before, for the purpose of laying a foundation for the introduction of specific instances of aggressiveness of deceased. He also offered testimony of an eye-witness to each of such shooting scrapes to prove that deceased was the aggressor, claiming that such offered “testimony was admissible for the purpose of enabling and assisting the jury *84 to more readily determine who was the probable aggressor.”

The trial court sustained an objection to these offers and the ruling is assigned as error. This presents a very interesting question. It has not been passed upon by our court, and the- courts that have considered it have not formulated any definite rule as a guide for the admission or exclusion of such evidence.

When one who has committed a homicide undertakes to justify his act, his state of mind at the time of the killing becomes an important issue. It may turn out that he was in no actual danger, still if he knows either from reputation or by personal contact that the deceased is a dangerous, turbulent person, the jury should be permitted to view any demonstration or overt act of the deceased in the light of such knowledge that they might judge his-conduct accordingly. It is the rule that where it is questionable as to which was the aggressor, or where the state of mind of defendant at the time of the affray is in issue under the claim of justification, that the general reputation of the deceased as a dangerous, turbulent, and violent man may always be shown. Campbell v. Territory, 14 Ariz. 109, 125 Pac. 717; 1 Wigmore, § 246. Such evidence, however, is not competent unless and until it appears that the deceased may have been the aggressor or may have made some threatening demonstration to take the life of, or inflict upon the defendant great bodily harm.

It is when specific instances of violence and turbulence by deceased with third persons, that have occurred some time before the homicide, are offered to prove deceased’s character or defendant’s state of mind that the courts disagree. The trend of the decisions formerly was against ever permitting such evidence, and the principal reason assigned was that *85 if other particular instances be allowed to be shown it “would lead to the mischief of raising any number of collateral issues, the trial of which might be almost interminable, and otherwise objectionable, as diverting the mind of the jury from the main issue.” Another reason given for rejecting such testimony was that no person could anticipate the many assaults that might be made on his character and be prepared to meet them. Heffington v. State, 41 Tex. Cr. 315, 54 S. W. 755.

Thus, such testimony by these decisions is rejected for practical reasons and not because of its invalidity to show who was the aggressor or the state of mind of defendant at the time of the affray. The trend, however, of the more recent decisions appears to be in the direction of allowing to go before the jury evidence of particular acts of violence and turbulence by the deceased towards third persons, when such acts may legitimately and reasonably be of aid to the jury in determining whether defendant’s claim of self-defense was bona fide and rooted in an honest belief of impending danger at the time he acted.

In State v. Ardoin, 28 N. M. 641, 216 Pac. 1048, Mr. Justice BOTTS, in a closely and well-reasoned opinion, in which he reviews some of the leading cases and cites others, deduces the following doctrine :

“Prom what we have already said, it would seem that no inflexible rule of exclusion can be formulated by which to test in all cases the admissibility of such acts against third persons. Should the statement of a general rule be attempted, we would surely find ourselves embarrassed in its application to subsequent cases where the facts are different from those in the case at bar. It strikes us that the true guide should be a reasonable discretion, and whenever the specific act, by reason of its character, or its relationship in time, place, or circumstance to *86 the other facts in the case, would legitimately and reasonably either affect the defendant’s apprehensions or throw light on the question of aggression, or upon the conduct or motives of the parties at the time of the affray, it should be admitted. It is true collateral issues may thereby be presented, but so may they be presented by the admission of other evidence as to which there is no question of its admissibility, although this feature might, and no doubt would, be taken into consideration by the court in exercising the discretion necessary to determine the admissibility of this class of' evidence in any particular case: "Wig. on Ev., § 248, and State v. Hanlon, 38 Mont. 557, 100 Pac. 1035.”

Neither the ends of justice nor a practical administration of the law requires or justifies the laying down of the bars to the admission of evidence of all the acts of violence of the deceased nor the arbitrary rejection of all such evidence. Each case must of necessity be largely determined upon its own facts. We think, where the facts show a prima facie case of self-defense, the accused should generally be permitted to introduce evidence of specific acts of violence by the deceased towards third persons within his own knowledge or coming under his own observation, as also that he knew or had been informed that deceased was a turbulent and quarrelsome man. We also deduce from the cases that previous acts of violence by the deceased towards third persons, when bearing some relation to or growing out of the same transaction as the one in which the homicide occurs, should be admitted in evidence for the purpose of helping the jury to determine whether a defendant acted in good faith and under an apprehension of losing his life or suffering great bodily harm.

We think an analysis of the cases upon this question well sustains the first proposition. People v. Farrell, 137 Mich. 127, 100 N. W. 264; Mortimer v. *87 State, 24 Wyo. 452, 61 Pac. 766; Wharton’s Crim. Ev., § 84; Bishop’s New Crim. Proc. (2d ed.), vol. 3, § 610.

The principle in the second proposition is recognized in the Hanlon case, supra (38 Mont. 557, 100 Pac.

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Bluebook (online)
229 P. 1032, 27 Ariz. 82, 1924 Ariz. LEXIS 110, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mendez-v-state-ariz-1924.