Pacheco v. People

43 P.2d 165, 96 Colo. 401, 1935 Colo. LEXIS 417
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedMarch 25, 1935
DocketNo. 13,588.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 43 P.2d 165 (Pacheco v. People) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pacheco v. People, 43 P.2d 165, 96 Colo. 401, 1935 Colo. LEXIS 417 (Colo. 1935).

Opinions

Mr. Justice PIolland

delivered the opinion of the court.

Plaintiffs in error will be referred to as defendants. On March 30, 1934, in the district court of Weld county, they were tried upon an information charging- them with having- murdered one Clifford Smith on February 27,1934. The jury returned a verdict finding each guilty in the first degree and fixing* the punishment at death. After the overruling of a motion for a new trial, and on April 9', 1934, sentence was passed upon the verdict by the court and defendants assign error.

The facts established by the people are in brief: That the deceased, Clifford Smith, together with his wife Violet Smith and Bobby Griffin, a 16-year old boy, were [403]*403living* on a farm near Wellington, Colorado; that prior to February 27, 1934, the defendants had worked for the deceased and were known to the Smith family; that the defendants are of Spanish-American descent and lived with John Herrara, a brother-in-law, in Wellington; that on the evening of February 27, Smith and his wife attended an entertainment at the school house in Wellington, and on account of a slight illness, the boy Bobby, was left at home alone; that the Smiths returned home about 9 o’clock, Smith entered the house and Mrs. Smith heard a shot and started to run away, when the defendants came out of the house and shot her; that immediately thereafter believing her to be dead, they carried her into the house, laid her on the floor and one of the defendants viciously attacked her person; that kerosene, apparently from a lamp on the living room table, was scattered over the inside of the house and the clothing of Mrs. Smith, and then set on fire; that defendants fled to their home, and defendant John told their brother-in-law, he had killed Smith; that defendants took some clothing and left; that on the day following, they were apprehended where they had been seen hiding in a hay stack, and upon being brought to Denver to escape apparent mob violence, were questioned by officers of the Denver police department, and, as shown by the evidence on the part of the people, made confessions which were reduced to writing, submitted to them and signed by the defendants in the presence of witnesses, which confessions, after the overruling of objections by the court were admitted in evidence as voluntary confessions. These confessions, supported in many details by the people’s witnesses and the testimony of defendant John Pacheco, disclose a brutal and sordid crime, the substance of the principal details of which are as follows:

Louis Pacheco stated in his confession that he and his brother John, arrived at Smith’s home about 7 o’clock in the evening; that they went there because he, Louis, wanted to get some money that he had worked for cutting [404]*404corn for which he had asked Smith several times; that he had quarrelled with Smith about it; that no one except himself and Smith knew that Smith owed him; that he had a 22 revolver in his pocket; that when he arrived at Smith’s house, Bobby Griffin let them in and he inquired of Bobby where Smith was, and was told that he was over at the school house; he then asked Bobby if he had a bigger gun and when Bobby said no, he told Bobby to go through the drawers and trunks and look for a bigger gun; that Bobby looked out and, seeing- Mr. and Mrs. Smith coming in their car, attempted to get away, whereupon Louis shot Bobby in the head; that his brother John did not see him shoot Bobby; that he shot him to keep him from going out to give an alarm to the Smiths; that in about five minutes Smith came in the house. Louis further stated in his confession: I asked him for my money and he said he didn’t owe me anything and wasn’t going to pay. I shot once and the shot glanced off and hit John, my brother, and then John shot Smith twice. Mrs. Smith, who was still out in the yard, started hollering. I slipped out of the door, John followed me and I shot her. She fell down, and we took her into the house, threw a blanket over her, and I saw John pour coal oil on them. John lit a cigarette and threw the match down and the fire was started. We left and started home, but John left me before we got home. I threw my gun away quite aways from the place.

The confession of defendant John Pacheco stated the same time of arrival with his brother at the Smith home as that fixed by Louis; the finding- of Bobby Griffin there; that they had been in the house about an hour before Bobby was killed; that Louie told him he killed Bobby; that while waiting for Mr. and Mrs. Smith to return, he searched the drawers and ransacked the place; that Mr. Smith came in first. The confession then continues: I said to him, “Did you turn me in on account of a calf, I want to fix it up, so he said we are going to settle it by shooting, so I grabbed that gun, and shot.” I didn’t see [405]*405any gun in Smith’s hand. Louie was in the kitchen. I shot Smith twice and left him lay there and after that I saw Louie shoot Mrs. Smith who was out in the yard, and the two of us carried her into the house. I then lighted the lamp and threw the oil on the floor and on Mrs. Smith, hut before that saw Louie lift up her dress. I did not rape Mrs. Smith and did not see Louie rape her. I then struck a match on the floor and went home. I didn’t go all the way home, I went back to see if anybody was there, and found two of them, Bobby and Mr. Smith on the floor. I threw the gun away by the water tank, it was a 22 rifle that was in Mr. Smith’s house. I then went home and told Louie that Mrs. Smith had left the house. We then went up to the hay stack. I threw the match on the floor and tried to burn the house.

Defendant John Pacheco testified in his own behalf. When interrogated concerning the confession he had made, he was uncertain, evasive and when pressed, could not remember. He admitted the shooting but denied the attack upon the person of Mrs. Smith and said that when Smith came in the house and was asked for the money and refused, he then picked up an iron (which the witness could not describe in any manner), and started to strike him with the iron when his brother, Louis, shot Smith. Smith then got up and started to strike Louis with the iron and he, to protect his brother, then shot Smith.

Mrs. Smith testified for the people and detailed the tragedy as it occurred after she and the deceased reached homé. She testified that her husband went into the house, she heard a shot and the defendants, who were then recognized by her, came out of the house, shot her and iit the fear of further violence, she feigned death, and was carried into the house. She described the attack upon her person in detail, and stated that while in her then condition she was kicked in the head and face. She related the events of the setting fire to her clothing and the escape of the defendants; of the putting out of the fire in her clothing, and, fearing that the defendants were outside the [406]*406door, she crawled out through a window and fled to the house of a tenant on the farm. The defendants were known to her. She identified them at the time of the tragedy and at the trial.

Counsel for defendants assign numerous errors, many of which are without merit. For reversal, they seem to rely upon the refusal of the court to give tendered instructions upon the crime of voluntary manslaughter, and giving of the instruction by the court charging accessories as principals.

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Related

Martinez v. People
444 P.2d 641 (Supreme Court of Colorado, 1968)
Berger v. People
224 P.2d 228 (Supreme Court of Colorado, 1950)
Quintana v. People
102 P.2d 486 (Supreme Court of Colorado, 1940)

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Bluebook (online)
43 P.2d 165, 96 Colo. 401, 1935 Colo. LEXIS 417, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pacheco-v-people-colo-1935.