Sandoval v. Territory of New Mexico

8 N.M. 573, 8 Gild. 573
CourtNew Mexico Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 1, 1896
DocketNo. 662
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 8 N.M. 573 (Sandoval v. Territory of New Mexico) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sandoval v. Territory of New Mexico, 8 N.M. 573, 8 Gild. 573 (N.M. 1896).

Opinion

Laughlin, J.

The plaintiff in error, Dionicio Sandoval, was indicted for murder in the first degree, on an indictment charging him with having on the twenty-ninth day of July, 1895, at the county of Bernalillo in said territory of New Mexico, shot and killed one Victoriano Tenorio.

At the October, 1895, term of the district court for said county, the said Dionicio Sandoval was tried and found guilty of murder in the first degree; and after motions for new trial and in arrest were made, argued and denied, defendant was sentenced tobe hanged, and error was sued out and stay of execution was granted, and the case is here on errors assigned in the court below, and such as are deemed pertinent to the proper decision of the case will be considered in the opinion.

There are some thirty-six errors assigned for reversal, by plaintiff in error’s counsel, but only such of these will be considered as seem necessary for the proper determination of the ease. There were only three witnesses who testified in this case, and they were all eyewitnesses to it, and within a few yards of the place where the homicide occurred; two testified in behalf of the prosecution, and the defendant only in his own behalf. There is no dispute as to the place where or the time when the shot was fired which killed the deceased, Victoriano Tenorio; nor is there any dispute as to whose gun it was from which the fatal shot was fired, nor as to where the fatal bullet entered the body of the deceased. The facts are clearly shown by the testimony of all the witnesses.

The only controversy shown by the testimony is as to how the gun was fired.

The testimony of all the witnesses shows that the deceased, the defendant, and the two witnesses for the prosecution, were all sheep-herders, and that on the evening and a short time prior to the occurrence of the homicide, the defendant whose flock and sheep-camp was some two or three miles distant from the place of the homicide, came with a forty-four caliber Winchester rifle, to the camp-fire of the deceased, about 7 or 8 o’clock in the evening, and after saluting the deceased and the two witnesses who were near the camp-fire the defendant took a seat upon a water keg with his rifle by him, and the witnesses for the prosecution testify, “that deceased asked defendant to be seated upon some sheep-skins,” which defendant declined to do, saying* “he was all right where he was, and was doing no harm;” then deceased said “no, but I suppose you will be more at ease lying on the sheep-skins. Then Donicio Sandoval (defendant) told Victoriano Tenorio (deceased) what was the reason he had said on his count he had so many lambs in his fold without any dames or mothers, — mavericks; and Victoriano answered, I didn’t say that; what I did say was, you didn’t deliver to me all my sheep. Then Dionicio Sandoval said: You are a liar. And he said, I don’t lie. And then he, defendant, shot.” These are substantially the same facts testified to by the other witnesses for the prosecution. The testimony further shows that the fatal bullet entered near the armpit of the deceased, and he fell to the ground and died immediately, and only said after he was shot, “take hold of me.” It further appears from the testimony on the part of the prosecution, the deceased was sitting down at the time he was shot, and that the defendant was standing up. This state of facts makes out a clear case of murder in the first degree beyond any doubt, as defined by our statute on that subject; and the instructions given by the court below on murder in the first degree was full and sufficient on that degree.

The testimony of the defendant in his own behalf on this particular point is as follows, to wit:

“Q. Were you camping that night close — how far were you camping from the deceased’s camp, Victoriano Tenorio! A. About three miles.
££Q. Did you go to the camp that night of Tenorio! A. Yes, sir.
“Q. State what you saw. A. I told him I went over there to tell him to fix his camp in the corral, to await the boss; that I would fix my corral on one side, and to ask him, also, why was he talking about me touching my honor without any 'cause.
££Q. What was said and done after you got there! A. He told me then that I lied, and he said what had I to say about him that I was so and so, touching my credit.
“Q. Just tell what was said. A. Then he jumped up as though to strike me, and then he got hold of the rifle and in the twist we gave it in getting up the gun went off, and he was shot. I didn’t do it intentionally.”

On cross-examination the defendant testified as follows, to wit:

££Q. Did you level your gun on him then, or which way did you hold your gun! A. I had my rifle on one side, and when he came upon me, I took hold of the rifle, and we got to struggling for the rifle.
££Q. Where did he grab the rifle! A. He didn’t, I had it.
££Q. Didn’t he grab hold of it! A. When I kinder got out- and he caught hold of the rifle, and he wanted to take hold of me and we struggled for it, and in the twist we made the rifle went off.
££Q. Where did he catch hold of the rifle! A. Eight on the other side of me, straight as we had it.
££Q. Where did you have the rifle! A. I had the barrel.
££Q. Did you pick it up by the barrel when you picked it up? A. I took hold of it about the middle of the rifle, about where the cartridge boxes are.
££Q. Did you have hold of it with one hand or both? A. No, I had it sitting by one side of' the keg.
£ £Q. When you picked it up did you pick it up with one hand or with both hands? A. With one hand, and then he caught hold of it himself, and then we both had the rifle.
££Q. Which hand did you pick it up with? A. With the left.
££Q. You took it about the middle, then did you take hold of it with your right hand, too? A. Yes, sir; by the barrel.
& * ifr #
££Q. You are right handed when you shoot, do you shoot from your right shoulder? A. On the right side.
££Q. You say he grabbed hold of the barrel also? A. Yes, sir.
££Q. With his hands outside of yours, or between your hands? A. One of his hands he had in the middle and the other over here (witness illustrates).
££Q. And he had hold of the gun toward the end? A. Yes, sir.
££Q. And in the scuffle you don’t know how the rifle went off ? I do not know.
££Q. Did you pull the trigger? A. (Witness illustrates) I do not know how the rifle cocked itself, perhaps in the struggle we had there it got cocked and went off.”

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Related

State v. Grubbs
512 P.2d 693 (New Mexico Court of Appeals, 1973)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
8 N.M. 573, 8 Gild. 573, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sandoval-v-territory-of-new-mexico-nm-1896.