Schrader v. State

1928 OK CR 231, 268 P. 325, 40 Okla. Crim. 261, 1928 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 182
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma
DecidedJune 16, 1928
DocketNo. A-5711.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 1928 OK CR 231 (Schrader v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Schrader v. State, 1928 OK CR 231, 268 P. 325, 40 Okla. Crim. 261, 1928 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 182 (Okla. Ct. App. 1928).

Opinion

DAVENPORT, J.

The plaintiff in error, hereinafter referred to as the defendant, was charged .by information in the district court of Cleveland county with the crime of assault with intent to kill. A jury was impaneled, . and, after hearing the evidence, returned a verdict of guilty of assault to do bodily harm, and his punishment fixed at imprisonment in the state penitentiary for two years. Motion for new trial was filed, considered, and overruled, and defendant reserved his exception. From the judgment and sentence the defendant appeals.

The testimony on behalf of the state is in substance as follows: Verne Chadwell testified:

That he knew the defendant. That he did not know whether or not he was married. That Mr. Schrader had been coming occasionally and talking with his sister of about 15 years of age. The afternoon of the alleged trouble he received information that some one was out in front and wanted to see him. “When I *263 came out of the house, I saw Schrader and another fellow in a car; I went out, and when I got up to the car close enough to see he had a gun in his hand, and I asked him what he had the gun for. He said, T heard you were going to kill me’; and I said, “If I had made any threat like that I would have got me a gun and done it’; I said, ‘If you are. a man, you will come out on the road somewhere and we will fight it out’; he said that he did not want me to beat him up. After I said that I told him, ‘Now I am going to make a threat’; that if I ever saw him down at the house or talking to my sister I would kill him; he said, ‘How about working down at the work; you can’t stop me down there’; I said, ‘ I could not hold him,’ but if I caught him talking to her or coming down there I would kill him; he said, T don’t believe you can,’ or, T don’t believe you will stop me,’ and he raised up his gun then. The gun was pointed toward me when he raised his arm. Before he raised it he was holding it in his hand. I was leaning on the car door. I took the gun out of his hand and turned it over to the officers. The pistol was loaded with two 45 automatic shells. The defendant looked to me like he was drunk. I think he was drunk. I don’t know whether defendant had received information not to come to my house any more; I never talked to him myself.”

On cross-examination witness stated:

He lived outside the corporate limits of Norman. He knew defendant was a soldier located over in Norman ; never had any words with the defendant before this afternoon. “I saw the car after I stepped out of the door onto the porch. My mother told me some one wanted to see me. The car was on what was called the parking space. Some one was in the car with him. I don’t know his name. They were in a Ford roadster. My sister was standing behind me when I went up to the car; was probably about five feet from the car when I saw the gun. I spoke first, and said, ‘What you got that gun for?’ He said, T heard you had been talking, making threats to kill me;’ and I told him if I had I would have got me a gun and done it; I said that if he were a man with anything to him he would come out somewhere and fight it out, leaving the gun at home. When I talked to him, I was leaning on the car door close to him. He said he *264 did not want me to beat him up; still had the gun in his hand. I told him I would make a threat if he ever come down to the house, if I ever caught him talking to my sister, I would kill him; I was referring to my youngest sister. He said, T don’t believe you can stop me,’ and raised his gun. He had the gun in his hand all the time. Defendant was sitting on the right-hand of the car when I come out to it. Defendant said he did not want me to come down to where he was working on the road and beat me up. Mr. Schrader got back to the wheel as the other fellow said he could not drive a car and drove away. In about 15 minutes they come back. Defendant was setting in the car about 100 yards from our house. Later on the officers come and arrested him. Hoard came down to the house and wanted us to give the pistol back to him, saying it belonged to the army.”

Velma Chadwell, called as a witness, stated:

That she was a sister of Verne Chadwell. That the evening of the alleged trouble defendant drove up and honked his horn and “I got up and went to see who was there; I went out of the house and talked with him. He said he heard I wanted to see him, and I told him yes, I wanted to tell him what I thought about him; and he replied it would do no good for me to bawl him out, ‘Tell Verne to come out here.’ I went in and told my mother. Verne was informed he was out there and came out to the car. I saw the controversy over the pistol. When I first saw it, Mr. Schrader had it in his hand out to his side. When my brother came out, Mr. Schrader said, ‘Remember what I got my hand on; I heard you were making threats against me’; Verne said, T haven’t made any; I will tell you what I will do. I will make one now to your face, if I ever catch you coming around here again or talking to my sister I will kill you’; Mr. Schrader said, ‘I am not even supposed to speak to her.’ He wasn’t supposed to go out of his way to speak to her, and, ‘If you do I will kill you.’ Mr. Schrader said, ‘You are not going to keep me from going with her.’ Just then he pulled his pistol, and Verne grabbed it. I was right up to the car, resting on the running board. When I first saw Mr. Schrader, he was setting under the steering wheel, but when I come back from the house he had moved to the *265 right side; the car was facing north. About fifteen minutes after they left they drove back. The defendant was drunk, I know. The other man with him was drunk. When he was arrested, the car was across the street from our house, and defendant was asleep.”
She had known Mr. Schrader since about October. “I had gone to the barn that day to see Mr. Schrader. I told him, when he asked me if I had been there, I went to tell him what I thought about him. Mr. Schrader, when he was talking to my brother, had his pistol in his hand, and told Verne, ‘You will not keep me from going with her’; he raised it up, and just as he did so Verne grabbed it. I don’t know whether he pulled the trigger, I was so scared. I heard my brother tell him he would kill him if he ever come back again. We found out, the night before Mr. Schrader was out there, he was a married man.
“Question by Mr. Holland: Some time before the night of this trouble some of the family sent word to Mr. Schrader to stay away from there?
“By Mr. Williams: Object; incompetent, irrelevant, immaterial, not sustaining any issues in the case.
“By the Court: If you know that is a fact. Exceptions allowed.
“By Mr. Holland: Q. Do you know whether that was done or not? A. Yes, sir; it was.
“By Mr. Williams: Move to strike out answer for the reason that no evidence shown that the defendant in this case ever received such information, and prejudicial to the rights of this defendant.
“By Mr. Holland: Defendant can go on the stand and testify to that.
“By Mr.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1928 OK CR 231, 268 P. 325, 40 Okla. Crim. 261, 1928 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 182, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schrader-v-state-oklacrimapp-1928.