Spick v. State

121 N.W. 664, 140 Wis. 104, 1909 Wisc. LEXIS 238
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedJune 3, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 121 N.W. 664 (Spick v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Spick v. State, 121 N.W. 664, 140 Wis. 104, 1909 Wisc. LEXIS 238 (Wis. 1909).

Opinions

Marshall, J.

The place of the homicide was in a sparsely settled wild country in which the plaintiff in error and the' deceased lived. The latter was the sole occupant of a homestead claim, called the Morrison homestead, about a mile and [108]*108.a half from the nearest neighbor. He .did a little farming, but spent his time, mainly, in hunting and fishing and entertaining persons who resorted to that region for the purpose of fishing. The deceased resided with his employer, one Barnes, who lived about a mile and a half from the Morrison homestead and did a farming, lumbering, saloon, and general store business. There were only three other persons, all homesteaders, living in that locality. Barnes had been acquainted with the deceased for about nineteen or twenty years, and during the two years prior to the homicide had employed him as a foreman in the woods and as a farm hand. The accused and the deceased were addicted to drinking intoxicating liquor somewhat to excess, though the habits of the latter in that regard were not so pronounced for a short time before the -homicide as formerly. ITe and the accused were well acquainted. The latter had been in disrepute with Barnes and the deceased for a considerable time before the homicide. Some incidents had recently occurred which increased the bad repute, particularly the fact that Barnes had lost cattle and it had been reported to him that the accused had killed and made away with them. The accused dis-trained one of the cattle because of its trespassing upon his premises, and Barnes compelled him'to release the animal. 'The deceased was partly of Indian blood. There were a number of that blood who lived not far away and some were accustomed to work for Barnes under the direction of the deceased. Eor some days before the homicide the deceased had charge of a crew of Indians putting up hay for Barnes at a point where, in going thereto and returning therefrom, by the shortest and usual route, he had to pass the place where the accused lived. The day before the homicide the latter, the accused, and two others went fishing-on a lake, using a ’boat. They had liquor along and the accused drank to such excess that he fell out of the boat into the water. About 4 ■o’clock in the afternoon his associates took him home, changed [109]*109his clothes, and put him to bed. The deceased was last seen alive going in the direction of the Morrison homestead about 6 o’clock on the following morning. Between 3 and 4 o’clock in the afternoon of that day the accused Visited the Barnes^ place and reported that Lombard had been killed. He stayed there until 6 o’clock and in the meantime drank to excess. He bought some groceries and started home with them in a sack. Later he was found lying beside the road in a drunken stupor about a mile from his destination and was assisted to regain his feet and accompanied home. To the person who assisted him to his feet he remarked, “I was just as liable to lay there as I did with Boni.” In the meantime, two men went from Barnes’s place to investigate the report as to the death of Lombard and found his body in the road about forty feet from the Morrison house. A bullet from a rifle had passed through his upper right side, apparently killing him almost instantly. There was a trail of blood from the body for a distance of seventy to eighty feet to a pile of lumber just outside a window, near the southwest corner of the house, at which point there was evidence of considerable blood having been lost, and there was a whisky jug belonging to the accused, marked with blood and dirt. There were indications that a rifle shot had recently passed through the wire screen in the window, fired from inside the house in the direction of the place where it seemed the deceased was when shot. On the bed in the house lay defendant’s rifle, with indications that it had recently been discharged. A rifle belonging to the deceased, of the same caliber as the other, was found a short distance from where he was apparently shot, but there were no indications that it had been recently discharged. The jug was full of whisky and in the house on the morning of the homicide. When found it was nearly empty. There was evidence establishing without controversy, or tending to establish, all these circumstances and others of a more or less incriminating nature, including ’some statements of the [110]*110accused, from which it was inferable that he was the guilty party, while there was other evidence from which it was claimed it was inferable that some other person did the deed. The accused after returning home drunk, as before stated, on the day of the homicide remained there till the next morning sleeping off his debauch. In the meantime several persons, attracted to the place by the report of the homicide, were about the premises, including the two men who first went to investigate the matter. They remained watching the body till the next morning, when there was a coroner’s in-quest and it was removed.

The story of the accused was, that upon waking up after sleeping off his debauch of the day before the homicide, he went on a fishing trip of several miles and. at his destination used a particular boat; that he returned in the afternoon about 1 o’clock and, upon finding the body of the deceased in the road, put down his sack of fish at the side of the house and went to the Barnes place and reported the fact. There was circumstantial evidence that his story was false, such as there being no sack of fish found at the side of the house by any one attracted to the place by the report of the homicide before the accused returned from the Barnes place, and the boat he claimed to have used on the fishing trip not having been disturbed on the day of the homicide.

Several errors are assigned, not argued in the brief of coun•sel for the accused, though some of them were mentioned incidentally, or argued briefly, on the oral argument. We will pass them with this mention thereof and with the statement that they have received sufficient attention to satisfy the court that neither of them is material.

The court properly sustained a challenge of a juror because he testified to having conscientious scruples against convicting a person of a capital offense on circumstantial evidence alone. Such a person is manifestly incompetent for jury ■duty. By the law of the land, which every citizen is bound [111]*111to support, and every jnror before being competent to sit in a case is so sjjecially bound by bis solemn oatb, it is as legitimate to judicially establish a fact by circumstantial as by direct evidence, and it is as much the duty of a juror to act ac- ■ cording to tire weight of the former as to act according to the weight of the latter. A person might as well say, generally, he has conscientious scruples against obeying the law of his country as to say he has such scruples against acting as a juror upon circumstantial evidence in a capital case.. Such .a person has too much conscience, so to speak, for the best of citizenship. More properly speaking, he has that species of ■conscience with that grade of weakness that often makes the ■coward mistake- his timidity for that conscience which is worthy of distinction.

It is suggested that in view of something said or decided in Kollock v. State, 88 Wis. 663, 60 N. W. 817, the court committed error by not instructing the jury on the subject of circumstantial evidence, though no request was made in that l'egard. We do not find anything in that case so holding.

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Bluebook (online)
121 N.W. 664, 140 Wis. 104, 1909 Wisc. LEXIS 238, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/spick-v-state-wis-1909.