State v. Audiss

20 N.W.2d 400, 70 S.D. 634, 1945 S.D. LEXIS 73
CourtSouth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 1, 1945
DocketFile No. 8715.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 20 N.W.2d 400 (State v. Audiss) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering South Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Audiss, 20 N.W.2d 400, 70 S.D. 634, 1945 S.D. LEXIS 73 (S.D. 1945).

Opinions

SICKEL, J.

The state’s attorney of Gregory county filed an information in the circuit court charging the defendant with the crime of wilfully and maliciously killing and injuring cattle, the property of John Raschke by shooting them with a twenty-two caliber rifle. The jury found defendant guilty and the court imposed a sentence of two years’ imprisonment in the state penitentiary. Motion for a new trial was denied and the defendant has appealed.

.Appellant assigns as error the insufficiency of the evidence to show that the shooting was wilfully and mali *636 ciously done by appellant. In support of this contention appellant claims that the evidence shows that defendant shot the cattle for the purpose of protecting his crops, “not out of a spirit of malice toward the owner or anyone else, but malice toward the cattle.”

The court instructed the jury as follows:

“Malice, as that term is used in the statute to which your attention has been directed, is defined by SDC 13.0102 as follows: ‘ “Malice” and “maliciously” import a wish to vex, annoy, or injure another person.’ Generally the ter:m ‘malice’ implies hate, mischief or ill will; action flowing from a wicked or corrupt motive, a depraved inclination to disregard the rights of others.”

Appellant did not object nor take exception to this instruction so it is the law of the case as far as the definition of malice is concerned.

In the case of State v. Tarlton, 22 S. D. 495, 118 N. W. 706, 708, this court said:

“While it is true that malice is an essential element of the offense of malicious mischief, the malicious intent may be inferred from the nature of the act and the circumstances of the case.”

In the case of State v. Berry, 43 S. D. 85, 177 N. W. 1012, the court considered the question of the sufficiency of an information charging the wilful and malicious killing of a dog where it appeared from the information that the defendant did not know at the time of the shooting to whom the dog belonged. The opinion quotes the rule stated in People v. Jones, 241 Ill. 482, 89 N. E. 752, 754, 16 Ann. Cas. 332, as follows:

“The malice must be directed against some person, ordinarily the owner of the animal, but it need not be shown that the offender actually knew the owner. It will be sufficient to show that he was bent on mischief against the owner, whomsoever he might happen to be.”

The court in State v. Berry, supra, cites numerous cases from other states, including Territory v. Olsen, 6 Utah 284, 22 P. 163, 164. In that case the complaint charged *637 defendants with maliciously and wilfully maiming and wounding a pig. The defendants claimed that the evidence was insufficient to prove malice against the owner with whom the defendants were not acquainted. The court said:

“But it is not necessary, in order to prove malice within this rule, to show that the defendant ever said or did anything indicating malice against the owner. Malice may be inferred, if the injury is unlawful, from the instrument used, or the wantonness, cruelty, or recklessness of the deed, or from any attendant circumstances which would justify the inference of malice in other crimes where malice is an essential constituent.”

In the case of State v. Coleman, 29 Utah 417, 82 P. 465, 466, also cited in State v. Berry, supra, the defendant was charged with wilfully and maliciously poisoning a dog that had ¡previously bitten his child, without knowing to whom the dog belonged. It was claimed that under the circumstances the evidence was insufficient to show malice toward the owner. The court said:

“It has been quite generally held that, where the doing, of an act is shown to have been unlawful and willful or wanton, malice will be presumed. A mere intent simply to injure the animal, or mere ¡resentment or malice toward it, without malice toward any person, it may be conceded is not sufficient. But, although the owner may be unknown to the offender, if the act was done maliciously or under circumstances evincing a depraved mind and ¡one prompt and disposed to the commission of mischief, or done willfully and unlawfully, or with that wanton and reckless disregard of all consequences and of the rights of others, and with an intent to wrongfully injure or destroy the property of another, regardless as to whom may be the owner or possessor, the commission of the offense is complete. When it is so done, it necessarily follows that the offender intended to inflict an unnecessary and inexcusable injury upon, and a consequent wrong against, the owner or possessor; and malice 'towards him may therefore be presumed.”

The question of the sufficiency of the evidence is to be determined according to the statute as interpreted in the above decisions.

*638 The evidence shows that defendant signed a voluntary-confession in which he stated:

“John Raschke another farmer in this county lives close to my place, having purchased this farm about six years ago. During all the years that he has lived a neighbor to me I have had trouble with 'his stock running in my fields. This year was the same trouble and to take up his stock did not have the desired effect of getting the trouble ironed out. However between noon and 1:00 o’clock on Sunday, September 12th, 1943 I went out into the field to-drill, my son Cecil having remained at the house at the time. I had made a couple of rounds when I went back to the house and got my son who I wanted to do the drilling for me. We were in the car at the time and in the back seat of the car I had the .22 rifle which belonged to my son. Cecil took the drill and started making the rounds and I stayed in the 'Other field where the Raschke cattle were. I was pretty mad so taking the .22 rifle out of the car went over to where the cattle were and started shooting them. I thought that there must have been at least 18 head in the field at the time 'although he had between 25 and 30 head on his place. I do not know just how many cattle I shot, at the time believing that it was about four head. These I shot through the stomach. As soon as I started shooting the cattle started to run, which was the reason that I did not shoot more of them. After this I returned to the house and spent the rest of the -afternoon working about the yard. That evening when Cecil returned from drilling I told him what I had done. The gun I at first hid in the manger but that night took it out of the manger and hid it in the manger of the east cattle shed.”

(Typographical errors corrected.)

The evidence shows that the defendant knew at the time that the cattle belonged to Raschke; that he made no effort to drive the cattle off his land, or to take possession of them, or to notify the owner of the trespass before going back to the house and getting the rifle and cartridges with which he shot them. According to the sheriff, defendant told him that he stepped out of the car and shot the cattle as they ran by; that the reason he didn’t shoot more of them *639 was because they ran away. Defendant shot eight of the cattle, some more than once, and four of them died.

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Bluebook (online)
20 N.W.2d 400, 70 S.D. 634, 1945 S.D. LEXIS 73, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-audiss-sd-1945.