State v. Banks

32 P.2d 571, 147 Or. 157, 1934 Ore. LEXIS 107
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedApril 5, 1934
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 32 P.2d 571 (State v. Banks) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon 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. Banks, 32 P.2d 571, 147 Or. 157, 1934 Ore. LEXIS 107 (Or. 1934).

Opinion

*159 BAILEY, J.

On March 24,1933, the grand jury of Jackson county, Oregon, returned an indictment accusing Llewellyn A. Banks and Edith R. Banks of the crime of murder in the first degree and charging them with having on March 16, 1933, in Jackson county, Oregon, unlawfully, feloniously, purposely and of deliberate and premeditated malice, killed one George J. Prescott by then and there shooting the said Prescott with a rifle loaded with powder and bullets, said rifle being held in the hands of Llewellyn A. Banks at the time of the shooting.

Thereafter, on motion of the defendants for a change of venue, the place of trial was changed to Lane county, Oregon. On May 21,1933, the jury hearing the case returned a verdict of not guilty as to Edith R. Banks, and a verdict of guilty of murder in the second degree, against Llewellyn A. Banks. On August 14,1933, a judgment was entered against the latter defendant, sentencing him to life imprisonment in the state penitentiary, from which judgment he has appealed.

In so far as material on this appeal, the following are substantially the facts as shown by the record: Prior to March 16, 1933, considerable friction was prevalent at Medford, between the so-called “Good Government League” and the “Committee of One Hundred” both of which organizations had comparatively large memberships composed entirely, or practically so, of Jackson county residents. The defendant Llewellyn A. Banks, hereinafter to be referred to as the defendant, was the publisher of a daily newspaper which became the organ of the Good Government League, of which the defendant was an active member and the honorary president. Several civil suits and *160 criminal proceedings had been instituted and were pending against Banks when an indictment was returned by the Jackson county grand jury charging him and other members of the Good Government League with burglary not in a dwelling house, committed on February 20, 1933, and connected with the taking of ballots from the courthouse at Medford.

The sheriff and at least one of his deputies were implicated in the burglary, and a bench warrant for the defendant’s arrest on that indictment was issued by the circuit judge and directed to George J. Prescott as constable of the Medford justice’s district of Jackson county. At or about ten o’clock in the morning of March 16, Mr. Prescott, accompanied by James O’Brien, a state police officer, went to the defendant’s residence for the purpose of serving the warrant. Upon their arrival there, Edith R. Banks, in response to the ringing of the bell, opened the front door a short distance, as far as permitted by a burglar chain. The officers made known their mission and almost simultaneously the defendant appeared in the room with a rifle at his shoulder and shouted, “Look out!” Mrs. Banks immediately stepped to one side and the defendant fired through the narrow opening in the doorway, killing Prescott instantly. The defendant then reloaded his rifle. At the time the shot was fired, E. A. Fleming was in the room with the defendant, and he immediately ran out of the back door of the house. O’Brien went for aid, and later, without further trouble, the defendant surrendered to peace officers.

Soon after the defendant was taken into custody a search was made of his residence and there were found, on a table in the room where defendant had stood at the time the shot was fired, a 30-06-caliber *161 Newton rifle, loaded, and a .44-ealiber Smith & Wesson revolver, loaded, in a holster. The state contends, and the defendant admits, that the fatal shot was fired with this rifle. In a back room, during this search, was found additional ammunition for the rifle and the revolver above mentioned, and for a .32-caliber Winchester.

Later, about four o’clock in the afternoon of the same day, a further search of the defendant’s house was made by two state police officers, and they found on a cot, with a woman’s coat thrown over them, “in a hallway leading from the front part of the house or from the dining-room to the rear”, a .32-caliber automatic pistol, holster, cartridge belt and loose cartridges. Between the time of the first search and that of the second the defendant’s house had been open and a great many people had gone through it.

Prior to the time that Constable Prescott went to the defendant’s residence to serve the bench warrant the defendant had made the statement to at least two individuals that he would not submit to arrest. To one he said that he would “pluck out the heart” of any man who came to his door to serve papers, and to another, that “no man could come through that door and take me. They will take me over their dead bodies, feet first.”

There was evidence to the effect that in the morning of March 16, before the arrival of the constable, the defendant had typed or caused to be typed a letter and carbon copy thereof addressed jointly to C. McCredie, chief of police of Medford, and to Captain Bown of the state police. The letter and the copy were placed in separate envelopes and addressed respectively to the chief of police and to the state police officer. In this letter the defendant stated that he had committed no *162 crime and would refuse to submit to arrest, and that any effort to arrest him would result in bloodshed. These letters were found unopened, according to some of the testimony, on a mat on the front porch of the Banks home, about the time that the body of Prescott was removed therefrom by officers.

The first assignment of error is based on the admission in evidence, over the objection of the defendant, of the .32-caliber automatic pistol, holster, belt of cartridges and loose cartridges found on the cot in the hallway of the defendant’s house. The ground of the objection was that such evidence was “wholly incompetent, irrelevant and immaterial, and not within any of the issues of the case, * * * not binding upon the defendants or either of them”; that the evidence did not in any way connect these articles with the defendants ; and that they were found in the Banks residence long after the two defendants had been removed therefrom and many other people had been within the house. In their argument, counsel for the defendant contend that the defendants admitted that Prescott was killed by a shot from the Newton rifle which had previously been introduced in evidence and that both defendants testified that they did not own or have any knowledge whatever of the presence within the house, or the ownership of, the pistol and ammunition found on the cot.

Whatever the defendants may have admitted or testified to would not in any way relieve the state of the necessity of proving its case. The only plea of the defendants was that of not guilty, and until their testimony was given the state was in no position to know what might be admitted by them. In order to convict the defendants of murder in the first degree it *163 was necessary to show that they had purposely and of deliberate and premeditated malice killed Prescott. To substantiate this charge testimony was introduced to show that the defendant Llewellyn A. Banks had made certain threatening statements tending to indicate that the crime was premeditated.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
32 P.2d 571, 147 Or. 157, 1934 Ore. LEXIS 107, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-banks-or-1934.