State v. Barry

92 N.W. 809, 11 N.D. 428
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 1, 1903
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 92 N.W. 809 (State v. Barry) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North 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. Barry, 92 N.W. 809, 11 N.D. 428 (N.D. 1903).

Opinion

Wallin, C. J.

The appellant is charged with the offense of killing one Andrew Mallem, with malice aforethought and premeditation, in the county of Cavalier, on the 3d day of January, 1901. After pleading not guilty, the defendant was tried by a jury, and found guilty of the offense charged in the information, and as a penalty the jury directed that the defendant should be confined in the state penitentiary during the remainder of his life. Defendant is now confined in the penitentiary upon a sentence entered by the district court pursuant to the verdict. The trial commenced on July 16, 1901. I11 this court counsel claim that the defendant should be awarded a new trial upon the ground that prejudicial error occurred in the case during the proceedings in the district court. Appellant’s counsel does not ask 'for a review of the evidence, or claim that the verdict returned by the [437]*437jury is not justified by the evidence offered at the trial, but does claim that numerous errors of law occurred during the trial, to which exceptions were saved by the defendant. A large number of errors are assigned upon the instructions which were given to the jury by the trial court, and some are predicated upon instructions requested in behalf of the defendant, and which were refused by the trial court. Error is also assigned upon certain rulings made upon the admission of the testimony in the case.

A proper consideration of the errors alleged requires that a preliminary statement should be made of the more important facts of the case as, disclosed by the record. Many very important facts are uncontroverfed, and there is a mass of evidence in the record which is not attempted to be contradicted, and counsel on both sides have presented in their briefs a succinct statement of the facts of the case which are not contested, and these statements do not differ, exce'pt in details which are relatively unimportant. The uncontroverted facts, as gathered from the record, may be stated as follows: On January 3, 1901, the defendant, who is a farmer, was residing on his farm, which was situated within a few miles from the village of Milton, in Cavalier county. Defendant was a bachelor, and at the time in question his family consisted only of himself, an unmarried sister, Mary Ann Barry, and the deceased, Andrew Mallem. A neighbor, one J ohn Wild, lived about three-quarters of a mile distant from the defendant’s residence. It is undisputed that parties -residing at Milton, after hearing certain statements in the nature of confessions made by the defendant at Milton on January 3, 1901, visited the defendant’s farm on that day, arriving there about noon. These parties went to defendant’s barn, and there, behind a‘horse called “Joe,” they found the dead body of Andrew Mallem. The body was still warm. There was a rope around the neck of the body, one end of which extended downward in front, and then, after passing between the legs, extended out behind the body. There was blood on the rope and on the floor near the body. A wound about one inch wide at the -surface was found on the right side of the neck of the deceased. This wound penetrated to a considerable depth, and the post-mortem held later showed that the carotid artery and the jugular vein were both severed, and it appears that the wound was necessarily a mortal wound. The evidence shows that all the inmates of the Barry home, including the deceased, were at the house in the morning of the day in question, and that shortly after 9 o’clock a. m. of that day defendant started from home, taking his sister with him, and that he drove his own team; and that the defendant then drove to Milton, arriving there about 10 o’clock a. m. What was said and done by the defendant during this drive to Milton and after his arrival there are facts of very great importance in their bearing upon the controlling questions in this case, but the evidence upon which these facts rest, except in minor particulars, is not at all conflicting. We find a succinct narrative of these facts in the brief of counsel for the respondent, and oné [438]*438which we find to be fully sustained by the evidence. For purposes of convenience we here present an extract from said narrative: “On the morning of January 3, 1901, the defendant harnessed and hitched his team; put a fur coat and cap on his sister; changed his own clothes, putting on a clean new suit and a coonskin overcoat. He drove up to the house of one John Wild, a neighboring farmer, accompanied by his sister, Mary Ann Barry. Her hands and ears were frozen. Defendant asked to have his sister cared for, stating that she had been out that morning, and got her fingers frozen; that he was going to town to get the doctor, and would send him out at once; that lie had news to tell; that he had killed his man that morning. He borrowed a pair of mittens, and drove to Milton, arriving there at about 10 o’clock a. m. He stopped in front of a livery barn; asked an acquaintance to hold his team; said he wanted to see Norgard, who was standing across the street. He approached Norgard, who was a justice of the peace, and inquired: ‘Are you a justice of the peace?’ Receiving an affirmative answer, he stated that he wanted to give himself up; that he had murdered a man, Andrew Mallem, that morning, and had come in to give himself up; that he was not joking; that he gave Mallem five minutes to pray; Mallem said: ‘God have mercy on me!’ He then stuck him with a knife, and that hq died in two minutes. He indicated where he had stuck Mallem, pointing with his finger to the right side of the neck at a point about an inch below the angle of the jaw. Said that he tried to hang him with a rope, but couldn’t, so finished him with a knife. That Mallem fought him like a hero when he tried to hang him. That Mallem punched him in the stomach, and knocked his wind out. That he killed him a few minutes past 9 o’clock that morning. Defendant then started toward the telephone, saying that he was not going to escape, but was going to telephone; that he wanted to send the doctor out to examine his sister; that Mallem had ruined her, and, if she was not in the condition he claimed, he wanted to be hung to a telegraph pole. Fie exhibited a jackknife, saying, ‘This is what I did it with’; and, upon his attention being called to the lack of blood on the blade, stated that he had washed the knife. When asked his reason for the deed, he stated that the preceding night his sister confessed to him that Mallem had raped her three years before, and that lately he had been taking liberties with her person, and that this had worked on her passions so that she jumped out of her mind; that when she made the confession to him it so worked on his passions that he couldn’t control himself, and, after thinking the matter over all night, he decided to kill Mallem; that on this morning he went down to the barn, caught Mallem behind the ‘Joe’ horse, told him he was going to kill him, gave him a choice to die by the rope or by the knife; that Mallem said, if he had to die, he didn’t have any choice. Defendant then tried to hang him; found that he couldn’t, so he gave him five minutes in which to pray. Mallem said, ‘God have mercy!’ and he finished him with the knife. Within a few minutes after arriving in Milton, defendant met one Allan McDonald, deputy sheriff, [439]*439and an old acquaintance. Upon being saluted by McDonald, defendant replied, ‘Yes, Mac, I am in your charge,’ and went in the custody of the sheriff to the telephone station, where he asked to have the county coroner, residing at Langdon, notified; also Mr. Dickson, the state’s attorney.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

State v. Keller
2005 ND 86 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 2005)
State v. Houser
261 N.W.2d 382 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 1977)
Pope v. State
478 P.2d 801 (Alaska Supreme Court, 1970)
State v. Maresch
27 N.W.2d 1 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 1947)
State v. Schock
226 N.W. 525 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 1929)
State v. Moeton
225 N.W. 318 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 1929)
Rucker v. State
162 N.E. 802 (Ohio Supreme Court, 1928)
State v. Young
212 N.W. 857 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 1927)
State v. Ferguson
204 N.W. 652 (South Dakota Supreme Court, 1925)
State v. Austin
168 N.W. 790 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 1918)
State v. Pock
152 N.W. 507 (South Dakota Supreme Court, 1915)
Dowd v. McGinnity
152 N.W. 524 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 1915)
State v. Hoff
150 N.W. 929 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 1915)
State v. Barnes
150 N.W. 557 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 1915)
State v. Peltier
129 N.W. 451 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 1910)
Auld v. Cathro
128 N.W. 1025 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 1910)
Hanson v. Lindstrom
108 N.W. 798 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 1906)
State v. Hazlett
105 N.W. 617 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 1905)
State v. Barry
103 N.W. 637 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 1905)
State v. Momberg
103 N.W. 566 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 1905)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
92 N.W. 809, 11 N.D. 428, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-barry-nd-1903.