State v. Bebee

175 P.2d 478, 110 Utah 484, 1946 Utah LEXIS 173
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 18, 1946
DocketNo. 6955.
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 175 P.2d 478 (State v. Bebee) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah 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. Bebee, 175 P.2d 478, 110 Utah 484, 1946 Utah LEXIS 173 (Utah 1946).

Opinion

WADE, Justice.

Hiram BeBee was convicted of the crime of murder in the first degree, the jury returning no recommendation and he appeals from the verdict and the sentence thereon.

Hiram BeBee, the appellant herein, to whom we shall hereafter refer as the defendant, is a slight old man weighing about 105 lbs., who purports not to know his true age, but ■ from events he says he remembers it could be inferred that he is about 100 years old. His appearance does not comport with that of the average man of this day and age. He wears long braids and dresses in a style sufficiently different from that of the ordinary man as to attract the attention of the casual passer-by.

In the late afternoon of October 15, 1945, after a weekend trip to Provo, defendant and his wife were returning to their home in Spring City, Utah, in a friends’ truck. Their route home took them through Mount Pleasant, Utah, where they arrived about 6 o’clock p. m. Defendant, who had hitherto never been in Mount Pleasant, decided to stop in that city and buy some beer to take home to another friend, whereupon he and the driver of the truck proceeded to a tavern where the driver purchased three bottles of beer and defendant ordered a glass of beer to drink on the premises. *487 Defendant while drinking his beer approached a table at which were seated a lady and some men and engaged in. conversation with them. A short time later he was seen in conversation with Lon T. Larsen, the deceased, who was the city marshal of Mount Pleasant. From snatches of conversation overheard by some persons in the tavern, Mr. Larsen had apparently asked defendant his name and defendant had' refused to tell him and in doing so had not been too respectful but had rather inferred it was none of his business. The evidence was contradictory as to whether defendant was aware of the fact that Mr. Larsen, was the city marshal. There was testimony that Mr. Larsen, who was dressed in civilian garb, after some conversation with defendant, unbuttoned the sport coat he was wearing and showed defendant his badge. Be that as it may, Mr. Larsen did not arrest nor was he requested to arrest defendant, but he apparently did not like his manners and speech and proceeded to evict him from the tavern. When they came to the door, both stumbled and went to their knees, whereupon Mr. Larsen, who was much the younger, heavier and stronger of the men, picked up defendant and took one of his arms and placed it behind1 his back and propelled him rapidly down the street to where the truck in which defendant came was parked. After what appeared to be some more conversation between them, Mr. Larsen opened the truck door, picked up the defendant and threw him on the seat. Defendant’s feet were sticking out of the truck so he pushed them in and closed the truck door. Mr. Larsen then turned to go up to the sidewalk when Mrs. BeBee emerged from a drug store nearby and demanded to know what he was doing with her husband. As he turned to answer, the defendant shot him causing him to stagger and fall and as he was floundering, defendant stepped out of the truck and shot him again. Defendant’s story was that he shot him because he thought he was going for his gun when he turned around after he had1 stepped away from the truck. It developed that Mr. Larsen was not armed at the time.

*488 After defendant had shot Mr. Larsen, he and his. wife and; friend got back into the truck and drove towards Moroni on their way back to Spring City. The city marshal of Moroni had been instructed to stop the red pick-up truck in which defendant was riding and when the truck approached the outskirts of Moroni he flagged it down. He attempted to take the keys' of the car but after objection by defendant, he thought better of it and instead took the names and addresses of the occupants which they furnished him. They then drove on to their home in Spring City. At about 7:00 or 7:30 p. m. of that same day, the sheriff and some of his deputies arrived at defendant’s home in Spring City, where they found a group of about 80 or 40 men, a great many of them with rifles and shotguns surrounding the house. Upon the sheriff’s arrival he was invited into the house, whereupon he and his deputies entered to make the arrest. The crowd which had heretofore been on the outside followed the sheriff into the house. Because of the presence of the mob of men in the room, the defendant who was still armed refused to surrender his gun to the sheriff thus forcing the sheriff and his deputies to. disarm him. They then took him to the county jail in Manti, Utah, and the next morning took him to the Salt Lake County jail.

After the information was filed against defendant, he moved for a change of venue on the ground that he could not obtain a fair and impartial trial in San Pete County because of the great prejudice against defendant as evidenced by the mob action both at the time of arrest and at the preliminary hearing. In support of such motion he filed affidavits to the effect that the feeling against him was so high that the sheriff was forced to remove him to the Salt Lake County jail for safekeeping; and that newspaper articles published in a number of newspapers circulating in San Pete County where the deceased was well known and had many relatives and where defendant was unknown, were inflammatory and also reflected the sentiment of the community towards defendant in that county. One such newspaper, the Mount Pleasant Pryamid, printed1 an article *489 which, was made a part of defendant’s affidavit, which purported to state the facts of the case and described the mob which surrounded defendant’s home at the time of his arrest as

“crack shot deer hunters with their rifles, all ready for the annual deer hunt, and many duck hunters with shotguns, all eager to pull a trigger at the proper time. The sheriff appeared on the scene before action started. Feelings were running high and it was only the respect for the office of sheriff that some leader did not speak out. Many ‘beads’ were drawn by old and young, many said, ‘This is the only time in my life that I have wanted to kill a man.’ It is believed that some expense would have been saved if the sheriff had not been at the scene of the gathering of all those weapons,”

and at the end of this article in black face type it printed the following:

“Eyewitness Saw Lon Larson Shot And Killed By A Man Identified By The Sheriff As Hiram BeBee. Why Wait?”

And in another article in this same newspaper describing the funeral services for the deceased at which there was a large attendance, it printed the following:

“President S. M. Nielson spoke of the responsibilities carried by Lon and paid high tribute to his character and then he chided society for opening the way for ‘such degraded trash’ to come into our midst and live among respectable people, as did these depraved and degraded outlaws, who struck down this good man. He said the government appropriates funds to destroy predatory animals and little or nothing is done to destroy such demons as those who kill law abiding citizens without cause.”

The sheriff and the newspapers filed counter-affidavits to defendant’s affidavits in support of his motion for a change of venue.

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Bluebook (online)
175 P.2d 478, 110 Utah 484, 1946 Utah LEXIS 173, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-bebee-utah-1946.