State v. Beck
This text of 174 P. 714 (State v. Beck) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nevada Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinions
By the Court,
B. E. Kuhl, Ed. Beck, and Wm. M. McGraw were jointly charged with the crime of murder. On motion, separate trials were granted the defendants. Defendant [212]*212Beck (appellant) was' convicted of murder in the first degree, and appeals.
Upon the trial defendant McGraw was called as a witness in behalf of the state, and testified relative to certain statements alleged to have been made to him by appellant. It is insisted that the court erred in overruling the objection of counsel for defendant to the testimony of the witness mentioned. For an understanding of the points urged, we quote from the brief of counsel for appellant:
“The testimony of McGraw consisted substantially of the following: First — The witness testified that appellant had secured from him a certain gun, which gun he later identified as being the one in evidence in the case. Second — That at the time of securing the gun appellant had told witness that he was going hunting with it. Third — That upon the following day appellant had told witness that he (appellant) and his partner, or rather ‘they,’ were going to hold up the mail stage, and had it all fixed with the stage driver; ‘that it was all cut and dried.’ Fourth — That appellant told witness to keep his mouth shut or he would kill him. Fifth — That later in the evening of the day of the crime, about 8 o’clock, witness was called out of a saloon by appellant, and told: ‘She’s all off; -the trick is turned. The stage is held up, and the driver’s head blown off.’ That in response to the question, ‘Who did that?’ appellant answered ‘Ben’ (Kuhl). That appellant had told witness that if he said a word he would kill him.”
In State v. Mangana, 33 Nev. 519, 112 Pac. 693, alluding approvingly to State v. King, 24 Utah, 483, 68 Pac. 418, 91 Am. St. Rep. 808, it is said:
* * When two or more persons associate together to rob another, and he is killed by one of them, the act is that of each and all of the conspirators, and all are chargeable therewith. State v. Schmidt, 136 Mo. 652, 38 S. W. 719.”
[214]*214
The main contention of counsel for appellant can best be presented in the language of his brief, where it is said :
“But we contend that there can be no such thing, as an admission by one conspirator to another, but that the testimony of McGraw necessarily becomes direct because of the position he occupies in the case.”
We are unable to agree with counsel’s contention. It is a universal rule that a voluntary statement against interest in a civil suit or involving the maker in a crime is always admissible against the party making it, and the mere fact that it is made to a coconspirator does [215]*215not rob it of its competency, nor is the coconspirator to whom it is made disqualified from testifying concerning it merely because he is a coconspirator. There is no analogy between the situation in this case and in one in which evidence is offered of a statement made by a conspirator to a third person after the accomplishment of the criminal purpose, involving a coconspirator.
No error appearing in the record, it is ordered that the judgment be, and it is hereby, affirmed.
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174 P. 714, 42 Nev. 209, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-beck-nev-1918.