State v. Boyatt

87 P.2d 992, 59 Idaho 771, 1939 Ida. LEXIS 99
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 23, 1939
DocketNo. 6606.
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 87 P.2d 992 (State v. Boyatt) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho 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. Boyatt, 87 P.2d 992, 59 Idaho 771, 1939 Ida. LEXIS 99 (Idaho 1939).

Opinions

HOLDEN, J.

Appellant was convicted of murder of the second degree, and appeals. It appears from the record appellant and Barbara Boyatt had been married about two years and for about a year and a half before the killing they lived on River Street in Hailey, Idaho. As to the character of the house in which they lived and where the killing occurred, she testified:

*774 “Q. You have a big red sign out in front of the house called ‘Bobby’s Place’?
“A. Yes.
“Q. As a matter of fact, this is just a house of prostitution?
“A. I have never called it that. It is ‘Bobby’s Place.’
“Q. Bobby’s Place?
“A. Yes, a beer parlor.
“ Q. Asa matter of fact that is what it is — a house of prostitution ?
“A. I don’t know.
“Q. You don’t know? .
“A. I don’t know.”
And appellant testified:
‘‘Q. IIow did your wife make a living?
“A. By running a beer parlor.
‘‘Q. What did she sell?
‘‘A. Beer.
“Q. Sell any whiskey?
“A. Previously she — (objection by counsel for appellant).
‘‘A. She sold whiskey previously to that, yes.
‘‘Q. Have any girls in the house all the time?
‘‘A. There were girls around there once in awhile as far as I noticed.
“Q. That was the way she made her living wasn’t it?
“A. Yes, sir.”

It further appears, from the record, a dance hall was also operated in connection with the beer parlor and house of prostitution.

Appellant testified the killing occurred August 12, 1937, under the following circumstances: That he called his wife by phone ffom Shoshone at about 4:30 in the afternoon; that he told her he would be up in a couple of hours that she told him she didn’t care whether he ever came up, and he said: ‘‘What is the matter, are you drunk again?” that on the way to Hailey from Shoshone, he stopped at Bellevue, where he drank a bottle of beer and again called the house asking for Monte Ferris; a woman answered the phone and he asked her to have Ferris come to Campbell’s Drug Store at Bellevue, *775 and Ferris came; that he (Boyatt) left his car at Bellevue and rode on to Hailey with Ferris; he got home at about 7 o’clock entering through the kitchen door, and Slater and his wife were in the kitchen; Slater was sitting on a chair and his wife was standing by the kitchen stove; after some conversation with Slater and his wife, he inquired: “What is the matter with you?” and said to her: “Come on in the bedroom, I want to talk with you”; that she looked at Slater but did not say anything and he took her by the arm; that Slater jumped up and pushed him against the wall, saying: “Ked, I am in, and you are out; you haven’t any business around here any more. I have been living with your wife, and I am going to keep on living with her ’ ’; that he replied: “That is funny,” and turned to her and said: “Is that right?” and she said: “Yes, that is right”; and he said: “I guess that is that”; he then called for Ferris and asked Ferris to take him to Bellevue; on the way back, Ferris told him what Boyatt testified the deceased had already told him, that is to say, the deceased had been living with his wife; upon arriving at Bellevue he borrowed a “32,” and bought a box of shells; that he got the gun because he wanted a “little authority”; he might “want to run a bluff on a fellow, and I might have to hit him on the head as a little protection”; after borrowing the gun and purchasing the shells he drove back to Hailey; that he “anticipated trouble and I was trying to avoid it ”; upon his return to the house he walked up the back stairs to Ferris’ room and asked if “Bobbie” was still there, and Ferris told him she was; he then walked through the dance hall and barroom, and into the kitchen; he happened to look in the bedroom and saw his wife lying on the bed with Slater leaning over her, handing her a drink, and his wife said: “Hello, you back again?” Slater turned around and set the glass on the dresser; Slater had his back tnrned to him when he (Boyatt) said: “Get out of here, Slater, I want to talk to my wife, you are a hell of a friend”; Slater wheeled around sideways and reached under his shirt for an automatic, and Boyatt said: “Don’t pull it”; Slater said: “You red-headed son of a bitch, you are the guy that is going out, not me, and you, are going out right *776 now”; that Slater drew an automatic and started to fumble with the safety catch, and pointed the automatic right at him and there was a sort of snap; that Boyatt did not know whether it was on safety or not; that he (Boyatt) reached for his gun, but it caught on his pants pocket; the minute he grabbed for his gun, Slater ran over and grabbed his hand; he tried to hit Slater over the head; Slater was calling him a son of a bitch and saying: “I will kill you, you son of a bitch; you get out of here and stay out”; that he tried to hit Slater over the head with his gun and the gun went off; he did not know where the bullet went; Slater was hitting him on the shoulder with his gun; he was sober and Slater was drunk; they struggled through the bedroom door, and out into the kitchen, and went into a clinch; Slater let loose of his hand and got both hands on the automatic and he then reached over and hit Slater three or four times on the head; Slater let one hand free and hit him on the nose and that temporarily dazed him and he dropped down on one knee; Slater grabbed him on the right side of his shirt collar with his left hand, and was trying to hit him on the head with an automatic, and at the same time trying to work it; Slater was cursing him, saying : “I will kill you”; that as soon as he (Boyatt) raised up, Slater grabbed him by his hand and twisted it around, trying to make him drop the gun and that was “when the gun went off the first time or the second time. Anyway, it went off twice right quick. We were fighting and he was cussing and finally both guns dropped on the floor, and we were both in a clinch, and we fell over here on the stove; over on this kitchen range, and were lying across that, and I was trying to hold him, and he was poking me on the side and finally reached over and got the stove poker or lifter, and hit me right along the left temple. That dazed me and I dropped to the floor and as I was groping around I got my hands on the automatic and as I raised up he had this poker ready to smack me again, and I hit him on the head with the automatic, and the magazine flew out of the gun, and we clinched and scuffled for possibly thirty seconds more, and we both fell on the floor and I pushed him away and he says: ‘I got enough, I’ll leave,’ and I said: ‘O.K.’ ”; that he (Boyatt) got up and *777

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Bluebook (online)
87 P.2d 992, 59 Idaho 771, 1939 Ida. LEXIS 99, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-boyatt-idaho-1939.