State v. Broadhurst

196 P.2d 407, 184 Or. 178, 1948 Ore. LEXIS 214
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedMay 18, 1948
StatusPublished
Cited by36 cases

This text of 196 P.2d 407 (State v. Broadhurst) 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. Broadhurst, 196 P.2d 407, 184 Or. 178, 1948 Ore. LEXIS 214 (Or. 1948).

Opinion

BOSSMAN, C. J.

This is an appeal by the defendant from a judgment of the circuit court based upon a verdict which found her guilty of the crime of first degree murder and which, pursuant to the recommendation of the jury (see Constitution of Oregon, Art. I, § 37, and § 23-411 O. C. L. A.), sentenced her to life imprisonment. The *183 victim of the alleged homicide was one W. D. Broad-burst, to whom the witnesses referred as Dr. Broadhurst. He met his death October 14, 1946, at about 3:30 p. m. on the Idaho-Oregon-Nevada highway, several miles north of Jordan Valley. The death, according to the State, resulted from wounds inflicted feloniously by a heavy wrench and a shotgun. One Alvin Lee Williams struck the blows and fired the gun. The State does not claim that the defendant was present when the crime was committed, but contends that Williams was her proxy and that she was a principal within the purview of § 23-207, O. C. L. A.

The appellant presents 24 assignments of error which her brief groups for the purpose of presentation into 12 contentions. We shall now state five of them. They require a summary of the evidence. The first; is:

“Alvin Lee Williams was not competent to testify.” Williams and the defendant were separately, not jointly, indicted. The appellant contends that since Williams had neither plead guilty nor been adjudged guilty or innocent, he was not a competent witness. The third contention is:
“The Court erred in overruling appellant’s motion for a new trial because of improper remarks of the district attorney.”

The attack remarks Avere a part of the district attorney’s opening statement. The defendant contends that they were not justified by the evidence which was later produced. The fifth is: ...

“The Court erred in not granting appellant’s motion for á directed verdict.”

The motion Avas based principally upon a claim that Williams’ testimony that he and the appellant coii *184 spired to kill Dr. Broadhurst was not corroborated. The sixth is:

“The Court erred in refusing to grant the defendant- a new trial.”

The chief basis of that contention are arguments (a) that the State presented no evidence of a conspiracy between the appellant and Williams except the testimony of the latter; (b) that Williams shot in self-defense; and (c) that Williams’ testimony disproved that Dr. Broadhurst was murdered. The twelfth is:

“The verdict is against the weight and preponderance of the evidence.”

A disposition of the foregoing five contentions requires mention of some of the evidence. The latter is extensive. The trial began February 24, 1947, and was not concluded until March 14, 1947. Our review of the evidence will be confined to essentials. The State contends that the defendant married Dr. Broadhurst for his wealth;. that three months later she won- the affection of Williams and then used hirn as her instrument in the killing. A few days .before the homicide Dr. Broadhurst executed a will which bequeathed his. entire estate to the defendant. The latter neither testified nor called a witness, and, hence,-the testimony came exclusively from the State’s witnesses.

Dr. Broadhurst lived upon a ranch which he owned, three miles from Caldwell, Idaho. Caldwell is 15' miles or so east of Oregon. Dr. Broadhurst, in addition to owning the Caldwell raneh, owned another near Jordan Valley, Oregon, which is south and west of Caldwell. He was 51 years of age, unmarried and worth about $200,000. Upon the Caldwell ranch was a house in which Dr. Broadhurst had made his home. About a year prior to his death he gave the use of the home to Dr. *185 and Mrs. F. L. Adams and lived with them. Dr. Adams was a nephew of Dr. Broadhurst.

In the early 1920s Dr. Broadhurst and the defendant lived in Burley, Idaho, and became acquainted. How long they lived there and to what extent they saw anything of each other is not disclosed by the record, but Dr. Broadhurst found the defendant attractive. In 1942 she' gave her age as 32; in May of 1946 she represented it as 35; four months later she reported it as 30. Each occasion was an application for a marriage license.

When Dr. Broadhurst left Burley is not disclosed by the' record and likewise we do not know when the defendant left there. We know nothing about what either did after leaving Burley until we reach the summer of 1945. However, on January 28, 1942, the defendant was married to Leslie M. Lincoln who, in 1941, was commissioned a lieutenant in the Army. Lieutenant Lincoln was discharged in 1944. In the summer of 1945 the defendant was living in Taft, California, with her husband, and Dr. Broadhurst was upon his ranches. About that time the two occasionally communicated with each other. A telegram which Dr. Broadhurst sent to the defendant August 25,1945, said:

“Same address Dr. W. D. Broadhurst, Caldwell, Idaho. Best wishes.”

In the same month he wrote to her, according to a witness’s recollection of the letter:

“In answer to your question, I am not married; therefore I have no heirs and no dependents.”

The contents of other communications which were exchanged before marriage were excluded by adverse rulings.

*186 In January, 1946, Dr. Broadhurst and his sister, Mrs. Sarah Allen, made a trip into Arizona, California and Mexico. He returned February 28. In its course he and the defendant communicated with each other. May 19, 1946, the two met at Reno, Nevada, and were married. The next day Dr. Broadhurst returned to his Caldwell ranch. The defendant did not accompany him.. The application for the marriage license, which was.signed by both, contained the following questions concerning the defendant: “Previously married?” “Husband deceased?” Both questions were answered in the affirmative, but the answer to the second question was false. No one claims that Dr. Broadhurst knew that it was false. Lt. Lincoln was alive when that answer was made and when this case was tried. Dr. Broadhurst did not know, when death overtook him, that the woman whom he deemed his wife was in truth the wife of another man. May 20, 1946, when Dr. Broadhurst returned to Caldwell, the defendant returned to Lt. Lincoln and resumed her conjugal relatiohs with him. April 24, 1946, 26 days prior to her return to him, Lincoln had filed a suit against the defendant for a divorce in which he charged cruel treatment. ' Five days after the suit was filed a reconciliation occurred and was still in effect on May 19, 1946, when the defendant and Dr. Broadhurst were married. June 2, 1946, Lincoln discovered that his wife and Dr. Broadhurst were married on May 19 and thereupon separated from her. July 8,1946, he filed an amended complaint in which he alleged the bigamous marriage. October 25,1946, 11 days after the death of Dr. Broadhurst, an interlocutory decree was entered in the divorce suit in favor of Lincoln. The decree did not become final until one year after that date.

*187

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Bluebook (online)
196 P.2d 407, 184 Or. 178, 1948 Ore. LEXIS 214, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-broadhurst-or-1948.