State v. Brooks

57 P. 1038, 23 Mont. 146, 1899 Mont. LEXIS 87
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 13, 1899
DocketNo. 1,413
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 57 P. 1038 (State v. Brooks) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana 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. Brooks, 57 P. 1038, 23 Mont. 146, 1899 Mont. LEXIS 87 (Mo. 1899).

Opinion

MR. JUSTICE HUNT

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Defendant, William C. Brooks, was convicted of murder in the first degree, for the killing of Jennie Brooks. He appeals from the judgment sentencing him to death, and from the order of the district court denying his motion for a new trial.

The evidence of the state disclosed these material facts: Jennie Brooks was the wife of the defendant. The couple had not lived together for some time. On November 18, 1898, between á and 5 o’clock in the afternoon, a cry of murder was heard in the neighborhood where Mrs. Brooks lived. Defendant was seen running, at the time this cry was heard, across the street, after his wife; he fired a shot as he got to the gate of the house in which she lived, and followed the woman until they reached the middle of the street, where she stopped, and they had a scufile, in which she was down on her knees part of tfie time, reaching out in the- direction of the defendant’s hand. While in this position he pushed her back and got away from her, and fired another shot at her, asking her if she was shot. She said something in a low tone, then ran away from him and fell dead. The defendant then fired several shots, apparently at himself, and, after doing this, went up to the body of his wife, lying on the face, close to the house, reached over and looked at it, took the revolver, put it down to her ear and fired, saying, “Nowyou are dead.” Defendant then said he would go and give himself up, and again said, “No, I wont; I’ll just shoot myself,” — and again shot the revolver off, but, as he did so, dodged his head to the side and avoided the bullets. Defendant then told the officers to come and take him, anti said he would give himself up and did so.. Mrs. Brooks had no weapon. Defendant, after the shooting, told a witness that it was unnecessary to go through any preliminaries; that they could just take him out and hang him, as he was ready to die, — and handed a bunch of keys to witness, telling him that they were the keys to his place of business, and he desired that his things should be taken and sold.

[151]*151A boy named Charley Powers, who lived with Mrs. Brooks, testified that, just before the shooting, Brooks went to Mrs. Brooks’ house and was standing there, holding the bill of a little live black pigeon in his mouth. Brooks at that time asked his wife what men had been doing about the house about 1 o’clock on Tuesday or Wednesday night. Mrs. Brooks denied that there had been any men about there at that time, and thereupon the defendant called her a “big whore,5 ’ threatened to kill her and struck at her. She then struck him with a small stick, and then they had a scuffle in which Brooks knocked her down and shot off his pistol, but missed her. This was just before the occurrences out of doors when she was killed.

The substance of the testimony in defendant’s behalf was that he and his wife had quarreled a great deal, and that the seperation just before the killing was at least the third that had occured between them. They had had a quarrel on the evening of November 14th. Defendant himself did not go on the witness stand, and relied upon insanity as a defense. To sustain this plea he called a witness named Scott, who testified: That he had known defendant for about four years. That he had never paid much attention to the actions, speech, appearance, and peculiarities of the defendant, but that on one day defendant called witness, and wanted him to rent a church “down there.” Witness told him, “Yes;” that, if they rented it out in the winter, they could make money enough out of it to fix it up; that the rental was to be six dollars a month. That defendant went off to fix up the contract, and when he returned, ‘ ‘he had it fixed up for six dollars for six months. So I told him: ‘You must be out of your head. A man that would have sense would know better than that.’” Witness said he did not think that he noticed anything peculiar in defendant’s action just prior to the homicide; that the defendant was a trustee of the African Church, and a member thereof. This witness was recalled, and gave the following testimony in support of the defendant’s plea of insanity: “I testified here this morning that I was present at the • colored [152]*152church in Billings about the month of September, 1898, at which time there was a disturbance came up in the’ church, and in which Mr. Brooks was one of the parties engaged. After the preaching was over, they had a minister here, and he wanted to collect some money to fixup the church; and Mr. Brooks drawed out a paper there, and proceeded to the altar to collect some dollar money and Sunday school money to represent our church, and I told him that it wasn’t necessary to do that, ’cause we had no church, we simply had the building there, and we had no means, and it was no use to send any money away until we got straight on our feet here. At that time Brooks got excited, you know, because he had everybody up telling him to behave and sit down, or else go home, — one of the two. In regard to his actions he was like any one else, I suppose, — when he would get angry or mad he looked like he was crazy. I couldn’t reason with him. I went to his home afterwards and tried to reason with him, but I couldn’t do it. This was about an hour after the disturbance that occured at the church. He would not listen at that time to us at all. When he gets mad he is excited. He was mad- that night. He seemed to want to be the leader of our church, and he also wants to be the leader of the colored people of this town. At that time I did not think him crazy. He was excited and strong-headed, and you could not reason with him.”

Dr. J. H. Rinehart testified as an expert on insanity. Defendant’s counsel put a long hypothetical question to him, based upon every circumstance that could have possibly been deduced from the testimony bearing at all upon the plea of insanity, and then asked him this question: “Would you say that this question contained evidences of insanity?” The doctor’s reply was, substantially, that there were a great many evidences of insanity under certain circumstances, which under other circumstances would hardly pass as evidences of insanity, and that there were quite a number of things, in the proposition put, involving symptoms of insanity. It so happened that Dr. Rinehart was a witness of the homicide itself, [153]*153and saw everything that occurred after the defendant and his wife left the house. The state called him in rebuttal, and he said that he was not prepared to say whether the defendant was acting like a crazy man or not; that he was “plowing around there in a terribly excited condition,5 ’ and that while he never had been well enough acquainted with him to form any opinion as to his sanity at that time, yet he had no reason to think that he was insane, from his actions, because he was not intimately enough acquainted with him to decide whether he was or not; that he always considered him a sane man, from what he knew of him, and had no reason to think for a moment that he was insane.

Another witness, who had known the defendant for four or five years, and had seen him frequently, testified on rebuttal that he would say that defendant was a sane man, and that at the time of the killing the thought never entered his head that Brooks was insane.

1. A witness for the defense, who testified that defendant and his wife quarreled a great deal, was asked if defendant ever stated to him anything in relation to his domestic troubles.

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

Related

State v. McKenzie
608 P.2d 428 (Montana Supreme Court, 1980)
State v. Noble
384 P.2d 504 (Montana Supreme Court, 1963)
State v. Greeno
342 P.2d 1052 (Montana Supreme Court, 1959)
State v. Espelin
76 P.2d 629 (Montana Supreme Court, 1938)
Gould v. Lynn
293 P. 968 (Montana Supreme Court, 1930)
State v. Ingersoll
292 P. 250 (Montana Supreme Court, 1930)
State v. Polich
226 P. 519 (Montana Supreme Court, 1924)
Ebaugh v. Burns
210 P. 892 (Montana Supreme Court, 1922)
State v. Smith
190 P. 107 (Montana Supreme Court, 1920)
State v. PRLJA
189 P. 64 (Montana Supreme Court, 1920)
State v. Halk
141 P. 149 (Montana Supreme Court, 1914)
State v. Matkins
121 P. 881 (Montana Supreme Court, 1912)
State v. Leakey
120 P. 234 (Montana Supreme Court, 1911)
Scheuer v. State
78 P. 971 (Montana Supreme Court, 1904)
Landeau v. Frazier
76 P. 290 (Montana Supreme Court, 1904)
Smith v. Shook
75 P. 513 (Montana Supreme Court, 1904)
State v. Hardee
72 P. 39 (Montana Supreme Court, 1903)
State v. Peterson
60 P. 809 (Montana Supreme Court, 1900)
State v. Peel
59 P. 169 (Montana Supreme Court, 1899)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
57 P. 1038, 23 Mont. 146, 1899 Mont. LEXIS 87, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-brooks-mont-1899.