State v. Cates

33 P.2d 578, 97 Mont. 173, 1934 Mont. LEXIS 77
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedJune 4, 1934
DocketNo. 7,224.
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 33 P.2d 578 (State v. Cates) 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. Cates, 33 P.2d 578, 97 Mont. 173, 1934 Mont. LEXIS 77 (Mo. 1934).

Opinions

*184 MB. JUSTICE ANDEBSON

delivered the opinion of the court.

The defendant by verdict of the jury was found guilty of murder in the first degree and by judgment of the court sentenced to be hanged. His motion for a new trial was denied, and this appeal is taken from the judgment and the order denying the motion.

The defendant admitted the homicide and attempted to justify it on the ground of self-defense.

The Missoula courthouse and the jail are the only structures located in a city block in the city of Missoula which is bounded on the west by Woody Street. The courthouse is located approximately in the middle of the block; the jail in the northwest corner. About a quarter to 9 o’clock on the evening of July 21, 1933, an automobile was observed by witnesses for the state to proceed very slowly along Woody Street in a northerly direction. When it reached a point about midway of the courthouse block, it stopped. The defendant was in the driver’s seat in this automobile. Paul Bead, the deceased, was standing on the running-board on the right-hand side of the car, with the front door open and with Ms head inside *185 the doorway, so that it appeared to witnesses 75 feet distant from where the automobile stopped, and who were viewing it toward its left-hand side, as though two persons were occupying the front seat of the car. Shortly after it stopped —from a minute and a half to two minutes — two shots were fired within the automobile. The defendant then got out and proceeded along the left-hand side of the car to the rear. The «deceased had proceeded to the rear right-hand comer of the automobile. "When the defendant came around the rear end of the car, according to five witnesses who testified on behalf of the state, the deceased started to run in a crouching position toward the courthouse, and defendant shot at him while deceased was thus running with his back turned toward the defendant. At a point 59 feet from the automobile the deceased fell to the ground. The defendant returned to his seat in the ear, sat down and immediately got out again. In the meantime he was approached by the witness Harlow, a constable, who placed him under arrest. The sheriff, who was walking from the jail, took charge of defendant. At all times after defendant first left the automobile he had a .38-caliber automatic pistol in his hand. Some of the witnesses for the state testified to having heard three shots only; others testified to having heard four. Subsequently that evening three empty shells were found in close proximity to the automobile and a fourth on the front seat, the shells being identical in size and make with those found in the clip of defendant’s pistol. The deceased was removed in an ambulance to a hospital, where he died on the night of the shooting, at about 11 o’clock. He was suffering from two bullet wounds. Following his death, Dr. Thornton performed an autopsy on his body. As a witness he testified concerning the result of the autopsy, with reference to the wounds.

The deceased, immediately after falling on the courthouse' lawn, complained of something hurting him. In his hip pocket a witness found a flashlight, which was removed. The witness Harlow made the following inquiry of the deceased, “Paul, where is your gun?” to which deceased responded, “I didn’t *186 have any.” At tbe time in question tbe deceased was, and for some time prior thereto had been, a prohibition enforcement officer.

Witnesses testified as to their making a search for a gun around the defendant’s automobile and on the courthouse lawn where the shooting occurred, and testified that none was found. In his right hand the deceased had keys which, while in the ambulance taking him to the hospital, he delivered to one of the witnesses, and which were found to be the keys to the defendant’s car. An examination of the car, by removing the lining on the inside of the right-hand front door, revealed that a bullet had passed through the lining, but had not passed through the metal portion of the door. A bullet was found lying inside this lining in the door. A further examination of the ear revealed that a bullet had passed through a portion of the post between the rear door and the window back of the rear door on the right-hand side of the car and through the glass of the window. Witnesses testified that from the appearance of the bullet hole through the window they were able to determine that the bullet had passed from the inside of the car out, rather than from the outside in.

The defendant testified that for some time he had been engaged in the business of “bootlegging” and had paid a fine for the violation of both the national and state prohibition laws; that for some time prior to the homicide he had been paying to the deceased the sum of $50 a month, and that at the time of the shooting he owed the deceased under this arrangement $120; that on the evening in question, in response to a solicitation over the telephone, he left his home about 8:30 and went into the alley to the rear of the Oxford pool-hall; that he walked down the alley from his ear, came back and went into the back door of the Oxford, but did not see the man who had called him on the telephone; that he then discovered sitting in the front seat of the ear a pasteboard carton which contained within it a paper bag, and inside the bag a jug of moonshine whisky; that he started to back his ear out of the alley, and at this point the deceased opened *187 the car door and turned his flashlight in the defendant’s face; that the deceased had a gun in his hand and said to defendant, “Back out of here”; that deceased did not tell defendant that he was under arrest and did not look into the car for anything; that from this point on the deceased directed him in the movement of his car. He testified further that deceased demanded $100, and that he (defendant) protested that he had less than $10 in his pocket, and that he had to remove his wife from the hospital that morning because of lack of funds to keep her there; that-the deceased said, “We will go to the sheriff’s office,” to which the defendant responded, “That is fine with me. But you remember you took money from me before my wife and kid.” Defendant then testified that deceased then said, “What are you going to do? Are you going to come through with this?” to which defendant responded that he could not come through and had nothing to come through with; that defendant then said, “We will go to the sheriff’s office and I will tell them what you are pulling,” to which deceased replied, “I can kill you and say you were resisting arrest,” at which point, defendant states, the deceased struck at him with the gun, and that he caught it. The defendant testified that, after the car was stopped, the deceased struck at him; that defendant grabbed his own gun and shot from the seat as the deceased was backing out of the car; that, when the deceased stuck up his head along back toward the rear of the car, the defendant threw up the gun and snapped back there; that defendant walked around toward the back of the car; and that the deceased was down by the rear wheel and “had his gun in his hand pointed toward the front right door of the car that was open, and as soon as I seen him I shot him.”

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Bluebook (online)
33 P.2d 578, 97 Mont. 173, 1934 Mont. LEXIS 77, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-cates-mont-1934.