State v. Cornish

13 N.W.2d 812, 70 S.D. 19, 1944 S.D. LEXIS 6
CourtSouth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedApril 7, 1944
DocketFile No. 8623.
StatusPublished

This text of 13 N.W.2d 812 (State v. Cornish) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering South Dakota 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. Cornish, 13 N.W.2d 812, 70 S.D. 19, 1944 S.D. LEXIS 6 (S.D. 1944).

Opinion

POLLEY, J.

Buford Cornish and Manville Purcell above named defendants were prosecuted on an information charging them with robbery. The trial resulted in a verdict of guilty and judgment sentencing defendants to a term in the penitentiary was entered. From such judgment they have appealed to this court.

At the opening of the trial the defendants objected to the introduction of any evidence on the ground that Count I of the information on which defendants were tried contains more than one offense. Count I of the information reads as follows:

“That Buford Cornish and Manville Purcell late of said county, Yeoman, on the 9th day of March, in the year of our Lord One Thousand Nine Hundred and Forty-two, at the County of Butte and State of South,Dakota aforesaid, within the jurisdiction of this Court then and there being, did make an assault in and upon one Joe LaFlamme, and thereby did place him, the said Joe LaFlamme, in bodily fear and danger of his life; and did then and there felonious *21 ly and unlawfully take from the said Joe LaFlamme approximately $10.00 in cash, the exact amount being not known by your informer, and one pocket knife; all of the said money and property was then and there in the possession of the said Joe LaFlamme and was then and there the property, goods and chattels of the said Joe LaFlamme; and the said Buford Cornish and Manville Purcell did then and there take from the person and against the will of the said Joe LaFlamme the money and property aforesaid, unlawfully, wilfully, violently and forcibly, and with force and violence, (*) and did then and there unlawfully wilfully, feloniously and forcibly steal, take and carry away all of the said money and property with the intent of the said Buford Cornish and Manville Purcell to deprive the owner thereof.” (Defendant Purcell was sometimes called “Buck”, and defendant Cornish was sometimes called “Red”).

It is conceded that that portion of the information above the asterisk constitutes a good and valid charge of robbery, but it is contended by the defendants that the portion of the information after the asterisk charges another offense, to wit: larceny, and in that way Count I charges more than one offense and therefore Count I is demurrable. But the language used after the asterisk does not charge larceny. By SDC 13.3801, Larceny is “accomplished by fraud or stealth.” The taking or gaining possession of the stolen property is accomplished by means of fraud or stealth, i.e. without the knowledge of the owner. But that is not the language nor the purport of the language used after the asterisk in the information. It reads as follows: “* * * and did then and there unlawfully, wilfully, feloniously and forcibly steal, take and carry away all of the said money and property with the intent of the said Buford Cornish and Manville Purcell to deprive the owner thereof.” There can be no misunderstanding this complaint; it charges a forcible taking and not by means of fraud or stealth.

Many alleged errors are predicated upon the rulings of the court on the reception and rejection of evidence. Defendants tried to show that LaFlamme, the complaining *22 witness, was in a highly intoxicated condition at the time he was assaulted by the defendants. There was no error in keeping this evidence out of the record. If LaFlamme had been as drunk as defendants tried to show he was, it would have furnished defendants no justification for making the assault, and the fact of LaFlamme’s intoxication was wholly immaterial.

Immediately after making'the assault, the defendants were arrested by a police officer and confined in jail. While defendant Cornish was on the witness stand during the trial, the state’s attorney on cross-examination, assuming that said defendant had set fire to the jail immediately after being confined therein, asked the defendant if he did not set fire to the jail shortly after being confined. The question was objected to as improper cross-examination and as misconduct on the part of the state’s attorney. Several other questions along the same line were asked by the state’s attorney. With a few exceptions, objections to these questions were sustained by the court; then on request of counsel for defendants the court admonished the state’s attorney not to ask any more questions along that line, and no more such questions were asked, but it is now insisted by counsel for defendants that the asking of such questions constituted such misconduct on the part of the state’s attorney as to entitle defendants to a new trial.

Where such conduct is persisted in to the prejudice of the defendants they are entitled to a new trial. State v. Klashtorni, 177 Minn. 363, 225 N. W. 278; State v. Archibald, 204 Iowa 406, 221 N. W. 814; 26 R.C.L. 1021. But after being admonished the state’s attorney asked no more such questions. We do not think defendants were prejudiced by the conduct complained of, and counsel for defendants does not appear to have considered said conduct prejudicial at the time, and did not call the matter to the court’s attention other than by objection to the introduction of the evidence and did not request the court to direct the jury to disregard the matters that had been injected into the case by the questions asked by the state’s attorney; but the *23 court out of abundance of caution, and on its own motion gave the jury the following special instruction:

“During the course of the trial proceeding in this case some questions were put by the state’s attorney to the defendant Buford Cornish, relating to a fire at the city jail at or about the time when said defendant was held at said jail. You are instructed that you shall wholly dismiss from your minds the mentioning of the jail fire as there is no evidence in the case tending to establish that there was any connection whatever between a jail fire and Buford Cornish or his conduct at any time.”

This, we believe, cured the error, if there had been error committed. State v. Waitman, 42 S. D. 5, 172 N. W. 504.

It is next contended by defendants’ counsel that the evidence is insufficient to support the verdict. This contention can best be answered by setting out a portion of the testimony of Joe LaFlamme, the complaining witness. While Mr. LaFlamme had his residence in the town of Belle Fourche, he worked out for different farmers and ranchers in the vicinity tending stock and herding sheep. On the 9th day of March, 1942, he came to town from where he was working. He was addicted to the use of intoxicating liquor and immediately on arriving in town he proceeded to get drunk. He was acquainted with both of the defendants and saw them both during that afternoon and along between nine and ten o’clock that evening he was walking up street when Cornish overtook him and took him by the arm and they walked along together until they reached Joe Johnson’s cafe. They stopped, and at Cornish’s request, some bystander went in the cafe and told Purcell that Cornish was outside waiting for him. Purcell came out immediately and when he came out Cornish was on LaFlamme’s left side and Purcell on his right side and one of them said they wanted to give him a drink.

LaFlamme testified:

A. “Red (Cornish) was on my left-side and Buck (Purcell) on the right-side and they said they wanted to give

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Related

State v. Archibald
215 N.W. 258 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1927)
State v. Klashtorni
225 N.W. 278 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1929)
State v. Waitman
172 N.W. 504 (South Dakota Supreme Court, 1919)

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Bluebook (online)
13 N.W.2d 812, 70 S.D. 19, 1944 S.D. LEXIS 6, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-cornish-sd-1944.