State v. Crump

47 P. 814, 5 Idaho 166, 1897 Ida. LEXIS 3
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 8, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 47 P. 814 (State v. Crump) 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. Crump, 47 P. 814, 5 Idaho 166, 1897 Ida. LEXIS 3 (Idaho 1897).

Opinion

HESTON, J.

The defendant was informed against for the murder of Thomas Ronan. A trial was had on May 12, 1896, upon which trial the ease was submitted to the jury at 11 o’clock P. M. on the 16th of May, and at half past 2 o’clock P. M. of the following day the jury was discharged by the court, they having failed to agree upon a verdict. On May 21, 1896, another jury was impaneled, and another trial was had, resulting in a verdict against the defendant of guilty of murder in the second degree, with two special verdicts in favor of the state upon defendant’s two special pleas of “former acquittal” and “once in jeopardy,” interposed by defendant upon said second trial. The facts in regard to the homicide are briefly as follows: The deceased, Thomas Ronan, was a farmer residing in Canyon county, at Lower Boise, about eleven miles from the town of Caldwell, with his family, consisting of a wife and two children, of the respective ages of seven years and four years. On the evening of May 13, 1895, the deceased partook of his supper at half past 6 or near 7 o’clock, which consisted of fried beefsteak, fruit and bread. Shortly after supper, deceased went to his field, to change the water (irrigating). Returning, he lighted the lamp, and sat down to read the newspaper. At [169]*169about 9 o’clock he called to his wife, who was in another room, that he heard a noise in the wire fence, and he would go down and see if- horses were in the wire. Thereupon he drew on his boots, and went out. The next morning deceased was found dead about two hundred and fifty or three hundred yards from the house. There was a wound, apparently made by some blunt instrument, in his forehead, and two more of the same character upon the back of his head. There was no evidence of a struggle near where the body lay. No footprints were visible. The clover was eight or ten inches high where the body was found. A reward of $1,000 had been offered for the apprehension and conviction of the party or parties who committed the homicide. On the eleventh day of .June, 1895, the defendant was arrested at the town of Payette, in Canyon county, upon the complaint of one Charles B. Eldridge, for the murder of said Thomas Bonan. The circumstances attending the arrest of the defendant were peculiar. It seems from the evidence that the defendant and Eldridge had been on a trip to Yale, Malheur county, Oregon, and, returning, had stopped at Payette.

Edwards, the deputy sheriff, who arrested Crump, states as follows: "It was between the hours of 6 and half past 6 on the eleventh day of June, 1895, Mr. Eldridge came to my residence in Payette, and asked me if I was the deputy sheriff. I tola him I was, and he says, T want you to arrest a man for the murder of Bonan.’ I asked him his name, and he told me it was Matt Crump. I asked him what ground he had for suspecting this man for the killing of Bonan. He said, as he was riding from Biverside to Yale, Oregon, that Matt Crump told him that he killed Tom Bonan. I told him I would go in and finish my supper, and come down after supper, and arrest him. He told me he would go and get his supper over at the restaurant. I told him I would see him down in front of the postoffice in Pay-ette. As I went down, Eldridge and Crump came out of the restaurant. He came over to me, and gave me an introduction to him. T told him, says I: 'You look like the man I am look, ing for. I am going to arrest you for the murder of Thomas Bonan.’ The defendant did not say nothing whatever. He did not deny it or say anything at all about it. I took my handcuffs out of my pocket, and put them on him, and, as I put them [170]*170on him he commenced to sweat. I thought the man was sick. The sweat dropped actually from his face as thick as small-sized •shot. The man was sick. I asked him if he was sick, and he said he drunk a couple of glasses of beer over to Ontario, and it was very warm, and he did not feel well. I took him down to the jail, and sent Eldridge to get a bucket of water. This was O. E. Eldridge, the man who was afterward a witness in this •case. The defendant never said nothing to me in regard to the ■charge, or in answer to my statement that I arrested him for the Eonan murder. After Eldridge went for the bucket of water, defendant asked me if that fellow gave him away, meaning Eldridge. I asked him, ‘Who?5 He says, ‘Eldridge.5 ■Says I, ‘What for did you commit the murder?5 He says, ‘No; that’s for me to say.5 I told Eldridge to go and swear out a •complaint. Eldridge went up, and swore out a complaint, and got a warrant for Mr. Crump. I arrested Crump and took him before Justice Allen. The justice set his trial for the next day. I took him back to the jail again. It might be half an hour after that I stopped at the jail. I went up home, and got some supper, at about half past 11. I gave Eldridge the keys of the outside door, and took the keys of the inside door of the jail. Eefore I went up to get my supper, Crump sung out for El-•dridge and I told Eldridge to go in and see what he wanted. I gave him the key of the right-hand cell, which Crump was in. The left-hand cell was open, and I went into the left-hand cell. Crump did not know I was in the left-hand cell. El-•dridge unlocked the cell door. Crump says: ‘Charley, what did you give me away for?5 Eldridge said: ‘I had to, Matt; such a cold-blooded crime demanded me to do it.5 He says: ‘I wouldn’t do that to you.5 I told Eldridge to come out of the cell; that was talle enough. 1 went out, locked the outside door and told Crump that I was going up to get something to eat. Says he, ‘For God’s sake, sheriff, don’t leave the jail.5 Says I, ■‘Why?5 Says he, ‘Those people there on the Boise river will come over and hang me.5 Says I, ‘You did not kill Tom Eonan, did you?5 Says he, ‘No; but they told me right there, in my presence, in Boise Valley, that they would hang the man to a telegraph pole that killed Tom Eonan.5 Says I, T am not going to leave the jail only to get a bite to eat. Mr. Eldridge [171]*171will come up for me if you want anything before I come back.’ When I went up to get something to eat, it was half past 11, I judge. I was up to my place about twenty minutes when El-dridge came up. Says he, ‘Crump wants to see you down to the .jail.’ Eldridge said Crump wanted me to bring a pencil and paper and law book. I went; asked Crump what he wanted of me. He said, ‘I want to make a statement.’ Says I, ‘Did you kill Tom Bonan?’ Says he, No; but I know who did.’ Says I, ‘Who did?’ Saj’s he, ‘Mrs. Bonan killed him.’ Says, ‘I want to make a statement.’ ‘Well,’ says I, T will take your statement down, but you make it of your own free will.’ He ■says, ‘All right.’ ” The deputy sheriff then took down the following statement, as the same was dictated by defendant, in the presence of said deputy and said Eldridge; and after the same had been read over to defendant, and signed by him, two persons, Banks and Dempsey, were called in, and signed as witnesses :

“The Statement of Matt Crump.
“Payette, Canyon Co., State of Idaho. Matt Crump do ■somely swear i seen Mrs. Bonan strike Thomas Bonan with a ax on the head at half past seven o’clock at night, Monday evening, 13th day of May, 1895. Mrs. Bonan struck him three times on the back of is head and on the foured. She turned him over to hit him on the foured. i Mat Crump was standing 35 feet from the place he was murdered. Mrs. Bonan ’wanted me three weeks before Thomas Bonan was murdered, wanted me to kill him because they had truble. i told Mrs. .Bonan i would not do it. And she said she would do it her •self if she couldn’t' get any one to do it. Mrs. Bonan had on man elouths when she murdered Toms Bonan. Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
47 P. 814, 5 Idaho 166, 1897 Ida. LEXIS 3, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-crump-idaho-1897.