State v. Downing

205 P.2d 141, 185 Or. 689, 1949 Ore. LEXIS 139
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 16, 1949
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 205 P.2d 141 (State v. Downing) 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. Downing, 205 P.2d 141, 185 Or. 689, 1949 Ore. LEXIS 139 (Or. 1949).

Opinion

BEAND, J.

The charging part of the indictment reads as follows :

“The said---Corbett Downing and Dale Zitek -----on the 23rd day of - - August - - A-. D. 1947, *691 in the said County of Douglas and State of Oregon, then and there being and at the same time and place acting together and not being armed with a dangerous weapon, did assault and beat one John Pollard, and did then and there feloniously take and steal from the person of the said John Pollard, one Waltham watch, one small pocket knife and one bill fold containing approximately Eighty-five ($85.00) Dollars in currency, being four Twenty ($20.00) Dollar bills; one Five ($5.00) Dollar bill, and some small change; all said money being lawful money of the United States of America; and all of said personal property then and there being the property of the said John Pollard, —”

The defendant entered a plea of “not guilty”, was tried separately and convicted. There are only three assignments of error. The first two may be considered together. By these assignments the defendant asserts that the court erred in refusing to grant defendant’s motion for a directed verdict at the close of the State’s case on the ground that there was no evidence of any plan on the part of the defendant relating to the assault and robbery. Defendant also asserts that the court erred in refusing to grant a like motion at the close of the defendant’s case upon the ground that no evidence of complicity had been produced in said cause. It is not contended by the state that the defendant personally assaulted or beat the victim Pollard. The physical act was performed by the defendant Zitek, but under our statute, if a defendant is concerned in the commission of a crime, whether he directly commits the act constituting the crime, or aids and abets in its commission, he is to be tried and punished as a principal. .0. C. L. A., § 23-202.

We have read all of the testimony and find that the *692 evidence of guilt was.both substantial and convincing. We shall summarize only a portion of the evidence tending to establish guilt, Much of it is uncontradicted. Since in the pending case Downing was tried alone, we shall refer to him as the defendant and shall refer to his co-defendant as Zitek.

The scene of the alleged crime was in or near the city of Eoseburg, Douglas County, Oregon. On the evening of Saturday,' August 23, 1947, the defendant and Zitek met John Pollard on the street. The defendant had known Pollard for two or three months. Zitek and Pollard had never met. The two boys got. into Pollard’s car with his permission. Pollard bought four quarts of beer. As' they drove about, the defendant asked, and was granted permission to drive the ca'r. -He also asked Pollard-if they could stay all night with him. The defendant then drove out some distance to- see a girl, stayed half ah hour, then drove to a point back of the fair grounds. The defendant stopped the ear and shut off the lights. In answer to Pollard’s question, “What did you come down here for?” the defendant answered, “To drink our beer.” Immediately thereafter, the defendant started up the car and diove back to the place where they expected to meet the girl friend. They waited there until the girl, together with-a truck driver and his wife, árrived. (The defendant-'Corbett Downing is frequently referred to in the testimony as “Corby”). Pollard testified that as the truck driver1, with his wife and the girl drove up,

“he drove right up pretty close in front of our car, and the truck is pretty high and the lights shined and Corby said, ‘Duck down and don’t let him see us.’ Corby said, ‘Duck down so they can’t see us - - so the truck driver can’t see us.’ So we *693 dropped down and the truck driver got out and went in the house and Dale was trying to get the girl, to take the girl home, and so the truck driver wouldn’t let him take her home. ’ ’

The boys then drove the car to the place where the girl lived. Shortly thereafter she arrived at her home, being driven by the truck driver. Zitek again tried to .persuade her to come with him, but without success. Defendant then drove the car back to Pollard’s place and again asked if they could stay all night with him. Pollard refused. At this point we quote the testimony of Pollard:

•• “So Corby said, ‘Then we will go down to the river and take a leak.’ So down to the river we went and so as soon as we got down there, Corby, he turned the lights out on the car and it was real dark aiid so as soon as I opened the door to get out, why Dale, he hit me on the back of the head with a quart of beer and I fell over and he stomped me in the stomach and so, in the meantime, Corby had got out on the other side too and he was some distance back of the car by that time. ’ ’

The defendant himself gave the following account of events at that place:

“And we parked there and Dale then asked him again if we could stay all night and Johnny said, ‘No, it was pretty late and better not.’ And I said, ‘ Well, we still had two quarts of beer then. — and I said, ‘We better go down to the river and finish drinking our beer so we won’t get caught uptown for drinking beer.’ and he said, ‘All right’ and Dale agreed to it and we drove down to the river and I parked there by Mosher Street and turned off the lights and got out of the car to relieve myself and I guess I got eight or ten feet from the car where there was some bushes ánd I heard some commotion *694 on the other side of the car and I turned around and started coming hack. When I got around the car, Dale was stepping over Johnny — Johnny was laying right straight from the car and he was stepping over and he kept on — well, at first he was walking and then he started running * * *”

Pollard testified that after he was knocked down he was unable to arise. The defendant and Zitek went off from the scene of the crime together, “walking and talking”. Pollard lay beside the car for some time and then the defendant came back and said: “Johnny, what’s the matter * * * are you hurt?” Pollard testified that, “he picked me up and put me in the car and in the meantime he was saying, ‘I will get the són-of-a-bitch — I will get him for you.’ ” The defendant’s testimony concerning this .circumstance closely resembles that of Pollard. The .defendant then drove back to Pollard’s home and took him up to the house, párked the car and “beat it”. After knocking Pollard down, with the defendant standing within eight or ten feet of the car, Zitek took Pollard’s;purse containing something more than $85, his watch and his knife. Pollard went to the hospital ..on Sunday, the 24th of August and was released on the succeeding Wednesday. He went to the scene of the crime and found his empty purse and his. Eagles pin lying in the grass. On Saturday, one week after the commission of the crime, the defendant came to see Pollard and said that he was “sorry it happened”.

Three witnesses, state police officer Morris, city police officer Upham. and county juvenile officer, Agnes Pitchford, all testified concerning statements made by the defendant and by Zitek, who were examined separately. The three witnesses were in substantial *695

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
205 P.2d 141, 185 Or. 689, 1949 Ore. LEXIS 139, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-downing-or-1949.