State v. Dunkley

39 P.2d 1097, 85 Utah 546, 1935 Utah LEXIS 95
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 7, 1935
DocketNo. 5535.
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 39 P.2d 1097 (State v. Dunkley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah 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. Dunkley, 39 P.2d 1097, 85 Utah 546, 1935 Utah LEXIS 95 (Utah 1935).

Opinions

STRAUP, Chief Justice.

Fred Nobel Endel, alias Henry Regan, and Sheril Dunk-ley by information were jointly charged with first degree murder, the killing of Freda Gibson, March 27, 1933, in Salt Lake City, by striking and beating her with a blunt instrument and choking and strangling her, thereby inflicting on her mortal wounds and injuries then and there causing her death. Endel and Dunkley were represented by different counsel. When arraigned, both were given time to plead. May 13,1933, both were brought forward to enter their plea. Dunkley entered his plea of not guilty and demanded a separate trial, which was granted. Trial of his case was set for May 29. Endel at his request was given further time to plead. He entered his plea of not guilty on May 17 and his case set also for May 29. The case against Dunkley was brought on for trial June 5. No further order was made or time fixed for the trial of Endel. The case thus proceeded alone against Dunkley. It was tried before the court and a jury. Endel, with his consent and with the consent of his counsel, was called as a witness on behalf of the state. During the trial, his counsel, at least a portion of the time, sat with counsel for the prosecution and collaborated with them. A. verdict of guilty of murder in the second degree was rendered against Dunkley June 14. On June 17 he filed a motion in arrest of judgment and a motion for a new trial. On the same day the court sentenced Dunkley to imprison *549 ment in the state prison for a term of forty years and ordered that the sentence be stayed pending the final determination of the motions. On June 24, Dunkley’s motion for a new trial came on regularly to be heard, but the court on his own motion continued the hearing until June 27. On June 24, the same day Dunkley’s motion for a new trial was to be heard, on motion of the district attorney, the charge of first degree murder against Endel was reduced to second degree to which Endel entered a plea of guilty, and on the court’s own motion the time to pronounce sentence was continued until June 28. On June 26 the court, on his own motion, further continued the hearing on Dunkley’s motions for arrest of judgment and for a new trial, and the time to pronounce judgment on Endel until July 1. On July 1 the court heard the arguments on Dunkley’s motions and took the same under advisement, and on that day sentenced Endel to imprisonment in the state prison for a term of forty years. On July 29, and on good cause made to appear, Dunk-ley was permitted to file an affidavit of Endel and affidavits of others in support of his motion for a new trial. On August 2,1933, the Dunkley motions were overruled and a commitment issued in accordance with the judgment theretofore pronounced and entered against him on June 17. Dunkley in due time prosecuted an appeal from the judgment and caused a transcript of the record consisting of the judgment roll and bill of exceptions to be transmitted to this court.

There are numerous assignments of error, twenty-five or more heads and about that many more subheads. To review and pass upon all of them would require a consideration of most of the criminal code of procedure. However, the principal assignments are: (1) Insufficiency of the evidence to connect Dunkley with the commission of the charged offense. (2) Permitting the state “to refresh the memory and recollection” of Endel, a self-confessed and conceded accomplice called as a witness by the state, by calling his attention to statements made by him to police of *550 ficers, the assistant district attorney, and reading to him parts of a confession of guilt made by him to police officers, in which statement and confession he in some particulars implicated Dunkley. (3) Unduly restricting the cross-examination of Endel by counsel for Dunkley. (4) Admittting in evidence a so-called confession of Dunkley wihout sufficient showing that it was made voluntarily. (5) Failure of the court to submit to the jury the evidence adduced and heard before the court in the absence of the jury bearing on the question of voluntariness of the confession. (6) Alleged errors of the charge to the jury and refusing requests to charge. (7) Overruling appellant’s motion for a new trial.

The principal question as to insufficiency of the evidence is that there was not sufficient evidence independently of the testimony of Endel, the accomplice, to connect the defendant with the commission of the offense. Mrs. Freda Gibson was about 75 years of age. She for some time lived alone in the southwest part of Salt Lake City on or near West Temple and between 7th and 8th South streets. She there owned several houses, living in one of them and leasing the other, a double house, to tenants. She was rather a recluse, living by herself quite economically and modestly without much of any company, and frequently was seen walking out about the neighborhood and up town sometimes late in the evening, always peaceful and attending to her own affairs and not disturbing or molesting any one. On the early morning of March 28, 1933 (at about 12 :25 or 12:30 a. m.), a fire was discovered in the house occupied by the deceased. The fire department in response to an alarm promptly responded and extinguished the fire. The firemen testified that the doors and windows of the house were closed and when they entered they found a smould-ering fire in the front room and in the kitchen of the house, principally behind doors, among rags, paper and other material scattered about, and several chairs partly burned. The dead body of Mrs. Gibson was found lying on the floor *551 of the kitchen with a plush black coat on partly on fire about the left shoulder and a galosh on her left foot. She also had on an old-fashioned pair of men’s trousers, one leg of which was tucked in the galosh or a high topped buckle overshoe, the other leg tucked in a high topped laced shoe, her hat lying nearby on the floor. As described, she apparently was dressed as though she had just got into the house from outdoors, when she was assaulted and killed before she had taken off her coat or other apparel. Her body, by firemen and policemen, was removed from the kitchen and taken outside and the fire on her coat and galosh extinguished. Her body was still partly warm with body heat, her arms and legs limp, and when her body was lifted, it “folded up like a jackknife.” One of the witnesses who handled and examined the body as it was carried out of the house testified that neither the arms, hands, nor legs of the deceased were tied or bound; that there was no tape, bandages, or cloths about the head or face or body of the deceased; that her arms and legs were untied and hanging free and limp. No witness testified to the contrary. There were contusions, bruises, lacerations, and hemorrhages about the head and face, the left jaw fractured, bruises on the lips, contusions on the chest, two ribs broken, inside hemorrhages about the chest and hemorrhages below the frontal portion of the brain, contusions and marks about the throat having the appearance of choking or strangulation, burns on the left thigh, on the left side of the face, and on the left hand, but the burns, as explained by the physicians, were produced after death. The physicians testified that the injuries as described by them were inflicted at about the same time by some blunt instrument and that they were sufficient to cause almost immediate death or within fifteen or twenty minutes after the injuries were inflicted.

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Bluebook (online)
39 P.2d 1097, 85 Utah 546, 1935 Utah LEXIS 95, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-dunkley-utah-1935.