State v. Flory

276 P. 458, 40 Wyo. 184, 1929 Wyo. LEXIS 34
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedApril 3, 1929
Docket1538
StatusPublished
Cited by35 cases

This text of 276 P. 458 (State v. Flory) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming 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. Flory, 276 P. 458, 40 Wyo. 184, 1929 Wyo. LEXIS 34 (Wyo. 1929).

Opinion

Blume, Chief Justice.

The defendant was convicted of murder in the second degree for killing E. T. Ostrum on January 16, 1928, and he appeals.

The deceased, aged between 65 to 70 years, was the father of Daisy Flory, the wife of defendant, who is about 21 years of age, and who married defendant in 1923. The *192 mother and father of Daisy were, it seems, divorced, for a number of years prior to the homicide in question in this case. The father apparently was not well acquainted with his daughter and paid little attention to her, although he sent her some small presents when her two children, aged three years and one year, respectively, were born. At the time of the homicide and for some time prior thereto, the deceased lived on a farm in Campbell County, Wyoming, the defendant on a farm in Montana, the distance, by road, between the two places being about fifty miles. The deceased was engaged in farming and in performing common labor. The defendant was a “dry-farmer” in the summer and a trapper in the winter. Deceased wrote to his daughter in the summer of 1927, wanting to visit" her, and she and her husband invited him to come. He arrived on the day after Thanksgiving, during the absence of the defendant, who came home on November 30th. The visit between the deceased and defendant was pleasant, and it was agreed, in fact, upon suggestion of the deceased, that the latter might, somewhat later, move over to defendant’s place, build himself a house and in the meantime occupy the “bunkhouse” on defendant’s place. He was invited to continue his visit at that time until after Christmas, which he agreed to do. Defendant left home, to go trapping, about the middle of December, and returned, as was expected, on the afternoon of December 23rd. He claims that during this time the deceased made indecent proposals to Daisy Flory, defendant’s wife, and raped her and committed incest upon her on the morning of December 23. According to the testimony, defendant was not told thereof until later, although she immediately indicated to him that she did not want her father to stay longer and did not want him to move as had been planned. Deceased left on December 26, first to visit at another place and then to go home. On January 3rd, 1928, defendant had occasion to *193 go to Ostrum’s place to get some poison for coyotes and to tell Mm not to move. During tbis time the deceased mentioned to defendant that be bad discussed with Daisy tbe subject of not having any more children, and be gave defendant a package containing a silk sponge and three rubbers, used for prevention of conception, stating-that while at Sheridan a few days previously, he had bought nine of them. Defendant had never discussed the subject with his wife and when he arrived home and showed her the package, she was perturbed, exclaimed “0 God,” and from that time to the morning of January 15th, she gradually told him of the details of the. indecent advances and rape above mentioned, telling the final scenes on the morning of the date last mentioned, and that deceased had said: “Don’t be foolish 'and say anything about this.” The defendant thereupon took his gun, as he was accustomed to do when going on trips, with the intention, as he testified, of going to deceased’s home and getting an explanation of the latter’s conduct. He stopped overnight at the house of Mr. Hudsonpillar, and the next morning went to the house of deceased, arriving there about 11 o’clock in the forenoon, finding the deceased at home. The house is nearly 24 feet square, entered by a door in the south into a large room occupying the whole of the south 13 feet. The north side of the house is divided between a kitchen, about 9xlOr feet in area, in the northwest corner, and a store-room in the northeast corner, each being connected with a large room by a door. No one else was there, and the only living witness to the tragedy is the defendant himself. He testified at length and his testimony, condensed, is about as.follows:

“I took the gun along in because I knew he was stouter than I, and I knew he could handle me. I had no intentions when I went in of killing the man at all. He says ‘Hello’ to me, and I walked towards him, and I said ‘What made you rape Daisy. ’ And he came right straight *194 towards me. I looked at both bands, but be didn’t bave anything in them, and be says to me ‘Let’s talk it over,’ and I says to him, ‘Don’t come any closer,’ and be turned around and walked back, and I walked after him — to see what be was going to do, and when be got to the stove (in the northwest corner of the kitchen) he says ‘Let’s talk it over. ’ He was facing me in a stooped-over position and I says to him ‘Charley, do you know yon just about ruined my home?’ And he says ‘I Avill keep the girl,’ and when he said that, I says ‘You are a pretty son-of-a-bitch to keep your daughter.’ I was thinking of some of the things he had done, and was pretty nervous, and that man he just sprang after me, and when he did I jerked the rifle back, and just then I heard the report of the gun, and I saw him fall, and I turned around and went out. At no time did he deny he didn’t rape his daughter. When I jerked the rifle back, I have no recollection of pulling the trigger with my finger. I didn’t intend to shoot him when I jerked the rifle back, and it surprised me, and I turned around and went out. I had fear when he came at me. He had the meanest look in his face of any man I ever saw, and I knew he could handle me, if he got hold of me. I was giddy when I went out. ’ ’

On cross-examination he testified, among other things:

“I was mad on my way over there and when I got there, but not any madder than any one else under the circumstances. I didn’t tell Hudsonpillar I was going to Os-trum’s. I didn’t want to talk to him about it. I can’t say that I was mad when I got to Hudsonpillar’s. The gun was cocked when I took it out of the scabbard; I didn’t examine it, but usually carry it with the safety on. I didn’t rap when I went in. As I was opening the door, on the south, he showed up in the kitchen. I went right in; had the gun in the right hand. I walked towards the deceased; deceased was in the kitchen; I walked close *195 to the kitchen door, keeping my eyes on deceased; I pointed the gun at him, when he came toward me the first time, and shouted at him ‘Don’t come any closer,’ and he went back into the kitchen. I went next to the door. He had nothing in his hands, but when he sprang for me, I don’t think so. I saw nothing in them. When he said ‘I can keep the girl’ it made me mad. I didn’t take my eyes off Ostrum. I must have taken the safety off the gun when he rushed at me the first time. It looked like to me he was rushing for the rifle, and when he rushed towards me, I jerked the rifle, and that was when the shot was fired. I didn’t intend to shoot him. The gun went off accidentally. I didn’t intend to shoot him, and it got me so I couldn’t stay there and look at him,.1 was intending to get away from him as he came toward me. I jerked the gun back and went backwards, and the gun went off. I was standing right in the door (leading to the kitchen). I knew he was dead the way he fell. I later gave myself up at Sheridan. ’ ’

On re-examination he testified that he wept twice while going to Ostrum’s.

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Bluebook (online)
276 P. 458, 40 Wyo. 184, 1929 Wyo. LEXIS 34, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-flory-wyo-1929.