State v. Frank

97 P.2d 410, 60 Idaho 774, 1939 Ida. LEXIS 89
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 6, 1939
DocketNo. 6709.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 97 P.2d 410 (State v. Frank) 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. Frank, 97 P.2d 410, 60 Idaho 774, 1939 Ida. LEXIS 89 (Idaho 1939).

Opinions

Appellant, Jones Frank, was charged with and found guilty of murder in the first degree and sentenced to life imprisonment in the Idaho State Penitentiary. This appeal was taken from the Judgment of conviction.

The evidence discloses that deceased, an Indian woman, married to appellant for about one year, and appellant were at their ranch home in an intoxicated condition at 8 o'clock A. M. March 21, 1938, at which time Elsie Rankin, a married daughter of appellant, and her husband, stopped at the Frank home. At this time Mary Frances, the deceased, had a cut on her eyebrow which was bleeding. Elsie Rankin and her husband went to Alpowa fishing and returned to the Frank home just before noon to secure a fish net from the woodshed. At this time appellant was standing on the back porch and was so "drunk" he could not go down the steps, and the deceased was sitting in the kitchen, dressed, "drunker" than before, but her physical condition was otherwise unchanged, except that the cut had stopped bleeding. After procuring the net Elsie Rankin and her husband went to Webb and left there about a quarter of four, picked up Alfred Paul at Lapwai, and the girls Catherine Frances and Rachel Frank, about one-fourth mile below the Frank home and they all went fishing. At this time, about 4 o'clock, they did not *Page 777 stop at the Frank house, saw neither Mary Frances or Jones Frank and observed no automobiles or persons around the Frank home. The party returned from fishing to the Frank home a little after eight in the evening and found the house dark and the doors locked. Elsie Rankin with her key unlocked the door and went in and lighting matches found appellant lying on the dining room floor, fully dressed and asleep, saw blood on the floor and found Mary Frances in a bedroom lying on her back on the floor, nude. Elsie Rankin immediately called Catherine Frances and the two entered the house and upon examination found that Mary Frances was dead. Without awakening appellant they left the house, locked the door and informed the deputy sheriff Joe Yeager, who returned to the house with them. Appellant was not then in the dining room, but upon opening the bedroom door the body of Mary Frances Frank was found on the floor in the same position as formerly except that she had been covered with a quilt and appellant was found in bed covered with bed clothing. The Deputy Sheriff Yeager then made appellant get up and put on his shoes and appellant stated he did not know what the trouble was and that his wife had fallen out of bed and hurt herself. Appellant was taken to Lewiston by Yeager and Elsie Rankin was left to see that no one entered the house. Yeager returned with the sheriff and they, together with Elsie Rankin, entered and found the body of deceased in the same position in which it was first discovered. Deceased's hair had been cut off and her body was a mass of wounds, bruises and lacerations. The head showed softness of scalp and the head and face were swollen and bruised in their entirety. Lacerations at several points in the frontal portion of the head and face exposed the bone. The forearms and hands were almost a solid mass of bruises and lacerations. The shoulders, neck, torso, chest, arms, knees, ankles, thighs and sides were covered with bruises. On the back of each hand were puncture wounds, the right hand showing a bone fracture. From the condition of the body it appeared that a variety of forces had been applied. The cause of death was traumatic shock. A pair of scissors was found lying on the floor fifteen or sixteen inches from the *Page 778 body toward the dining room and an eight inch pointed file was found on the dining room table with the sharp end covered with one and one-half to two inches of blood and what appeared to be a little flesh. A tom-tom stick was found in the dining room, shattered and with blood and hair upon it. Ladies clothing was scattered about the house, rumpled and torn. Blood was found all around on the floor of the dining room, on the buffet, walls and door, and the blood in the dining room appeared to have had a body dragged through it across the floor toward the bedroom.

The testimony of appellant was to the effect he was at home with deceased all during the day of March 21, 1939, and that both were drinking. He stated that on the morning of March 21st his wife was drunk and had fallen against the stove cutting her lips and eye. He distinctly remembered the occurrences of the day that his daughter and her husband came early in the morning and later in the afternoon, the last time to get a fish net. He stated that during the afternoon he and his wife were on the porch and that he told deceased he was going in and take a good rest, that he "passed out" on the porch and when he awoke it was dark, that he groped for the door; found it closed and crawled in because he could not stand; that he then lay down on the floor in the dining room; that he did not see Elsie or Catherine come in and that when he awoke and walked into his room he found his wife lying on the floor with no dress on and everything scattered; that he covered his wife with a quilt and went to bed; that later he got up and felt his wife, found she was dead and went back to bed. He stated that when he came in from the porch there was blood all over the dining room floor as he crawled into the house. While appellant denied that he ever struck his wife and denied that his hands were swollen the next day or when arrested, there is evidence that both appellant's hands were swollen so badly on the 22d of March that he could not close either of them and that his knuckles were skinned. There is also evidence that on March 4th appellant chased Lizzie Jabeth and her husband from his house, locked the door, and as the Jabeths were leaving they heard Mary Frances scream for help and heard appellant say if he did not kill her then he *Page 779 was going to kill her some of these days. The Deputy Sheriff Yeager was called on the 4th of March and returned to the Frank home with the Jabeths and found Mary Frances all bloody with no clothes on and her teeth knocked out and no one was at the house except appellant and Mary Frances. There is testimony of various other members of the family that Mary Frances was seen on different occasions when she had been beaten up and that she had left her home on several occasions to avoid trouble with her husband. There is evidence of the daughter Catherine Frances who testified that during the night of March 20th she heard Mary Frances say or scream in the bedroom: "Don't do that. Leave me alone." "Stop beating me." "Don't hit me. You are my husband." And there is evidence that on the morning following Mary Frances' lips were swollen, that she was bleeding from a cut over the eye and had blood in her hair and that at this time appellant had blood on his sweat shirt.

Assignments of error one to twelve deal with evidence, admitted over appellant's objection, relating to prior threats of appellant against his wife and prior ill treatment of her. In point of time the threats and ill treatment related by the several witnesses occurred as follows: during the winter immediately previous to March 21st; six weeks before March 21st; and, particularly on March 4th. The evidence was to the effect that appellant and deceased on these occasions had been drunk and deceased had suffered bruises and blackened eyes from appellant's treatment of her.

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Bluebook (online)
97 P.2d 410, 60 Idaho 774, 1939 Ida. LEXIS 89, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-frank-idaho-1939.