State v. Gabaldon

96 P.2d 293, 43 N.M. 525
CourtNew Mexico Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 21, 1939
DocketNo. 4464.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 96 P.2d 293 (State v. Gabaldon) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico 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. Gabaldon, 96 P.2d 293, 43 N.M. 525 (N.M. 1939).

Opinion

BRICE, Justice.

The appellant, with Vidal Baca, was tried for the murder of Jose Gurule. Baca was acquitted and appellant convicted of the crime of manslaughter and sentenced to serve a term in the State penitentiary.

It is contended that the evidence does not legally establish that deceased was killed by appellant. This assignment calls for a review of the testimony.

We have held in numerous cases, both civil and criminal, that this court will review the testimony only to determine whether a finding, verdict, judgment, or decree is supported by substantial evidence; and if a search of the record discloses such support, we will not disturb the result.

The following facts are practically undisputed :

The deceased Jose Gurule and his brother Herminio Gurule, attended a dance at a house in or near the town of Belen, in Valencia County, New Mexico, on the night of the 11th of June, 1938. They left the dance about 1:30 o’clock in the morning of the 12th of June, and went upon the streets of the town of Belen. They had both been drinking, but were not intoxicated. They were seen by Vidal Baca, the town marshal, who ordered them to go home. This occurred a second time, resulting in an altercation. Baca fired his pistol in the air twice, left in his car and enlisted the appellant Gabaldon, a night watchman, Augustin Sedillo, and Juan Garcia, each a deputy sheriff, to aid in the arrest of the Gurule brothers, for whom they began a search. Sedillo and Garcia left the car first, to search behind a store, and Baca and the appellant drove about a hundred yards further, where they found the deceased and his brother sitting on the sidewalk. They got out of the automobile, and Baca, with a gun in his hand, notified them that they were under arrest. A fight ensued in which Baca struck Herminio on the head with his gun several times, while the appellant attempted to hold the deceased, who escaped and ran across the street. Baca had some difficulty in handling Herminio at first, and shot his gun in the air to attract the other officers. Following this gun shot, two other shots were fired south from the scene of the affray; at what distance the witnesses were unable to state. After Herminio was beaten until he was unconscious, the appellant and Baca put him in the car and started with him to the city jail. In the meantime, Sedillo and Garcia, having heard the shots, came from the north and met appellant and Baca, and the four took Herminio to the jail, which is in the city hall. Appellant left immediately but soon returned in his automobile and stated to Sedillo and Garcia that he had found the deceased in an alley, wounded. The two deputies went with appellant to the side of the house of Mrs. Adelaida Baca, where they found the deceased, suffering from a gun shot wound and paralyzed from the waist down. The next day there was found in Mrs. Baca’s back yard, about 45 feet from where the deceased’s body was lying, a steel jacketed 45-caliber bullet, and, some 20 feet northwest of the body of the deceased, an empty 45-caliber shell. The wound was made by the bullet found, or one like it.

The clothing and flesh around the wound on deceased’s body was powder burned, indicating that his slayer was within a very few feet of him when he was shot in the back. The bullet struck and shattered the fifth dorsal vertebra, lacerated the spinal cord, ranged upward and came out in the front of his neck.

The distance from the place of the affray to the corner of Mrs. Baca’s house is 140 feet, and from said corner down an alley running at a right angle with the street, to the body of the deceased, is about 40 feet; a total of 180 feet.

The deceased stated that Baca shot him, but later when his mind apparently had cleared, he stated he did not know who shot him. Herminio could give no information because he had been beaten into insensibility by Baca.

The deceased was not shot by either Garcia or Sedillo, for they were still north of the place of the affray after the shots had been fired, and the shooting occurred in an alley south of that place.

There is no evidence to indicate any other person was near the place, or that another had the opportunity to shoot the deceased, or had cause to do so. We are satisfied that' either the appellant or Baca shot him. The interests of the respective defendants, therefore, sharply conflicted.

The appellant told Sedillo and Garcia at the time he took them to the deceased in the alley, that he believed Baca had shot him. Later on the same day he signed a statement to the effect that Baca shot in the air during the scuffle and the deceased got loose from him and ran past the front of the car and, “I gr-abbed Herminio Gurule. Herminio and I then fell on the ground. I then saw Jose Gurule run across the street. Vidal Baca went towards the same direction after Jose Gurule and then I heard two shots. Herminio and I were scuffling on the ground.” The only reasonable inference that could be drawn from this statement, if true, is that Baca shot the deceased.

At the trial of the case the defendants were not separately defended. All witnesses introduced were in the behalf of both. The appellant repudiated his statements that pointed to Baca as the one who killed the deceased. He stated:

“Vidal Baca, the marshal, fired up in the air, then Jose Gurule ran towards the south and turned behind the car. I jumped and grabbed Herminio, took him away from Viclal. Then Vidal Baca directed himself to see where the other boy had run away. He crossed the highway,
“Q. Who crossed the highway? A. Jose Gurule, then Vidal Baca he was down on the ground with Herminio. I heard two more shots, then Vidal Baca helped me pick him up.
“Q. Then you told me (the district attorney) and in that statement you state, that you saw Vidal Baca follow Jose Gurule across the street, didn’t you? A. Not that much.
“Q. Just how much did you say? A. Maybe one or two feet from me, that’s all.
“Q. You also told me in my office, Mr. Galbadon, that Vidal Baca was the man who shot Jose Gurule, didn’t you? A. No, Sir.
“Q. What did you tell me? A. I didn’t know who shot him.”
Appellant’s statement regarding Baca was read to him and the following occurred:
“Q. Is that what happened? A. Not all that.
“Q. You signed this statement, didn’t you? A. Yes.
“Q. Well, what happened, tell us, since you have changed your story? A. Vidal Baca didn’t run after him, only .just got away about two feet from me because at the same time, he helped me 'pick Herminio up from the ground.
“Q. And Vidal Baca only shot once into the air, is that right? A. Once in the air that I saw.
“Q. He wasn’t the one who took the other two shots? A. I don’t know, he could have been and he could have not been.”

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Bluebook (online)
96 P.2d 293, 43 N.M. 525, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-gabaldon-nm-1939.