State v. Gadbois

56 N.W. 272, 89 Iowa 25
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedOctober 5, 1893
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 56 N.W. 272 (State v. Gadbois) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Gadbois, 56 N.W. 272, 89 Iowa 25 (iowa 1893).

Opinion

Robinson, C. J.

During the night of the twenty-ninth day of November, 1892, the store of W. H. Burrows & Company, in Belle Plaine, was broken into, and merchandise amounting in value to nearly three [27]*27hundred dollars was stolen from it. On the third day of the next month, the merchandise so taken was found packed in satchels and a box under the hay in certain hay barracks in the town of Watkins, about fifteen miles east of Belle Plaine. During the night of that day, the defendant William B. Q-adbois was seen to enter the barracks, and was arrested soon after he left them, and his codefendant, L. P. Widner, was arrested during the same night, within a short distance of the town.

circumstantial ' ‘ I. The appellants contend that the evidence was not sufficient to authorize a conviction of either of them. They were not seen to commit the ortense oí mach they are charged, none of the stolen property was found in their possession or under their control, and they have not admitted their guilt. To sustain their conviction the state relies wholly upon circumstantial evidence, which shows substantially the following: At the time of the burglary, Qadbois resided in Cedar Rapids, thirty-five miles east of Belle Plaine; and Widner at Marion, a few miles further away. Cedar Rapids, Belle Plaine, and Watkins are on the main line of the Chicago and Northwestern Railway, and trains pass each way through them during the nighttime. A witness testified that he saw the defendants in Belle Plaine at 3 o’clock in the afternoon of the day which preceded the burglary, near the store which was broken into; and another, who was a car repairer, states that he saw them in the railway yards about 9 o’clock in the evening, that he talked with them, and that they asked about the trains going out. He also stated that he saw them in a store in the town an hour or two earlier. A witness testified that at about 7:30 o’clock in the morning of November 30, 1892, he saw through a church window in Watkins, two men moving about. He started for the church, but before he [28]*28arrived two men left it and went away. They resembled the defendants, and he thinks, although he is not positive, that they were the defendants. Several witnesses testify that, between 8 and 9 o’clock that morning, the defendants took breakfast at the house of Joseph Brecht, two and one half miles southeast of Watkins. They wore their hats pulled down over their foreheads while eating, and remained but a few minutes. An hour or two later they were seen about five miles southeast of Watkins. In the evening of December third, soon after the 10 o’clock train came in from the east, Gadbois was seen, by persons watching, to come around a corner about twenty-five yards north .of the hay barracks. He w;alked towards the barracks, looked around, and then walked towards a church, which was about fifty yards in a northeasterly direction from the barracks. He walked about thirty yards, and looked west toward the schoolhouse; then walked back of the barracks, and whistled twice; then walked towards the church again, looked around, and came back, went into the barracks, and remained but a short time; then came out and walked rapidly northward to the corner; then turned west towards the school house, which was about two and one half blocks west, and a little north of the barracks. When he turned west, the watchers, among whom was the sheriff, followed him. The sheriff called to him to “halt,” when he started to run. The sheriff fired a shot at him, and, after running about a block, he stopped, and was arrested. He was taken to a house, and asked where his partner was, and said he had no partner. He was then asked what the whistling was for, and answered, “I have nothing to say.” He after-wards said, speaking of himself, that his name was Harry Dustan, and that he lived in Chicago. At a little after 10 o’clock, a man wearing a stiff hat and a light overcoat was seen drivings black horse westward, [29]*29about half a mile north of the town. Soon after that time a man wearing a light overcoat was seen to walk eastward towards the church, along a street which led from the direction of the schoolhouse, and in a very short time he was seen to go westward towards the school house. Being informed, that a man had been seen going toward the barracks, the sheriff and a companion followed him, going north from the school house. After driving about a half mile they overtook the defendant Widner, who was driving a black horse attached to a roadwagon, and was wearing a stiff hat and light overcoat like that worn by the man who had been seen going westward north of Watkins, and eastward from the schoolhouse and- then westward in Watkins. He was ordered several times to stop, but refused to do so until a gun was aimed at him. He stated that he had been visiting' relatives at Millers-burg, and was going to Marion. 'Millersburg is about thirty miles south of Watkins, and Marion is about the same distance in a northeasterly direction. The next morning he said he came from the south; that he had tied his horse by a schoolhouse or church, and had gone up town for feed for him, but having no money, and not wishing to beg, he went back. He and Gadbois, when arrested, said they had never seen each other before. The evidence showed that they had been seen together repeatedly before the robbery. Widner hired the horse and wagon he was driving, when arrested, in Marion, at abput 1 or 2 o’clock in the afternoon of December 3, telling the owner at the time that he wished' to go to Linn Grove, a place about five miles away.

Much testimony was given in behalf of the defendants, which tended strongly to show that Gadbois was in Cedar Rapids and Widner in Marion when the robbery was committed; and the testimony of the witnesses who claim to have seen the defendants in Belle [30]*30Plaine the day before and evening of the robbery is contradicted. Bnt several witnesses who testified to the presence of the defendants at their homes at about the time the burglary was committed were impeached, and the testimony of others is in some respects improbable. The numerous witnesses who testified to having seen the defendants near Watkins the morning following the burglary, when their witnesses say they were, in Linn county were wholly disinterested, and it is not probable that all of them were mistaken. They identified the defendants by their faces, their general appearance, their dress, and by certain peculiarities specified. If their testimony is true, that of several of the witnesses for the defendants was necessarily false. If the defendants were in and near Watkins during the morning following the burglary, and whether they were or not was a question for the jury to determine, then we are satisfied that the defendants are guilty of the offense charged. And even if they were not there at that time, their actions and statements immediately preceding and following their arrest can not .be explained on any other reasonable hypothesis than that they were acting in concert, and had a criminal connection with the burglary, if they were not the sole perpetrators of it. We conclude that the evidence to sustain a conviction is sufficient.

2.__. c0mpiicantsf evi-end‘ dance. II. The appellants complain of the ruling of the court in permitting the state to prove that the defendants had been seen together in several different places in Iowa during a period 0f nearly two years before the burglary was committed. There was no error in those rulings. The defendants had denied that they ever met. before their arrest, and the state claimed that they were concerned jointly in the burglary.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

State v. Anderson
159 N.W.2d 809 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1968)
State v. Nelson
153 N.W.2d 711 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1967)
State v. Collins
69 N.W.2d 31 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1955)
State v. Schenk
18 N.W.2d 169 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1945)
State v. Weaver
182 Iowa 921 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1918)
State v. Caine
111 N.W. 443 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1907)
Potter v. Sims
111 N.W. 29 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1907)
State v. Arthur
109 N.W. 1083 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1906)
State v. Thomas
109 N.W. 900 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1906)
State v. Greenland
100 N.W. 341 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1904)
State v. Roscum
93 N.W. 295 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1903)
State v. Beebe
88 N.W. 358 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1901)
State v. Kouhns
73 N.W. 353 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1897)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
56 N.W. 272, 89 Iowa 25, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-gadbois-iowa-1893.