State v. Gallagher

509 P.2d 852, 162 Mont. 155, 1973 Mont. LEXIS 513
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedMay 1, 1973
Docket12341
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 509 P.2d 852 (State v. Gallagher) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana 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. Gallagher, 509 P.2d 852, 162 Mont. 155, 1973 Mont. LEXIS 513 (Mo. 1973).

Opinion

MR. JUSTICE JOHN C. HARRISON

delivered the Opinion of the Court.

This is an appeal from a judgment of conviction of murder in the first degree entered on a jury verdict in the thirteenth judicial district, county of Yellowstone. After denial of his motion for a new trial, defendant appealed.

Defendant Jerry Gallagher raises four issues on appeal:

1. Defendant is entitled to a new trial insofar as his defense counsel had previously prosecuted him.

2. The trial court erred in failing to grant defendant’s motion for new trial based upon newly discovered evidence.

3.. The trial court erred in failing to grant defendant’s *157 ■motion to suppress certain evidence obtained in violation of "his Fourth Amendment rights.

4. The trial court erred in admitting certain evidence obtained in a search incident to defendant’s arrest where the •arrest warrant was predicated upon an insufficient showing •.of probable cause.

On September 7, 1971, a body was discovered on “Hardin Hill” on U.S. Highway 87 near Billings, Montana. The body was identified as that of one Eldon Egan. The body was •observed by tourists, who had stopped at a vista point to •observe the Yellowstone Valley, some 75 to 100 feet below the vista point on a steep incline beyond a barbed wire fence which ran parallel to the highway. It was later observed 'the fence had been cut at a point not far from the body. The tourists stopped a Montana Highway Patrolman, Leo Burnett, ■•and showed him the body. He immediately notified the sheriff who took a team of deputies and detectives to the scene, ■■arriving about 1:20 p.m.

A careful combing of the area revealed a fingernail clipper, two shell casings and one spent bullet. At the vista pulloff, ■above the body, there was a trash can in which was found a paper bag containing a blood stained pillowcase, a block of wood, and a comb. A second bag contained a broken Vodka bottle.

Dr. Gorden L. Cox, a Billings pathologist, examined the body. His examination revealed Egan had been severely beaten ■and shot twice in the head. One of the shots had been fired ■through the roof of the mouth. Either of the bullet wounds would have produced instant death. A .32 caliber slug was found in the skull and the expended slug found near the body was a .32 caliber.

Deputies of the sheriff’s office and Billings police officers immediately began investigations to ascertain Egan’s activities in the community. Much of the investigation concerned Billings southside bars and their clientele.

*158 Testimony at trial revealed that defendant and one John Cnrry, who was also charged and later acquitted of the-murder, were together in the Montana Bar in the early hours', of September 7, 1971. Egan had also been in the bar and testimony indicated that he was carrying a .32 caliber revolver.. There was testimony that Curry made the statement to someone at the bar when Egan came into the bar “not to move, you might get into the cross fire”. This person, James Lee Marvidikis, was not available for trial but later in a deposition taken in Billings, March 16, 1972, and introduceed at the time' of the motion for a new trial, testified Curry had a gun, at one time had it at least partially out from under his belt and that Curry told Marvidikis, “There is going to be a beef. * * * Hold still, don’t move, you might get cross-fired.”1

Investigation revealed and testimony was later given, that defendant and Egan had a few nights before been involved’, in a “beef” at the Empire Bar and that Egan, who came out the loser, had threatened to “get” defendant. Testimony revealed both men had lived with a woman named Ida May Prance Egan, also known as Smoky Walker, and that the altercation had developed because Egan at the time was out of favor and defendant was being favored.

The investigation narrowed down to focus upon the whereabouts and activities of Curry and defendant. At about 9 :00! p.m. on the evening of September 8, the day after the discovery of Egan’s body, the sheriff received a call from a Mrs. Ruth Parker, complaining that a prowler was in or had been in her home. Knowing that defendant had been living there, the sheriff and two deputies went to her home and upon arriving there were requested by Mrs. Parker to search the house, including the basement. While in the basement, accompanied by Mrs. Parker, the sheriff observed what appeared to be a blood stained shirt and with Mrs. Parker’s permission took the shirt, which had a tear on the right side of the rear of the shirt. He also took a pair of trousers *159 and a pair of stockings that appeared to be blood stained. At trial, only the shirt had identifiable blood stains and the blood was type A. Both defendant and Egan had type A blood.

Concerning the blood stained pillowcase found in the trash can near where the body was found, an extensive investigation traced it to the home of one Lamona Northey in Butte, Montana. Miss Northey, aged 16, is the daughter of one Neddie St. Amant of Butte, a friend of John Curry. Miss Northey testified that John Curry came to her home on the evening of August 29, 1971; that he slept on the couch; that she gave him a pillow covered by the pillowcase found in the trash can; that the next day Curry took the pillow out to his car; and, that she had not seen it again until it was shown to her by investigating officers at Butte on November 30, 1971. She identified the pillowcase by the embroidery on it and indicated a particular interest in it because it had been made by her grandmother and that she had intended to embroider over it due to the fact some of the colors had faded.

Defendant and Curry were arrested one week after Egan’s •death in a remote cow camp in Wyoming. The car they were driving, which belonged to Curry’s son, was impounded and searched under a warrant issued by a Wyoming magistrate. Testimony of witnesses at trial established that Curry and defendant had washed the car, inside and out, while at the cow camp. They were observed washing the mats in a horse tank and hanging them to dry on a fence. Blood stains were found on the floor mats, and on a piece of cardboard taken from the trunk of the car, but the stains were not in sufficient amounts to establish whether they were human blood stains or to be typed. During the search by Sheriff Hladky of Wyoming the following items were taken from the car, processed and sent to the FBI and later introduced into evidence: a pair of gloves, a small suitcase containing clothes, a motel *160 key, front floor mats, and a piece of cardboard from the trunk of the car.

Defendant and Curry were charged with the death of Egan. Bail was set at $25,000 but later revoked on motion by the-county attorney. Private counsel appeared for both defendants and represented them until December 20, 1971, when an affidavit was filed by defense counsel setting forth that, he -could not represent either defendant to the possible prejudice of the other. The withdrawal was authorized and defendant requested appointment of counsel alleging he was without funds to hire counsel. It is noted that after being-ably defended by the public defender he found funds on appeal to hire private counsel.

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Bluebook (online)
509 P.2d 852, 162 Mont. 155, 1973 Mont. LEXIS 513, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-gallagher-mont-1973.