State v. Gallehugh

94 N.W. 723, 89 Minn. 212, 1903 Minn. LEXIS 489
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedMay 8, 1903
DocketNos. 13,314—(8)
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 94 N.W. 723 (State v. Gallehugh) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Gallehugh, 94 N.W. 723, 89 Minn. 212, 1903 Minn. LEXIS 489 (Mich. 1903).

Opinion

LOVELY, J.

Defendant was prosecuted upon an indictment charging murder in the first degree, for having feloniously killed one Charles Collins by shooting him with a revolver in the city of Minneapolis on March 7, 1902. At the trial the homicidal act was admitted, but excused on the claim that the killing was in self-defense. After submission of the cause to the jury upon instructions defining the degrees of homicide, defendant was convicted of murder in the second degree, and sentenced to imprisonment for life. Upon a settled case containing the entire evidence, a motion for a new trial was made, based upon alleged errors of the court in the exclusion of testimony, and upon affidavits to show that one of the jurors was disqualified to sit in the case. The motion was denied, and defendant appeals.

[214]*214Collins, the victim of the homicide, was the colored chef of the San Angelo Hotel, in Minneapolis, and was shot and killed by defendant while engaged in serving supper in the kitchen of that building. Defendant, a white man twenty-five years of age, not connected with the hotel, was at the time paying a visit to his wife, who was employed as a domestic therein. The circumstances attending the homicide were witnessed by three female employees of the hotel, who were present in the kitchen at .the time, and were examined as witnesses for the state. One of them (Martha Olson) stated: That she went into the kitchen with a tray of dishes about seven o’clock in the evening. That defendant was there, seated, talking privately with his wife. Collins was standing a few feet from defendant, on the other side of an intervening table, at the range, getting an order ready. That his back was toward the defendant, when the latter suddenly arose, left his wife, stepped to the table, and said to Collins, “Come here.” The chef- turned, and in reply said, “Why, what do you want?” Defendant then pulled a revolver from his right hip pocket and said, “Take your place.” Mrs. Gallehugh (defendant’s wife) then rushed forward, threw her arms around her husband, and said, “Don’t! Don’t!” Collins in the meantime advanced to defendant, who within four or five seconds fired. Collins received the shot, and instantly fell to the floor. Defendant then stooped over the fallen man and shot him the second time where he lay. The witness then left the room. As she did so she saw defendant run out of the kitchen without his hat, which had fallen from his hand. She further stated that she distinctly saw the hands and actions of both parties during the whole transaction; that at no time was Collins armed with any weapon; that defendant had the revolver in his hand before he made the demands upon his victim to “come here” and “take your place.” The testimony of this witness was corroborated in every material respect by two other domestics who were in the kitchen, each stating positively that Collins was unarmed, and did not have a knife in his hand.

The defendant and his wife testified that the deceased had a knife in his hand, which fell upon the floor as he dropped. There is no intimation by any one else, including others who came into [215]*215the room soon afterwards, that any knife was found upon the floor, while one of them positively denied that any such weapon was there. The narrative of previous events upon which defendant relied in justification of his conduct was given at the trial by himself and his wife, in which it was stated substantially by each: That, on the day previous to the shooting, Mrs. Gallehugh was assaulted in the laundry and insulted by Collins. That on the day after this assault, during the afternoon, defendant called upon his wife, and stayed with her a short time in the quarters occupied by the female help. At this time she did not inform him of the occurrence in the laundry, but did tell him that a previous indecent proposition had been made to her by Collins. That in the presence of some of the female employees a statement was made that colored male sevants of the hotel had chased some of the white girls who worked there, which led the defendant to make remarks in connection therewith, but he left his wife after a visit of some ten minutes, and returned about seven o’clock in the evening to bid her good-by, as he was going to Chicago. He then went into the kitchen, where his wife, the chef, and several girls were at work, engaged in serving supper for the guests of the hotel. Mrs. Gallehugh said to her husband, shortly after he came in, that she did not want to work at the place any longer, and would tell him the reason why as soon as she could. That within fifteen minutes afterwards, and while defendant was seated, she came to him, and gave the specific details of the injury she had suffered at the hands of the chef in the laundry, when defendant became so enraged that he rose with the fixed purpose of inflicting personal chastisement upon Collins, or, to use his own language, “to give him the best thrashing he ever had in his life,” but without the intention of shooting him. With this purpose only, he says, he called out, “Come here.” At this time Collins was seated at the table, watching him; and, when the latter said “Come here,” the chef rose, and moved around the table until he was three or four feet distant. Mrs. Gallehugh, as she states, saw that her husband was excited, and, discovering that Collins had a knife in his hands, threw her arm around her husband and exclaimed, “Don’t! Don’t!” Defendant says he then discovered the knife, [216]*216which he describes minutely, and, under fear that he would be injured, pushed his wife away, pulled his revolver from his right hip pocket, and fired two shots into the body of the deceased while he was standing in front of him.

As indicated above, in the respective claims of the prosecution and defense there were decided and material variances. On the one hand, the aggressor in every respect was the defendant, who was in no danger of being stabbed by Collins, but whose apparent purpose was to take the life of an unarmed man, while, upon the other hand, the purpose of defendant went no further than to commit a battery upon the colored cook for the assault and insult he.had previously offered to his wife. There is evidence in the record to support either theory, and it was obviously the duty of the jury, upon the fair and impartial presentation of the law in the instructions given by the learned trial court, to which no exceptions were taken, to determine, upon this conflict, the guilt or innocence of defendant under the rules applicable to criminal cases; and with the result we have no authority to interfere, unless the defendant’s rights have been prejudiced by the errors assigned in excluding evidence offered in his behalf, or the refusal to set aside the verdict upon the ground that an incompetent juror was accepted, and allowed to participate in the trial.

It was assigned as error that the wife of defendant was not permitted at the trial to testify that a short time — some six minutes — after the killing, and after her husband had left the building, she stated to a member of the police force who arrived on the scene that deceased had a knife in his hand when he approached her husband. The excluded evidence in this respect obviously could not have had greater weight than to corroborate her previous statements, already given under oath, to the effect that she saw the knife in Collins’ hands when he came around the table. But it is urged that such rejected matter was a part of the res gestae, or part of the main transaction in which her husband participated. We think the court properly refused to receive the excluded statement. What Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
94 N.W. 723, 89 Minn. 212, 1903 Minn. LEXIS 489, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-gallehugh-minn-1903.