State v. Goettina

158 P.2d 865, 61 Wyo. 420, 1945 Wyo. LEXIS 20
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedMay 15, 1945
Docket2302
StatusPublished
Cited by45 cases

This text of 158 P.2d 865 (State v. Goettina) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming 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. Goettina, 158 P.2d 865, 61 Wyo. 420, 1945 Wyo. LEXIS 20 (Wyo. 1945).

Opinion

*430 OPINION

Blume, Chief Justice.

In this case the defendant, James J. Goettina, was charged in the District Court of Sweetwater County, Wyoming, with murder in the first degree for killing one Frances Goettina, his wife. The defendant pleaded not guilty and claimed, upon the trial, that he killed deceased in self-defense, and further that the homicide was accidental. He was convicted of manslaughter and sentenced by the court. From that judgment he has appealed to this court.

The defendant was 56 years of age and the deceased 31 years of age at the time of the homicide herein. Defendant first came to Wyoming in 1913, worked in a coal mine until late in the year 1917, enlisted in the United States Army and went to England, France and Germany. After the war he returned to Rock Springs, subsequently went to Illinois for a period of time, but returned to Rock Springs in 1928, and since 1933 was engaged in conducting a saloon business, the place conducted by him being known as the Belmont Inn. He met the deceased and married her on September 10, 1935, and they lived together as husband and wife until in the spring of 1943. Deceased left her home on April 3 and went to Jackson, Wyoming, apparently with one George Brown. She took with her from the safe of the *431 Belmont Inn the sum of §900. Becoming apparently broke, she phoned defendant about May 24, 1943, to come to see her at Jackson, Wyoming, which he did. Two days thereafter they returned to Rock Springs but she subsequently went away again, and again returned to Rock Springs about June 24, 1943. In the meantime in May, 1943, the parties had made a settlement of their affairs. The deceased had wanted to obtain ownership of the Belmont Inn. The defendant refused on the ground that the Inn was his only way of earning a livelihood. Finally, the defendant agreed to pay her about §2200, in addition to the §900 which she had taken, §50 a month, and turn over to deceased the automobile owned by the defendant. The defendant further offered that he would make a will in favor of the deceased so that she would become owner of all of hid property.when he should die. The deceased agreed to the settlement as fair enough, and that she would never come back to the Belmont Inn. The §2200 was paid and the automobile transferred on the public records. The will, however, was not signed on account of the fact that W. A. Muir, Esq., Attorney at Law, and then acting as attorney for the deceased, refused to let him sign it at the time when he offered to do so on account of his intoxicated condition. A divorce suit was instituted by deceased against the defendant on May 23,1943; the latter defaulted in the case. No judgment was ever entered therein and it was finally dismissed after the homicide had taken place in this case.

The homicide took place in the Belmont Inn about 1:30 A. M., July 1, 1943. A map of the building is in evidence. In the northeast corner is a small room, about 9 feet long by 7 feet wide. In the southwest corner of this room was a refrigerator, in the northwest corner a cooler, and a wash bowl on the north. South of this small room was the bar and its appurtenances, including a cash register and two drawers. The *432 bar was 27 feet long. The immediate incidents of the homicide seem to have begun behind the bar and ended up in the small room above mentioned, where, seemingly, the fatal shot was fired. During the evening of June 30, 1943, the deceased visited various places where intoxicating liquors were served, including the Belmont Inn, and she appears to have taken quite a number of drinks of straight whiskey and that she was in a rather intoxicated condition. She was at the Park Hotel with some of the witnesses in the case about midnight and caused these witnesses to return her to the Belmont Inn about that time. According to the witness Lexie Sanders, deceased left the Belmont Inn about 12:30 A. M. for a short period of time, saying that she was going to get a sandwich, and the defendant asked her if she would be back and she said she would. She returned, the exact time not appearing, and the witness saw her about 1:00 A. M. in the ladies toilet of the cocktail lounge. According to the defendant’s testimony, however, she left about 12:30 A. M., saying that she would never come back “to the son-of-abitching place again.” The Belmont Inn was closed about 1:00 o’clock A. M., July 1, and Lexie Sanders and Pauline Meyer, bar maids at the Inn, left about that time, the latter apparently leaving last and by the back door. At that time the deceased was in the cocktail lounge of the Inn, and she and the defendant were then the only ones in the saloon. Soon after 1:00 o’clock the defendant and the deceased were seen standing in front of the bar of the Inn and close to the front door by one Guido Frank. They apparently were arguing and Frank heard the deceased say: “Let me alone.” Soon thereafter two shots were fired. At that time the deceased and the defendant were back of the bar in the Inn. One of the shots grazed the right arm and the breast of the deceased and entered the left arm close to the elbow. The bullet of this shot was found in the left arm after she had *433 been exhumed. The medical testimony shows that that shot was not fatal. The bullet of the second shot which caused the death of the deceased entered the back at the twelfth rib on the left side, three inches from the spine, posteriorly, came through the posterior wall of the stomach, striking a portion of the lower left lobe of the liver; then through the diaphragm, through the lung cavity, through the left chest at a point four and one-half inches from the mid-sternal line between the fifth and sixth ribs, and through the left breast, emerging at a point one-half inch below the left nipple. The bullet was subsequently found in the north wall of a small room in the northwest corner of the building 3 feet and 10 inches from the floor. There were quite a lot of blood stains on the front and sleeves of defendant’s shirt. He had no coat on, and the evidence shows that he had not been drinking during the evening and was sober.

Immediately after the shooting, about 1:38 A. M., the defendant called Mr. Erlewine, the Chief of Police of Rock Springs, who arrived on the scene shortly thereafter. Mrs. Goettina was sitting on the floor, somewhat slumped down, “she was lying down, sitting with her feet in front, on the floor.” She was still living and was taken to the hospital where she died on the morning of July 2 ,1943. Mr. Erlewine testified that the defendant, when he called him over the phone, stated: “Come on over to the Belmont, — I just killed Frances,” and that he later said when he saw him in the Belmont Inn: “I killed her, and there she lays back there; there is the gun I shot her with,” showing him the revolver which was lying on a shelf in which were contained two empty cartridges and four loaded ones. The knife in evidence, hereinafter mentioned, was lying on the floor in the small room. The witness Pitchford, who was with Erlewine when the latter entered the Belmont Inn, testified that when the defendant opened *434 the door to the saloon, he made the remark that he had shot the deceased, and that she was on the floor back of the bar.

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Bluebook (online)
158 P.2d 865, 61 Wyo. 420, 1945 Wyo. LEXIS 20, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-goettina-wyo-1945.