State v. Gounagias

153 P. 9, 88 Wash. 304, 1915 Wash. LEXIS 1122
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 24, 1915
DocketNo. 12531
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 153 P. 9 (State v. Gounagias) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington 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. Gounagias, 153 P. 9, 88 Wash. 304, 1915 Wash. LEXIS 1122 (Wash. 1915).

Opinion

Ellis, J.

The defendant was tried upon an information charging him with murder in the first degree. The jury returned a verdict of guilty as charged. The defendant’s motion for a new trial was overruled. Judgment was entered upon the verdict. The defendant appealed.

On May 7, 1914, and for a long time prior thereto, the appellant and one Dionisios Grounas, known also as Dan George, both Greeks, had been employed with a number of their countrymen in a paper mill located at Camas, Clarke county, Washington. The defendant and George had at one time lived in the same house, but prior to the date of the killing, the appellant had moved away and was, on the 6th day of May, 1914, living in a house about a quarter of a mile or, as he testified, six or seven blocks from the house where George lived. At that time the appellant was employed on the evening shift, which began work at four o’clock in the [306]*306afternoon and ceased at midnight. George was employed on a different shift, and on the evening of May 6th, went to bed early, apparently remaining there until the time of the shooting. The appellant did not go to work at four o’clock as usual on that afternoon because, as he testified, he was suffering from a severe headache which lasted all day, the cause of which he was not permitted to relate. He detailed his movements, stating that he visited a pool room, played a little at billiards, made several visits to a coffee house in Camas, played a game of cards with the baker, went to the river intending to commit suicide, but abandoned that idea, visited certain Greeks of his acquaintance and conversed with them for something over an hour, met a man from the old country, took him to his own house and talked with him for some time, and finally, about eleven o’clock at night, again visited the coffee house.

On the 18th day of April, 1914, the day before the Greek easter, the appellant and two other Greeks, in response to an advertisement in a Greek periodical, each ordered from a mail order house in Chicago a box containing a thirty-two calibre revolver and certain other articles, which he testified he ordered because he considered the articles cheap. The appellant’s box came about the 30th of April, and on that or the following day he procured ammunition for the revolver from a dealer in Camas. He kept the revolver concealed in his house in a slit in the underside of his mattress. He testified that, on the evening of May 6th, when he made his last visit to the coffee house, there were several of his countrymen there and something occurred, which he was not permitted to detail, which so excited and enraged him as to cause him to form the design of killing Dan George. He testified that he had never at any time thought of killing George until his last visit to the coffee house on the evening of May 6th; that about ten minutes after eleven o’clock he rushed from the coffee house, ran to his own house, made a necessary visit to the toilet, went to his mattress, took out the revolver and [307]*307loaded it, went rapidly up the hill to the house where George lived, entered the house and, by the light of a match, found George asleep in his bed, did not awaken him, but immediately shot him through the head, firing five shots, all that he had in the revolver; that he then returned to his own house, removing the empty shells on the way, put the revolver back in the slit in the mattress and went to bed, where he was shortly afterwards arrested.

Counsel for the appellant, in his opening statement, disclaimed any intention of asking an acquittal but started to detail certain circumstances which he expected to prove in mitigation to reduce the offense from murder to manslaughter. On objection by the state, he was not permitted to proceed with this part of the statement. In the progress of the defense', counsel offered to prove by the appellant that, on the 19th day of April, 1914, the Greek easter, the appellant, who was then living in the same house with the deceased, had taken several glasses of beer and, either because of the beer or of some drug therein, had become helpless and almost unconscious, when the deceased, after making many insulting remarks concerning the appellant and his wife, who lived in the old country, finally, while the appellant lay helpless on the floor, committed upon him the unmentionable crime and went away, leaving the appellant in a state of semi-consciousness ; that the appellant thereafter moved to another house, and on the next day, meeting George on the street, upbraided him for his action and asked him why he had done it, to which George, in substance laughingly replied, “You’re all right, it did not hurt you;” that the appellant then, in order to avoid the disgrace of the matter, asked George to say nothing about it to their countrymen; that thereafter, wherever the appellant went, he would hear remarks and see signs made by his countrymen indicating that George had circulated the story, so that the appellant was continuously ridiculed and subjected to insulting remarks and gestures on the part of his fellow countrymen. That these things so preyed upon [308]*308his mind that he became sick and afflicted with severe headaches, and that the headache on May 6th, which was so severe as to prevent his working, was induced by this cause; that, when he entered the coffee house at about eleven o’clock on the evening of May 6th, there were about ten men there, who began making laughing remarks and suggestive gestures which, in the appellant’s weakened condition, so excited and enraged him that he lost all control of his reason and rushed from the house with the design of avenging himself by killing George.

The appellant also offered to prove by other witnesses that Dan George had in fact circulated the report of his treatment of the appellant and that, by reason thereof, the insulting remarks, signs and gestures were often made in the appellant’s presence. These offers were made in the absence of the jury, and the evidence was by the court excluded. The appellant was asked in the presence of the jury, “Why did you kill Dan George?” The court, evidently understanding that, in answer to this question, he would repeat the story which had been excluded, did not permit him to answer further than to say that he first thought of killing George, “At the moment when I saw those inhuman things at eleven o’clock.”

After the foregoing offer of evidence had been refused, and after counsel for the appellant had disclaimed any intention of seeking an acquittal on the ground of insanity or any other ground, he made an offer to show, by the testimony of an alienist, “what a man would do under these circumstances or is likely to do.” The court then asked if any question of insanity was raised, and counsel answered, “No,” further stating, in effect, that the alienist would not say that the man was insane either at the time of the killing or at the time of the trial or ever had been, but he would say, from his examination of the appellant, that the appellant acted under an uncontrollable impulse, produced by bringing back to his mind the outrage with such vividness and force that it was [309]*309as real to him on the night of the killing as at the time when the outrage was committed, and even more so because of his weakened condition. This evidence was also excluded.

The court instructed the jury as to the necessary elements of murder in the first and second degrees, but refused to instruct as to manslaughter.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
153 P. 9, 88 Wash. 304, 1915 Wash. LEXIS 1122, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-gounagias-wash-1915.