State v. Hall

13 P.2d 624, 54 Nev. 213, 1932 Nev. LEXIS 23
CourtNevada Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 4, 1932
Docket2966
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 13 P.2d 624 (State v. Hall) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nevada 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. Hall, 13 P.2d 624, 54 Nev. 213, 1932 Nev. LEXIS 23 (Neb. 1932).

Opinions

*223 OPINION

By the Court,

Ducker, J.:

The appellant, John Hall, was convicted in the district court of Clark County of the crime of miurder of the first degree. The j ury exercised their discretion and fixed the punishment at death. The appeal is taken from the judgment and order denying appellant’s motion for a new trial.

The conviction of appellant resulted from his killing one John C. O’Brien by shooting him with a pistol on the night of June 15, 1931, near what was known as the Fox ranch situated about six miles south of the city of Las Vegas, Nevada. O’Brien, Hall, their wives, and the former’s stepdaughter, Lillian, had been living together at the Fox ranch in a two-room house for a few days prior to the time of the homicide.

The shooting occurred about 10:30 at night, when they were going to their home from Las Vegas in an automobile. Mrs. O’Brien, as a witness for the state, gave substantially the following version of the affair: “Mr. O’Brien was sitting at the wheel, I was sitting in the middle and my daughter on the side. Mr. and Mrs. Hall were sitting in the back seat. When we got near our home where we generally stopped the car Mr. Hall hollered, ‘Drive on and don’t stop.’ Mr. O’Brien drove a short distance, stopped the car, looked back and hollered, ‘What’s the idea ?’ Then Mr. Hall commenced shooting. My daughter and I got out of the right side of the car and Mr. O’Brien followed us the same way. Mr. Hall shot twice while in the car and then got out the left side *224 of the car and shot four times more. I ran around to stop Mr. Hall from hurting my husband further and Mr. Hall hit me. He hit me on the top of the head. He just kept on hitting me then on the head. I kept falling down and getting up. He was cursing all the time. These words I can remember, ‘G- d-you, I’ll get you too.’ I ran around the car and asked Mrs. Hall if she would help me. She started beating me up. At the time Mrs. Hall hit me, Mr. Hall was after Lillian. He hit me with a gun. He hit me a good many times and knocked me down. I asked Lillian to run for help. He said there is no need of going for help. He was right behind us. We ran down through the bushes.”

Lillian, Mrs. O’Brien’s daughter, was also a witness for the state. She testified that she was 15 years of age. She gave the following account of the affair: “On the evening of June 15, 1931, about 10:30 in the evening, my daddie, mother, myself and Mr. and Mrs. Hall were on our way home in a Studebaker car. Mr. O’Brien was driving, my mother was in the middle of the front seat and I was sitting on the outside of the front seat. Mr. Hall'told my father not to stop the car. He started to stop and Mr. Hall took out the gun and started to shoot. After the shooting he beat my mother. I started after my mother, and she said to go after father. I started to go down the road after him and he said he was all right. I then went after mother. Mr. Hall was beating her. I heard six shots, two in the car and ■ four outside. I saw no gun or anything else in the hands of Mr. O’Brien.”

N. R. Burghart was driving his car on the highway past the Fox ranch between 10:30 and 11: 00 on the night of the shooting. He saw O’Brien in the road in front of him with both hands up. His shirt was bloody, and he was staggering. Burkhart took O’Brien to the Las Vegas Hospital, where he died shortly afterwards on that night. An examination of the body by a physician and surgeon revealed bullet wounds, one of which, a wound through the chest, was the cause of death. The bullet causing the latter wound entered the back about *225 two inches from the spine and emerged in front near the nipple.

Hall and his wife were taken into custody at Yermo, Calif., on the morning of July 16, 1931, by Lester Sample, an inspector with the highway border patrol. Hall was asked by Sample why he killed those folks at Las Vegas, and replied: “I didn’t kill anybody.” Sample told him that he did, and Hall said: “Why, there was a little shooting went on out there, some shooting. I didn’t know I hit any of them.” Sample asked him where his guns were, and Hall said he had no guns. Sample found two guns in Hall’s suitcase. They were pistols.

A short time afterwards Hall told Sample that O’Brien stole six or seven hundred dollars of his money. He said: “I knew that he got this money and I rented this ranch to watch him and if I caught him spending any of this money I was gong to kill him. If he is dead I sure am glad of it. I was going to shoot him before at their home but my wife interfered and wouldn’t let me. If I die in the electric chair he won’t be able to spend any of my money.”

When Hall and his wife were taken into custody by Sample, they had come into Yermo on a motor express truck. The driver of the truck, T. V. Shafer, testified that they were walking along the road about 1: 30 a. m. June 16, 1931, when he took them into the truck. He corroborated Sample in the main as to the statements made by Hall, and in addition testified that Hall said: “He would hate for his friends back in South Carolina to know that he had fired six shots at a man and only hit him three times.” He also testified that Hall said that he was glad he did it because O’Brien deserved everything he got. Hall and his wife were detained at Yermo until the arrival of Joe Keate, sheriff of Clark County, on the same day. Hall waived extradition, and he and his wife returned to Las Vegas in the car with the sheriff and his deputy, Mr. Bodell.

The deputy drove the car. Mrs. Hall sat in the front seat with him, while Hall sat in the back seat with the sheriff. Hall was not handcuffed. The sheriff testified *226 that during the ride Hall said: “The son of a gun stole my money. I killed him and I’m glad of it. I never was happy until I knew he was dead.” The witness testified further as to Hall’s statements: “He said at one time there about two weeks prior to that time he would have killed him if his wife hadn’t stopped him. He said that another time, that what he wanted, or as soon as he found out they had been spending this money that he had lost, he had decided he needed killing and he was going to kill him, and various things of that kind, but it all pertained to that one thing.” The witness also testified that Hall said that at the time he shot him, O’Brien was reaching back to strike him; that Hall said, “ T don’t know what he had in his hand, but he had what I thought might be a blackjack in his hand’; that he said he ran out of shells for the big gun and wanted to use the little gun to shoot the others with, especially Mrs. O’Brien; that she had as much to do with the stealing of that money as did O’Brien, and also he figured the little girl would be along with them; that if the little gun had worked he would have killed the others.”

Bodell also testified as to Hall’s statements on the return to Las Vegas. His version of these statements is substantially as follows: “Hall said, ‘Well, I guess

you boys thought I was trying to get away from you, but I wouldn’t; I was just full of booze, out of my head and just wanted to go somewhere — anywhere.’ Later on he said: ‘You know that son of a gun stole $700 from me.

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Bluebook (online)
13 P.2d 624, 54 Nev. 213, 1932 Nev. LEXIS 23, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-hall-nev-1932.