State v. Henderson

184 P.2d 392, 182 Or. 147, 1947 Ore. LEXIS 212
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedJune 24, 1947
StatusPublished
Cited by41 cases

This text of 184 P.2d 392 (State v. Henderson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon 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. Henderson, 184 P.2d 392, 182 Or. 147, 1947 Ore. LEXIS 212 (Or. 1947).

Opinions

ROSSMAN, C. J.

This is an appeal by the defendant from a judgment of the circuit court which found him, guilty of the crime of first-degree murder and which ordered his execution. The judgment was based upon a verdict of a jury unaccompanied by recommendation of life imprisonment as permitted by Constitution of Oregon, Art. I, § 37, and § 23-411, O. C. L. A. According to the indictment, one Walter H. Poole was the victim of the homicide.

The appellant submits nine assignments of error which, succinctly stated, follow:

The defendant’s motion for a verdict of not guilty should have been sustained.
The defendant’s motion to withdraw from the consideration of the jury the question of first-degree murder should have been sustained.
Purported confessions and admissions submitted by the State should have been excluded.
*152 The instructions to the jury should have included that part of § 23-406, O. C. L. A., which says: “If any person shall, in the commission of an unlawful act, * * * involuntarily kill another, such person shall be deemed guilty of manslaughter.”
Evidence indicating that the defendant shot one Jerry Taylor a half hour or so prior to the alleged homicide should have been excluded.
Evidence given by one Stanley MacDonald, a witness for the State, concerning tests which he made to determine how far unburned powder is thrown in the firing of a revolver should have been excluded.
Photographs submitted by the State showing wounds upon the body of the deceased should have been excluded.
An instruction concerning the defendant’s use of an alias should not have been given.
The trial judge employed the wrong means in substituting an alternate juror for one of the regular ones who became incapacitated.

The deceased was killed late in the evening of December 24, 1945, in Vanport, which is a community immediately adjacent to Portland. His body was discovered by a passerby December 25 at 2:00 p. m. The State claims that his death was caused by a bullet fired by the defendant which pierced the aorta.

When Poole’s body was discovered it was lying with the face downward and the right arm folded under the chest. There were several bruises upon the head and one of the shoulders. There was also a bullet hole in his back, another in his chest and two in the upper part of his right arm. The four bullet holes were made by a single missile which entered Poole’s body from the back, severed the aorta, left the body through the chest and then went through the right arm. The wounds upon the head, according to the record, were severe *153 enough, to have rendered Poole unconscious. The State contends that after Poole had fallen to the ground from the blows upon his head, the defendant shot him in the back. It claims that before the defendant killed Poole he robbed him of his automobile, watch and ring.

The defendant, who was 25 years of age at the time of the trial, was born in North Carolina. He went to school until he had completed some of the high school grades. After he left school he worked for three years in a cigarette factory and advanced there to the position of assistant inspector. April 4, 1941, he enlisted in the Army and remained in it until March, 1945, when he deserted. At that time he was located at Port Lewis, near Tacoma. Immediately after his desertion he went to Portland, discarded his uniform and assumed the name of Aaron Eobinson, that being the name of his stepfather who lived in Philadelphia.

A half hour or less before Poole’s death the defendant had an altercation in a tavern in Vanport with a Negro whose name was Jerry Taylor. The defendant was also a Negro. Poole was a white man. Taylor, like the defendant, was a deserter from the Army. Tn the course of their wrangle the defendant twice fired a gun which he carried. One of the bullets hit Taylor. At that juncture, according to the State’s evidence, the defendant went to his home, which was nearby, hurriedly told his wife of the shooting, quickly gave her a few dollars, told her to return to her narents’ home, and said that he was “skipping out.” Without gathering up any of his belongings, the defendant walked to the highway which led to Vancouver. When he reached it he saw a man entering an automobile. That individual was the aforementioned Walter H. Poole, a stranger to the defendant. Unbeknown to *154 Poole, the defendant opened the right-hand door of the car and sat down alongside Poole. The State contends that the defendant, at the point of a gun, directed Poole’s driving until a dark parking place was reached. There, according to further contentions of the State, Poole, obedient to the defendant’s commands, stopped his car and got out of it. It was at that point, if the State’s claims are well founded, that the defendant took Poole’s life.

While the defendant was in the charge of military authorities in Philadelphia, pursuant to his surrender to them, he signed four statements in each of which he declared that he struck Poole over the head three times with a pistol immediately after Poole got out of his car. In these four statements he also stated that while the third blow was being struck the gun was discharged. It is these four statements which, in part, constitute the subject of the third assignment of error. The State does not concede that the gun was discharged inadvertently. It disputes that part of the purported confessions. The defendant, in addition to challenging the admissibility of the statements, contends that he never admitted that he struck or shot Poole. He concedes, however, that immediately prior to Poole’s death he rode with him in his ear and that after Poole’s death he possessed his automobile, ring and watch.

After the defendant took Poole’s automobile, which was a Chevrolet, he drove it. The car at that time displayed a Washington license plate. The defendant substituted for it an Oregon license plate which he removed from some car. The State contends that he wanted the car so that he could flee from Portland and from possible apprehension for the shooting of Jerry Taylor and for his desertion from the Army. The *155 State contends that his desire for a car in which to flee caused'him to kill Poole.

Immediately after taking Poole’s car the defendant drove to Tacoma where he shortly turned around and returned to Portland. Upon returning to Portland he remained only long enough to have some emergency repairs made to the car and then drove east as far as Logan, Iowa, where the car became disabled. By bus and train he made his way to Philadelphia. He arrived there December 80. In the course of a day’s visit with his mother he told her that he had become involved in some difficulty in Portland. She and the defendant’s stepfather advised the defendant to surrender himself to the Army authorities. He heeded the advice.

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Bluebook (online)
184 P.2d 392, 182 Or. 147, 1947 Ore. LEXIS 212, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-henderson-or-1947.