State v. Joseph

371 P.2d 689, 230 Or. 585, 1962 Ore. LEXIS 336
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedMay 16, 1962
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 371 P.2d 689 (State v. Joseph) 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. Joseph, 371 P.2d 689, 230 Or. 585, 1962 Ore. LEXIS 336 (Or. 1962).

Opinion

SLOAN, J.

Defendant was convicted of the manslaughter of one Okey Eugene Richards. He appeals from the judgment which followed the conviction. Defendant admitted the killing. He claimed it was done in self-defense. There are five assignments of error. The one assignment of substantial merit is directed at a part of the instructions on self-defense. The assignments do not require a detailed statement of the facts.

During the afternoon of September 20, 1959, defendant shot and killed Richards and another man *587 named Deman. On and prior to that date, defendant was employed on a ranch near Chiloqnin in Klamath County. He lived in a small cabin on the ranch. Earlier on that date and on the day before Deman and other men, including Richards, had visited defendant at the latter’s cabin. There had been a considerable amount of wine drinking. Defendant and Deman had quarreled during prior visits. Defendant testified that on the next to the last visit that he had ordered Deman to leave the premises and that Deman left with the statement that he would return and “gut” defendant.

Defendant then testified that Deman and Richards did return. He said that Deman drove his car close to the porch on the front of defendant’s cabin. Defendant had prepared for the visit by placing his loaded 30-30 rifle close at hand and by placing some additional shells in his pocket; that Deman got out of the car with a bottle of wine in one hand and a knife in the other. Deman moved to the rear of the car, away from defendant. The two men were then apparently about 12 or 15 feet apart. According to defendant, and he is the only living eye-witness, some heated words were exchanged and defendant fired two shots over Deman’s head to warn him to stay away. Defendant claims this did not have the desired effect and that Deman advanced towards him and so defendant shot several times into Deman’s body, killing him instantly. It should be mentioned that defendant was indicted for first degree murder for the killing of Deman but was tried and acquitted prior to the trial o'f the instant case.

Defendant swore that after Deman’s body fell he walked to it and saw that he was dead. He then looked in the car at Richards who, defendant said, was in the *588 act of grabbing a knife from the seat of the .car and yelled at defendant that he was going to kill him for ■shooting his friend. Defendant testified that he then fired a shot thru the window of the car to warn Richards bnt Richards got out of the car and moved behind the back of the car, defendant moved to the front of the car; that he called to Richards and that Richards then came towards him brandishing the knife; that defendant fired at him and the shot hit Richards’ hand knocking the knife from his grasp. He said that Richards then stooped to pick np the knife with his other hand and defendant then fired other shots which killed Richards. A pathologist testified that there was one bullet hole in Richards’ head which had .been fired after Richards’ heart had stopped and that the muzzle of the gun had been not more than 18 inches from Richards’ head when it was fired.

Although no one else was present at the time of the shooting, another man was asleep in a nearby house when the shooting happened. There is direct conflict between the testimony of that man and the testimony of defendant as to what happened after the shooting. The witness testified that defendant came to the house and got knives from the kitchen which he then took and put into the hands of the dead men. Defendant, of course, denied this. There was, in evidence, the testimony of police officers and others as to statements said to have been made to them or in their hearing by defendant. Some of the statements tended to refute defendant’s testimony. Efforts made by defendant during the trial to impeach the testimony of some of the state’s witnesses form the basis for the first two assignments of error.

The first assignment claims error because the court refused to permit a leading question be asked *589 of one of defendant’s witnesses. The question was: “Now, after Mr. Jones asked Mr. Joseph what had happened I will ask you specifically if Mr. Joseph replied: ‘I just shot a couple of son-of-hitches?’ ” Whether or not a leading question may be asked in direct examination is strictly within the discretion of the judge. Tucker v. State Ind. Acc. Comm., 1959, 216 Or 74, 81, 337 P2d 979. There was no abuse in this instance.

The second assignment also relates to an effort to impeach a witness for the state. The witness, named Murch, had been asked if he had engaged in a conversation about this case with another man named Hood when the two of them were confined in a jail. Murch denied that he talked with Hood at all. Hood was then called by defendant. He was first asked if he had engaged in talk with Murch about this case and he said that he had. He was then asked to relate the alleged conversation with Murch. The court refused to permit Hood to testify to 'the actual conversation. The court ruled that “You have answered as far as you have laid a foundation for right now.” This, too, is a matter for the exercise of the trial court’s discretion. There was no abuse in this instance. State v. Nortin, 1943, 170 Or 296, 321, 133 P2d 252.

The third assignment is the more critical one. The court’s instructions on self-defense were long and overly repetitious. The exceptions taken by defendant are as follows:

“Mr. Card: I will respectfully take exception to the Court’s instruction as follows: ‘The circumstances must have been such as to warrant such a belief in the mind of a person of ordinary reason and firmness in the situation in which he was placed and it must have appeared to him that there *590 was no other reasonable means of avoiding or declining the combat, if any you find.’
“The Court: Taking exception to that?
“Mr. Card: I am taking exception to that, Your Honor, on the basis that this implies to the jury that the defendant has a duty to retreat.
“The Court: Does it say retreat?
“Mr. Card: No. I will further take exception your Honor, to that portion of your charge contained on page 11, and the words ‘danger that cannot, apparently, be avoided by adopting incidents less violent than that of taking human life.’ For the same reason, this implies to the jury that—
“The Court: You may have your exception.
“Mr. Card: (Continuing) he would be required to retreat.
“The Court: Is that there?
“Mr. Card: No, it is not here. The basis of my exception is that it implies to the jury that he initially has a duty to retreat.”

We do not agree with defendant that the part of the instruction quoted implies a duty to retreat and we do not think the jury would have so accepted it as applied to the evidence in this case. Furthermore, the language complained of is substantially the same as that which has been approved by the court in other cases. In State v. Porter,

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
371 P.2d 689, 230 Or. 585, 1962 Ore. LEXIS 336, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-joseph-or-1962.