State v. Jukich

242 P. 590, 49 Nev. 217, 1926 Nev. LEXIS 5
CourtNevada Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 12, 1926
Docket2702
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 242 P. 590 (State v. Jukich) 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. Jukich, 242 P. 590, 49 Nev. 217, 1926 Nev. LEXIS 5 (Neb. 1926).

Opinions

*220 OPINION

By the Court,

Ducker, J.:

Appellant was convicted of the crime of murder of the first degree, and the penalty of death was imposed. He appeals from the judgment and order denying his motion !for a new trial. The grounds urged on this appeal for a reversal of the judgment may be grouped under three heads, namely, insufficiency of the evidence to support the verdict of murder of the first degree; incompetency of counsel who represented appellant in the court below; and, misdirection of the jury by the court. These will be considered in the order stated.

On the 14th day of February, 1925, at the home of her parents in Ruth, White Pine County, Nevada, appellant shot and killed Jennie Madek, a young girl between 15 and 16 years of age. The parents of the deceased and the appellant are natives of Jugo-Slavia. The appellant is 28 years of age, and had lived in White Pine County for about 11 years before the killing. For about two months immediately prior thereto he had been at Gold Hill, Nevada, and returned to Ruth the day before the homicide. He had boarded with the parents of the deceased for about 18 months prior to his leaving Ruth for Gold Hill. The circumstances immediately surrounding the killing are as follows:

Appellant came to the house where the girl lived at *221 about 3 o’clock in the afternoon and remained there until he killed her four or five hours later. Besides the appellant there were four eyewitnesses to the shooting— the mother and a sister of the deceased, Mrs. Madek and Katie Madek, a girl 9 years of age, and two Americans whose names are Alfred Le Prowse and W. C. Mosher. Le Prowse and Mosher came to the Madek house five or ten minutes before the shooting took place. They came there to get a drink of wine, and found the persons named present, including an infant child of the Madeks. They had two drinks of wine. Appellant joined them in the last drink, and drank about a fourth of a glass. There is little difference in their testimony. Appellant was standing about four feet from Jennie when he suddenly pulled his gun and shot her. Prior to the shooting they did not hear appellant say anything to Jennie, but Le Prowse testified he had heard appellant talking to Mrs. Madek in a foreign language. Both witnesses testified that they saw no signs of anger on the part of the appellant or the others. Mosher testified that appellant appeared to be normal and that he saw no evidence of his being badly intoxicated. Both witnesses left the house immediately after the shot was fired, and Mosher testified that he heard the report of a second shot just as they were leaving the house. Katie Madek in her testimony gave the following version of the circumstances of the shooting:

“I was in my father’s house the night Jennie was shot. My mother and two Americans and Stanko and my little brother were there. Brother is a baby 2b^ years old. My sister was standing by two doors wiping my father’s bucket. Stanko was sitting on a chair, and he got up and stood by the stove. . He put his foot on the chair, and his left hand was in his left coat pocket. He was talking when two Americans came in. They asked Stanko if he had any wine, and he said, ‘Just a glass of water.’ My mother gave the two men a glass of wine. They drank just one glass, and my mother said, T forgot Stanko,’ and gave him a glass of wine. He drank just three drops. He did not act like he was *222 mad at any one andi did not use any bad language at any time. He did not say anything to Jennie. Stanko pulled his left hand out of his pocket and shot her in the breast. Jennie fell down. She tried fco get up two times but couldn’t. My mother took his arm, and he shot in the roof. Two times he shot. My mother held his hand, and when he shot he opened the door and ran out, 'and — well, he was going to shoot me and the gun wouldn’t shoot, and then he hit me and skinned my nose. He came back again to see if Jennie was dead. When he came back to Jennie the second time he shot at her, and the gun wouldn’t work, and he kicked Jennie in the head and went out.”

Mrs. Madek, the mother of the deceased, testified substantially as follows: Appellant started to board with her on the 25th day of June, 1923, and left her boarding place on the 26th day of December, 1924. He came to the house on the afternoon of the 14th of February, 1925, with one Mike Smilanick, at about 3 o’clock in the afternoon. The latter remained until her husband got home from work. He stayed there all the time until he shot Jennie. He did not quarrel with anybody in the house and showed no sign of being angry about anything. Just before the shooting he was sitting on a chair and got up and stood in front of the door. He made one step towards Jennie and shot her. Mrs. Madek jumped at him and appellant said, “You are finished also.” She grabbed him by the hand, and the bullet went straight into the ceiling. Finding that she could not do anything with him she ran out of the house calling for help. After he fired the second shot he was pulling at the trigger. He held the gun in his left hand. The second shot hit the witness on the little finger. Before he shot Jennie he had been talking of his marriage. He said that a fellow in Virginia City was his best man, and his wife was there. Before the shooting he had been talking to Jennie in a nice way, and she asked him why he did not bring his wife out. He replied that he could not until he had a house and a job. The witness gave appellant three drinks of wine. She stated that he was not drunk.

*223 After the shooting- the appellant went to the house of one Tartan, and said he had killed that girl. He gave the gun to Tartan, and was shortly afterwards taken into custody by a deputy sheriff. The officer asked him what he had done, -and he said he had killed a girl. Asked why he did it, he said she would not marry him, and he was ready to go too. The officer put him in a car and took him to jail. While on the way there the officer said he asked appellant why he killed the girl, and he replied, “If I couldn’t have her nobody else could,” and kept saying, “Goodbye, sweetheart.”

Questioned concerning his condition, the officer testified that he appeared to be normal; that he would j udge he had been drinking a little, but was sober and normal and did not appear to be excited. Another deputy sheriff, who was present when appellant was taken into custody and who went in the car with him to the jail, testified that appellant did not seem to be drunk, and that he did not smell -any liquor on him. Concerning statements made to him at the time by the appellant, the following questions were asked and answers made:

“Q. What did he say to you? A. * * * We went into the house and sat down, and I says, ‘Why did you kill the girl?’ He says, ‘They promised me the girl— we had a written agreement’ — and then began rambling.
“Q. Did he say written agreement? A. Yes; he said the parents of the girl and him signed the agreement that he was to marry the girl when she became a little older.
“Q. Did he exhibit any remorse over his action? A. None.
“Q.

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Bluebook (online)
242 P. 590, 49 Nev. 217, 1926 Nev. LEXIS 5, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-jukich-nev-1926.