State v. Kaster

15 N.W.2d 866, 235 Iowa 142, 1944 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 464
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedOctober 17, 1944
DocketNo. 46599.
StatusPublished

This text of 15 N.W.2d 866 (State v. Kaster) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Kaster, 15 N.W.2d 866, 235 Iowa 142, 1944 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 464 (iowa 1944).

Opinion

Per Curiam.

Defendant, Stanley M. Kaster, was indicted by the grand jury of Bremer County, Iowa, charged with the crime of having murdered Glenn B. 'Winehell in said, county on September 25, 1943.

He entered a plea of not guilty but upon trial was convicted of murder in the first degree and sentenced to death. He has appealed to this court. There was no argument filed herein by either party and the case comes to us on a clerk’s transcript, together with a transcript of the evidence furnished by the official court reporter.

We have gone over the transcript of the record and the evidence with care. The transcript reveals that all of the proceedings were carefully made of record; that the rights of the defendant were scrupulously preserved; that he was repre *143 seated by able counsel, and every opportunity was afforded him to defend against the charge. The instructions of the court show extreme care in preparation, and fully, fairly, and correctly set forth to the jury the law and the rules for their guidance in deliberating upon and arriving at a verdict. The lower court found defendant’s motion to set aside the judgment and to grant a new trial was without merit. We have carefully examined the motion and the different grounds set forth therein and are of the opinion that the lower court did not err in overruling the same.

We have gone over the evidence carefully and will set forth a short résumé thereof, dealing principally with the crime and the identity of the defendant. We do this because of the nature of the crime charged and the seriousness of the consequences to the defendant by reason of his conviction.

The transcript of the evidence is so voluminous that it would serve no good or useful purpose to set out more than a brief statement of the parts dealing with the actual commission of the crime, the identity of the perpetrator thereof, his apprehension, and his statement and admissions following that event.

The defendant is a man thirty-four years old and so far as the record shows was a stranger in the community where the crime was committed.

On September 25, 1943, and for some years prior thereto, Glenn Winchell, the deceased, had been employed by the city of Waverly, Iowa, as a guard or watchman at its electric power plant in that city. He was a regular officer, wore a uniform, a policeman’s badge, and carried a revolver in a holster fastened to his belt. At that time he was on duty during the night and his duties required him to go various places at or about the plant, and in so doing he carried with him what is known as a time clock. About ten p. m. on that date, while on duty at a. point near the light plant, he was shot and died within a few minutes. The shot which killed him came from a 12-' gauge shotgun loaded with buckshot. The main charge struck him full in the face, near the mouth, with some of the shot penetrating his brain, others his throat and neck, one severing the jugular vein, and others striking him in the arm. There were at least nine buckshot wounds in his face and arm. Sev *144 eral shotgun wads were found in the neck wound. There were no powder marks on his face. When shot ho fell in the parking between the street and the sidewalk and near a large tree. He died in a few minutes without regaining consciousness. When found he was lying on his side with the gun and the holster under him. The gun was loaded but contained no empty shells. Also, the time clock was found by the side of his body.

A Mr. Zahn, who lived a short distance from the scene of the shooting, was approaching his home about the time the shooting occurred: He was.a witness to the actual shooting. As he was about to enter his home he heard a voice call, “Don’t shoot,” and saw Glenn Winchell some seventy or seventy-five feet away standing at or near the sidewalk, while another person holding a shotgun was some fifteen or twenty feet farther away. Winchell had his hands raised as if to protect his face and was trying to get behind a large tree. The witness started in that direction and had traveled some fifteen or twenty feet closer when Winchell called out again, “Don’t shoot, don’t shoot.” Witness testified that the holder of the gun then raised it to his shoulder and fired it directly into Winchell’s face at a point when they were thirty to forty feet apart. Winchell dropped to the ground and when picked up was lying between the sidewalk and the tree. When Winchell fell his assailant, still carrying the gun, ran a short distance to a Studebaker coupé which was parked near by. He threw the gun into it, entered, and backed it up rapidly, narrowly missing several other cars then and there parked or passing. He then drove to the intersection, where the car either stalled or stopped for a short interval of possibly a minute. In the meantime Zahn gave the alarm by calling out that Winchell had been shot, and for someone to stop the car and get the number. Several persons close at hand observed the car, its driver, and its number, 7-32. When driven away the lights of the Studebaker were not turned on and when last seen several blocks away its lights were not on. It was being driven rapidly in a direction out of the city.

Several witnesses sitting in an automobile parked close by where the Studebaker had been parked before the shooting *145 identified the defendant as the driver as it backed out and drove away immediately following the shooting. A Mr. Eammerer, a teacher in the Waverly high school, together with his wife, was near the intersection where the Studebaker car stopped. They heard the call to get the number and stepped back from the street in order to avoid being run over but got the number and observed the driver of the car. Mr. Eammerer positively identified the defendant as the driver of the car and stated that he had taken particular notice because of the calling of Mr. Zahn. Mrs. Eammerer identified the car and stated that in her opinion the defendant was the driver.

A short time before the shooting the Studebaker ear, with defendant alone therein and driving, had been. seen in the vicinity of the light plant and had passed that way at least three times. Witnesses observed that the driver seemed to be looking in the direction of the light plant. This happened -just before Winchell was shot and while he was making his rounds of the property guarded.

Early on the morning of September 27, 1943, the Studebaker coupé was found off the road and in a ditch on a highway not far from Janesville, Iowa. The defendant was in the Studebaker and he sought to obtain help from a witness to get out of the ditch. At that time there was no rear number on the ditched car. Later, on the same day, this Studebaker ear was found in a wooded tract near a shack off the highway about two miles from the town of Janesville. ' In the shack was a stove with a fire burning and there was evidence that it had been occupied shortly before. The car then carried a license No. 7-23120. The officers examined the car and found a number of personal effects belonging to the defendant, who about that time was seen in the woods near the shack armed with a shotgun. Among the things found in the car were a revolver, some shotgun shells, and a “jump wire” which could be used' to start automobiles with ignition turned off. The officers took possession of the car but the defendant did not return to it.

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Bluebook (online)
15 N.W.2d 866, 235 Iowa 142, 1944 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 464, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-kaster-iowa-1944.