State v. Lapke

249 N.W. 634, 61 S.D. 389, 1933 S.D. LEXIS 58
CourtSouth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 18, 1933
DocketFile No. 7253.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 249 N.W. 634 (State v. Lapke) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering South Dakota 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. Lapke, 249 N.W. 634, 61 S.D. 389, 1933 S.D. LEXIS 58 (S.D. 1933).

Opinion

WARREN, J.

Defendant was convicted of the crime of murder, and, from the judgment and order overruling motion for new trial, he has appealed to this court.

About noon Saturday, December 14, 1929, Mrs. Mary Lapke, the deceased, and her sons, Alphonse, the defendant herein, Conrad and Harry, drove to Miller, S. D. located some twenty-three miles from the farm occupied by the Lapke family to do some marketing and transact business. They started home about 4 p. m., a neighbor and his sick boy riding with them to the said neighbor’s home. They arrived home about 6 p. m. Alphonse drained the car and with the others did the evening farm chores and then went into the house. There was some talk about the business transacted in town that day between Alphonse, his mother and father. After supper, the father and the boys -went into the living room while Mrs. *390 Lapke washed the dishes. Alphonse turned on the radio, Mr. Lapke laid down on the couch, and Harry and Conrad read the newspaper. After finishing the dishes, Mrs. Lapke came into the living room and listened to the radio for a while. About 8 o’clock she said that she must go out and shut up the chicken coop and get some meat for breakfast.

The day before, the Lapkes had done some butchering, and the carcass of a large hog hung in the granary some 190 feet east of the house.

Mrs. Lapke left the house. Some time later Harry arose and went outside to the toilet, situated some 50 feet northeast of the house. He was gone about three minutes. At this point it is well to state that the state contended that Alphonse also left the house and was gone about fifteen minutes, while all the members of the Lapke family contend that Alphonse did not leave the house that night at that time and that Harry was the only one who stepped outside of the house. It is the contention of the defense that Alphonse was at the radio when Harry left the room and was there when Harry returned. After Mrs. Lapke had been absent for about twenty minutes, the members of the family became worried and Anton, the husband, told Harry to go out and see if he could find 'her. Harry went out and called a “couple of times,” but there was no answer. Mr. Lapke then requested all the boys to go out and see if they could find her. Alphonse, Harry, and Conrad went out; they found the west door of the granary closed, but the east door was partly open; near the butchered hog was fresh pool of blood, a butcher knife, a plate, and a flash-light, but Mrs. Lapke was nowhere to be found. The}1' immediately reported to their father, who joined them in the search; Alphonse remained in the house and awoke and dressed tire little 8 year old boy, Martin, and later joined the rest of the family in the search about the yard, a grove of trees north of the buildings, and into a field north and east of the home. Mr. Lapke then instructed Alphonse to take the car and go to Miller to see if their mother was at the daughter’s place. The car was prepared; it being necessary to fill the radiator as Alphonse had drained the car when they returned from Miller that afternoon. The boys drove to Miller to the home of their sister, Mrs. William Nuhring. They did not find Mrs. Lapke. Afterwards they all returned to the Lapke home.

*391 Alphonse and William Nuhring drove to several neighboring farms both east and west of the house in search of Mrs. Lapke, but no trace could be found. They also drove to some relatives near Orient, S. D. Later that same night, Alphonse and Nuhring came to Miller to get the sheriff. They drove first to the chief of police, informing him of the disappearance of Mrs. Lapke; the chief accompanied them to the home of the sheriff, who came out to the Lapke place. The sheriff arrived early in the morning, but dozed off to sleep waiting for daylight. The next day the search was continued by all members of the family, the sheriff and neighbors. Alphonse, Nuhring, and a Mr. Larson drove to Redfield and Zell and claim to have inquired of police and railroad stations if Mrs. Lapke had been seen or if she had bought a ticket for Wisconsin, the former home of the Lapkes. The following morning, Monday, the body was found on an old straw pile more than a mile southeast of the Lapke buildings on the Blake farm. Her throat had been cut, causing her death. The body was taken to the Lapke home, where a coroner’s jury was called and an inquest held. The body was then taken to Miller, S'. D.

A couple of weeks later, Anton Lapke, Alphonse, Harry, Conrad, and Martin Lapke were brought to Miller, placed in separate rooms in the courthouse, kept under guard, and were subjected to almost continual cross-examination on the part of the state and county sheriffs, deputy state sheriff, and attorneys. They were not permitted to consult an attorney nor each other. The little boy was held for one day, and the rest of the family was held nine days. No warrant for their arrest had been issued, and no complaint filed. Alphonse was arrested and charged with the crime of murder. A preliminary hearing was held and all members of the Lapke family examined.

Thereafter, upon an information duly filed, the defendant, Alphonse Lapke, was brought to trial in the circuit court of Hand county, S. D. Attorneys for the defense filed a motion to quash the information based on affidavits of attorneys and members of the Lapke family, material parts of which are hereinafter narrated. The motion to quash was denied, and the defense then demurred to the information, which was overruled. The defendant pleaded not guilty, was tried, convicted, and sentenced to the state penitentiary for the rest of his natural life. From the judgment and *392 order overruling the motion for a new trial, the defendant has appealed to this court.

The appellant with considerable earnestness alleges that he did not have a fair trial on account of the state’s aggressive conduct in coercing witnesses to testify' in its behalf, such testimony having been obtained by the state through different and diverse means, such as placing the defendant in solitary confinement, and placing many of the witnesses in separate rooms which practically amounted to solitary confinement; that the investigations made by the state were unfair and not only were questionable methods employed in coercing the defendant, but also that the witnesses gave testimony which was not true and which greatly prejudiced the defendant in the eyes of the jury. The appellant’s contention can perhaps be best stated by briefly quoting extracts from the motion in arrest of judgment and affidavits produced and presented to the trial court. Paragraphs II and XIII of the motion in arrest of judgment are as follows:

“II.

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Bluebook (online)
249 N.W. 634, 61 S.D. 389, 1933 S.D. LEXIS 58, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-lapke-sd-1933.