State v. Madden

276 P.2d 974, 128 Mont. 408, 1954 Mont. LEXIS 65
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 22, 1954
Docket9426
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 276 P.2d 974 (State v. Madden) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana 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. Madden, 276 P.2d 974, 128 Mont. 408, 1954 Mont. LEXIS 65 (Mo. 1954).

Opinion

MR. CHIEF JUSTICE ADAÍR:

The defendant was convicted of assault in the first degree and appeals from the judgment of conviction and an order denying him a new trial.

*409 The information charges: “That on or about the 21st day of February A. D., 1953 * '* * defendant, Garvin G. Madden, at the County of Hill, in the State of Montana, with force and arms, did then and there, knowingly, willfully, unlawfully and feloniously and wrongfully and with the intent to kill Alice Madden, a human being, assault said Alice Madden with a deadly weapon, to-wit: a loaded firearm, contrary to the form, force and effect of the statute in such case made and provided, and against the peace and dignity of the State of Montana.”

In his single specification of error the defendant claims that it was error for the trial court to overrule defendant’s motion for a new trial. He urges that the jury failed to consider evidence which he asserts reasonably, and as a matter of law, raised a reasonable doubt as to defendant’s intent to kill.

Sufficiency of the Evidence. The testimony introduced by the state is to the following effect.

At the time charged in the information the defendant and the complaining witness, Alice Madden, were husband and wife.

In the latter part of January 1953 the couple, becoming estranged, ceased to live together and defendant moved out of the wife’s home located at No. 1539 Fifth Street in Havre, Montana.

On Friday, February 20, 1953, the defendant purchased from a hardware store in Havre a new High Standard “Sport King” .22 caliber automatic pistol having Serial No. 338707, together with a used leather holster.

Thereafter, at about 9 o’clock on the evening of that day the defendant entered the Palace tavern in Havre at which time his shirt was unbuttoned and open revealing a leather strap beneath, worn across defendant’s chest by means whereof defendant was carrying his recently purchased pistol and holster.

The state’s witness Archie Maze testified that he was the bartender on duty at the Palace tavern on such evening; that at such time he noticed that defendant was drinking and that he was carrying what the witness thought was a gun; that the witness talked with defendant and asked the latter if he would leave the gun with the witness; that defendant complied with the bartender’s *410 request and left with him the High Standard .22 caliber pistol together with the leather holster and a light colored leather strap.

The witness Maze further testified that at about 9 o’clock in the morning of the following day, being Saturday, February 21, 1953, the defendant returned to the Palace tavern for his pistol, holster and strap stating that he was going to take them home and put them away whereupon the witness delivered the pistol, holster and strap to the defendant who he said then appeared to be sober and entirely normal.

At about 10 o’clock on such Saturday morning, February 21, 1953, the defendant, appearing at his wife’s home at No. 1539 Fifth Street in Havre, was admitted to the kitchen where he talked with the wife for a while.

She testified: “He had a strap across his shoulder and I asked him what it was and he told me he had been sick and the doctor had taped him up. * * * He asked me to take him back, and I said, ‘No.’ There was no happiness there on either side. * * * After I asked him to have coffee, he asked me if he could use the bathroom. ”

When defendant emerged from the bathroom he was holding his newly acquired automatic pistol in his right hand. The wife testified: “Well, he was holding this gun on his side with his jacket partly shielding it, and he said, ‘This is it.’ ” She testified that defendant then asked her to go into another room with him; that she told him she wasn’t going; that thereupon the defendant, using his left hand, seized her right arm, and, with the pistol still held in his right hand, and pointed at her, started pulling her toward the living room.

The wife testified “we slowly struggled towards the north wall and we got there and there was no place else he could go to pull me. There was a rocking chair stitting there and he put the gun to his side, and we were very close together. I had hold of the gun, and he was trying to do something with it. I didn’t know what. I heard a click '* * * and after the clicking, he started forcing the gtm towards my body and I couldn’t hold it.”

*411 Tlie wife testified that at this time defendant turned the pistol toward her body. She made answer as follows:

“Q. He turned it [the pistol] towards your body? A. Yes.

“Q. And the gun fired? A. Yes.

“Q. Were you frightened? A. Very much so.”

The bullet struck the wife in the leg breaking the bone thereof and necessitating resort to surgery as well as the placing and keeping of the leg in a plaster cast for months.

As to what happened when the bullet struck her the wife testified : “I fell and as I fell part of the gun came with me. I picked up part of the gun and threw it under the china closet. He leaned over me and reached under the china closet, and he was trying to get the piece that I had thrown under there. * * * I asked him for a cigarette and he didn’t answer. I asked him for a anacin and he didn’t answer. I asked him to pick me up and put me on the bed and he told me I could lie there and plead, that he wasn’t through with me yet. He was trying to put the gun bach together. He was on his knees — beating it against the floor. At first it was the barrel, and then he reversed it and used the other end against the floor, After the gun wouldn’t go together, the shells were removed and they rolled out on the living room floor. I made an attempt to crawl to the phone, and he told me to lay where I was at or I would get some more * * * He seen somebody walk by the west window — an object or a shadow. He took and walked out of the living room and took the gun with him, and he went out there and locked the door. ’ ’

She further testified that defendant had the gun in his hand at the time he left the living room; that she heard him lock the door by which he had entered her home; that then the police and the doctor arrived; that at the command of Chief of Police Mooney the defendant unlocked the door and admitted the officers to the house; that thereupon defendant told the officers that if they stepped into the hall he would hill them.

On her direct examination the complaining witness was interrogated and made answer as follows:

“Q. Do you recall any of the circumstances, or conversations, *412 when the police arrived? A. Mr. Mooney, the Chief of Police, asked him [defendant] to unlock the door after he had tried it.

“Q. Did you hear that? A. Yes, I did.

‘ ‘ Q. And was Mr. Mooney admitted to the house ? A. He asked Mr.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
276 P.2d 974, 128 Mont. 408, 1954 Mont. LEXIS 65, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-madden-mont-1954.