State v. Marmon

154 N.W.2d 55, 1967 N.D. LEXIS 89
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 19, 1967
DocketCr. 337
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 154 N.W.2d 55 (State v. Marmon) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North 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. Marmon, 154 N.W.2d 55, 1967 N.D. LEXIS 89 (N.D. 1967).

Opinion

STRUTZ, Chief Justice

(on reassignment) .

The defendants were charged with commission of the crime of grand larceny of livestock under the provisions of Section *58 12-40-03(3), North Dakota Century Code, and were found guilty by a jury. They appealed from the judgment of conviction.

A review of the facts reveals that the defendants, Marmon and Ruckle, together with one Harry Eustis, who also was charged with the crime of grand larceny but not tried with the defendants herein, had gone out at night and had shot a young beef belonging to one Lee Addicott, a neighbor of the defendant Marmon. The defendants allege that they had gone out to shine deer and, as they were driving along one of the back roads, they had seen a deer; that they turned around and drove back to where they had seen the animal, saw some eyes shining in the darkness, and, thinking the animal was the deer, the defendant Ruckle had shot at the eyes. When they went to where the animal had fallen, they found that it was a young beef. Defendants assert that, rather than leave the carcass to spoil, they bled it and put the meat in the pickup they were driving. The defendant Ruckle, with Eustis, then started for Williston, where they intended to put the carcass in the cooler until they could find its owner.

The animal which they had killed belonged to Lee Addicott, defendant Mar-mon’s neighbor, and it bore Addicott’s brand and earmark. The record discloses that the defendant Marmon had helped Ad-dicott with the branding of his cattle and that he was acquainted with Addicott’s brand.

On the way to Williston, defendant Ruc-kle and Eustis were stopped by game wardens who suspected that shining of deer was taking place in the breaks along the White Earth Creek in Mountrail County. A search of their vehicle disclosed the carcass of the animal which they had killed, together with knives, a cleaver, and other instruments used in killing and skinning the beef.

After having been stopped by the game wardens, the defendant Ruckle, with Eustis, continued on to Williston where they stopped at Ruckle’s home, parking the vehicle on the street. Here they were apprehended by the sheriff and members of the Williston police force. When they were halted by the officers, the defendant Ruc-kle stated that the animal belonged to Eus-tis. He then changed his story and stated that they had purchased the animal in New Town. He later admitted that this, too, was false, and his explanation for telling these falsehoods was that he wanted to give the defendant Marmon an' opportunity to contact the owner of the animal, who was believed to be a person living in Minot.

Ruckle and Eustis were taken to the State’s Attorney’s office where they were interrogated in the presence of the defendant Ruckle's attorney. In the State’s Attorney’s office, the defendant Ruckle related that the three of them had been out shining deer; that he had shot at a pair of eyes which had appeared in the beam from the headlights of their car, supposing the animal to be a deer, but that, on investigation, they discovered that he had shot a domestic animal.

Subsequent to the meeting and interrogation in the State’s Attorney’s office, Ruckle and Eustis took the officers to a remote area in Mountrail County where the head and the entrails of the animal which had been killed had been dumped into a deep ravine. They also helped the officers locate the hide, which had been placed in a burlap sack, weighted with rocks, and sunk in the backwaters of the Garrison Reservoir. Before disposing of the hide, they had cut out the brand, and this portion of the hide never was recovered.

The morning following the killing of the animal, the defendant Marmon called on one Vincent Cowley in Minot. The conten-tention of the defendants was that they thought the animal which they had killed was one belonging to Cowley, who had cattle located in the general area where this animal had been shot. Defendant Ruckle testified that defendant Marmon had believed the animal killed belonged to Cowley *59 and had said that he would go to see Cowley in Minot the following morning and report its killing. Testimony was then offered through Cowley as to what Marmon had told him when he went to Minot to report the killing of the animal. When the State’s objections to these statements were sustained by the trial court, the defendants made an offer of proof, by such witness, that defendant Marmon had gone to Cowley the morning following the killing of the animal and informed him that the defendants had shot one of his cattle, and offered to pay for it; that Cowley subsequently investigated and found that he had not lost an animal; and that Cowley’s investigation was based on what he had been told by Marmon.

This offer of proof was denied on the ground that Cowley’s proposed testimony was based on self-serving declarations made to him by defendant Marmon and that such statements, made the day following the shooting of the animal, were not a part of the res gestae.

It was during the examination of the defendants’ witness Cowley that an incident occurred which the defendants contend was prejudicial error, and on which they place much stress on this appeal. Cowley was asked whether he had had any conversation with the defendant Marmon on the morning following the killing of the animal, as to whether one of his animals was missing. One of the attorneys for the State objected to this question as immaterial, incompetent, hearsay, and self-serving, and then added:

“If Mr. Marmon has any statement he should get up on the stand himself.”

On this record, the jury returned a verdict of guilty against the defendants, Ruc-kle and Marmon. Their appeal to this court raises several issues which we will consider in the following order:

1.Should the court have granted a mistrial on the motion of the defendants at the time the attorney for the State referred to the fact that the defendant Marmon could take the witness stand if he wanted to produce certain evidence?

2. Was the reference to Harry Eustis, without calling him as a witness, prejudicial error as to the defendants ?

3. Is the evidence sufficient as to the defendant Marmon to sustain the verdict of guilty?

4. Did the defendants receive a fair trial?

Our statute provides that the neglect or refusal of a defendant to testify shall not create or raise the presumption of guilt against him. The law further provides that such neglect or refusal to testify shall not be referred to by the prosecuting attorney or considered by the court or jury before whom the trial is held. Sec. 29-21-11, N.D. C.C. Thus our law specifically prohibits the prosecution from making any reference to the failure of a defendant to take the stand.

The United States Supreme Court has held that comment to the jury by a prosecutor in a State criminal trial upon the defendant’s failure to testify as to matters which he can reasonably be expected to deny or explain, because of facts within his knowledge, violates the self-incrimination clause of the Fifth Amendment to the Federal Constitution. Griffin v. State of California, 380 U.S. 609, 85 S.Ct. 1229, 14 L.Ed. 2d 106 (1965).

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
154 N.W.2d 55, 1967 N.D. LEXIS 89, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-marmon-nd-1967.