State v. Martinez

210 P.2d 620, 53 N.M. 432
CourtNew Mexico Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 13, 1949
DocketNo. 5198.
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 210 P.2d 620 (State v. Martinez) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico 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. Martinez, 210 P.2d 620, 53 N.M. 432 (N.M. 1949).

Opinion

SADLER, Justice.

The defendant was convicted of voluntary manslaughter and sentenced accordingly, from which judgment and sentence he prosecutes this appeal.

In the early morning hours of February 12, 1948, about 1:30 o’clock, Robert Buck, the deceased, accompanied by two companions, Quinten Hulse and Charles Holman, •27, 22 and 20 years of age, respectively, entered the bar owned and conducted by the defendant, Ben Martinez, in the Village of Bayard in Grant County, New Mexico, for the purpose of ordering drinks. Upon entering the bar they found it somewhat crowded by patrons approximately twenty .five (25) in number, all of Spanish-American extraction, who were loafing, drinking and talking with each other. Drinks were being served upon order by the defendant and his bar maid, Agnes Padilla.

The two younger men of the party had chanced upon each other at 5 o’clock the afternoon before and were joined by Buck, the third member of the party, about eight o’clock. After visting several bars and remaining in each for varied and indefinite periods, at least one by Holman and Hulse alone, and about three following the meeting with Buck, at one of which the party ate their evening meal, they came to' a saloon known as “Ben’s Bar,” owned and operated by the defendant, later to become the scene of the shooting. It was an established fact that the three young men had imbibed freely of intoxicating beverages before reaching this bar. The two younger men were drinking beer and the eldest, the deceased, taking mixed drinks, —whiskey and water. The estimate of the number of drinks consumed by members of the party between the late afternoon before and the hour of entering Ben’s Bar, nearly eight hours later, was from 8 to 10, each. While all naturally were under the influence of intoxicants, the extent was not established with any degree of certainty and, no doubt, varied as to each.

Upon entering Ben’s Bar, Buck proceeded to the bar and Hulse paused and began talking to “a couple of fellows there at the table that started hallooing” at the Buck party as soon as they entered the bar. Holman stopped and observed that one of the two who had hailed them had picked up a chair in each hand and commenced bouncing them around on the floor. Holman stepped over to him and warned that he had better put the chairs down .or he might hurt somebody. The next thing Holman knew they were down on the floor wrestling and fighting with the man bouncing the chairs on top when later separated. While still on the floor engaged in this scuffle near the bar the defendant, leaning over .the bar, endeavored to strike one or both of the participants with a long green bottle held in his hand by the neck.

During the struggle between Holman and the other person, later identified as a soldier named Ballesteros, home on furlough, Buck picked up a coke and beer bottle and struck the edge of the bar with their necks, breaking them. It was at this point that Agnes Padilla called John Turney, a deputy sheriff, who acted as policeman for Bayard, and asked him to come over, stating there was trouble in Ben’s Bar. When Deputy Turney arrived for whom a second call had been put in while he was enroute to Ben’s Bar, broken pieces of glass, as if from the bottles broken on the edge of the bar, were scattered around over the floor of the bar.

While the fight was in progress, the defendant had told the participants to break it up and get out. Buck asked why they could not be served drinks. Some one, apparently a customer, responded: “This is a Mexican joint, you can’t have a drink here”. A member of Buck’s party said, “all right, we will go next door”. There was another bar next door. The three members of the party then started out. Hulse was in the lead, followed by Buck and Holman. As they neared the door, they were rushed by a group of those in the bar and shoved through it, the defendant, who was participating in the expulsion, .striking Buck on the head with a black jack as his party was being expelled. The door was then “slammed shut” after them, thereby engaging the automatic lock and denying reentry to those outside.

The blow from' the black jack had apparently dazed Buck and upon coming out of his dazed condition and realizing he had been struck, he turned and called upon those inside to let him reenter, applying an opprobrious epithet to whichever one had struck him. Enraged, seemingly, at his inability to get in and at his unknown assailant, he then struck violently with his closed fist the glass panel in the locked door breaking a large hole in it. The panel had dimensions of feet 3 inches by 2 feet and the breaking exposed the interior of the bar. As soon as this occurred Holman said, “Let’s get going be-for somebody gets hurt”. Hulse then began pulling Buck back away from the door and toward the car and had gotten him practically to the door of Holman’s car, parked some 10 to 12 feet away at the curb and across the sidewalk from the front'of the bar, when the shot next mentioned rang out. In the meantime the defendant, who had returned to his place behind the bar, took a 38 caliber pistol from a drawer under it and fired a single shot through the opening made by the broken panel in the door. All three members of the Buck party entered the car as hastily as possible and were driven post haste to Fort Bayard .Hospital, by Holman, owner of the. car. .

It was found upon examination that Buck had suffered a gunshot wound from a bullet which entered his body just below the clavicle, or collar bone, on his right side, making its exit some four (4) inches lower than the point of entrance. In other words, the bullet entered deceased’s body just below the collar bone on the right side and came out right above the lower part of the shoulder blade. It perforated the right axillary artery and vein and although an emergency operation was performed within twenty four hours following the shooting, it was to no avail. The deceased died from the gunshot wound shortly after midnight of February 14th.

It was also found that Quinten Hulse had been wounded by the same shot which passed through the body of the deceased, Buck. As already indicated, he was directly behind and facing the rear of Buck’s body pulling him back towards the car to which point he had brought him, when defendant fired the fatal shot. The bullet, as it made its exit from the body of Buck, entered the body of Hulse at the relative location borne by his body to that of Buck, standing directly behind and facing the latter’s body. It was still maintaining its downward course when it entered Hulse’s body and continued to do so until it came to rest in his body. Hulse was not mortally wounded and in due season recovered.

The party of three, Buck, Hulse and Holman, had already left the scene of the shooting when Deputy Turney arrived. At that time it was not known by the defendant whether the shot fired by him had struck any one. The officer examined the pistol and found the chamber containing five shells, four loaded and one empty. .The defendant admitted to the officer that he had fired the shell found empty in the pistol, which he had taken from a drawer in his bar about a minute and a half after the panel in the door was broken, upon returning to his place behind the bar. He also admitted that following the expulsion of Buck, Hulse and Holman, the door was closed by Gavino Navarro and that it locked automatically. In this connection, the defendant testified:

“A.

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Bluebook (online)
210 P.2d 620, 53 N.M. 432, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-martinez-nm-1949.