State v. McCann

49 P. 216, 16 Wash. 249, 1896 Wash. LEXIS 45
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 22, 1896
DocketNo. 2271
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 49 P. 216 (State v. McCann) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington 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. McCann, 49 P. 216, 16 Wash. 249, 1896 Wash. LEXIS 45 (Wash. 1896).

Opinions

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Scott, J.

The defendants were informed against and prosecuted for the murder of one Joseph Cicero. The charging part of the information was as follows:

“They, the said John McCann, James McCann and Michael McCann, in the county of King, in the State of Washington, on the twenty-first day of August, A. D. 1895, purposely and of their deliberate and premeditated malice killed one Joseph Cicero by then and there purposely and of their deliberate and premeditated malice, shooting and thereby mortally wounding the said Joseph Cicero, with a revolver pistol, had and held by them, the said John McCann, James McCann and Michael McCann, from which said mortal wound the said Joseph Cicero then and there died.”

Michael McCann, the father of the other two defendants, was acquitted by the jury, but John and J ames were found guilty of murder in the first degree and are under sentence of death. Their appeal therefrom presents a great many questions which will be taken up in detail, and the facts connected with the homicide will substantially appear in the discussion of certain of them.

The first errors alleged relate to the refusal of the court to sustain challenges for cause to two of the jurors who were called to try the case, but as the record shows that the defendants afterwards peremptorily challenged both of them and did not use all of their peremptory challenges, there was at least no harmful error. State v. Moody, 7 Wash. 395 (35 Pac. 132).

[252]*252The defendants were all charged in one information, and elected by one of their attorneys to be tried together, and a continuance was granted them to prepare for trial with that understanding. The defendants were not present in court when this was done, and subsequently, when the cause was called for trial, one of the defendants, Michael McCann, demanded a separate trial, which the court refused to grant, and this is alleged as error. But as Michael McCann was acquitted and the two other defendants did not join in the request of Michael McCann that he be tried separately, and did not demand separate trials for themselves, there was no prejudicial error here.

It is contended that the court erred in sustaining objections to certain questions asked witness Parhm upon his cross-examination by counsel for the defendants. The first one was, “You were connected with him [Cicero] when he ran a saloon in this city?” The objection to this was properly sustained, for it assumed as a fact that the deceased once conducted a saloon, of which there was no evidence, and it did not tend to show what the feeling was between the witness and the defendants and was directed to business matters only between the deceased and the witness, and, furthermore, the question was thereafter substantially answered in the further examination of the witness. The remaining questions were directed to occurrences between the deceased and the defendants, relating to altercations over road matters, and the part that the witness took therein. The objection was properly sustained to these questions. The witness had already testified that he was a friend of the deceased, and the court informed counsel for the defendants that he might interrogate the witness as to what feeling he had, friendly or unfriendly, towards the defendants, [253]*253and this was all the defendants were entitled to show; hut counsel did not see fit to examine the witness upon that subject.

The next error assigned is the refusal of the court to strike certain testimony given by one Weiss, relating to an occurrence between the deceased and John McCann some months previous to the homicide, and in answer to the question, Where did this conversation take place?” the witness answered, “Right there. Very near where he murdered him this year.”

It is contended that this answer was objectionable as giving the conclusion of the witness with reference to the guilt of the defendants.- But it was not specially objected to on that ground at the time. Counsel for the defendant said:

“ It impresses me, may it please the court, that this does not come within your honor’s suggestion, and I move to strike it all out.”

The suggestion referred to was made in ruling upon an objection to a prior question as immaterial and irrelevant, wherein the court said:

“ If the witness recalls a conversation where any threats were made I think it is proper for the witness to state it.”

Other questions were asked and answered after this ruling and prior to the question and answer above given, and the motion was apparently directed to the. whole of it. In response to the motion, the court said:

“ I do not think there is any necessity, particularly, to strike it out, if the jury do not understand any more about it than the court does.

The particular testimony of the witness above given was objectionable to the extent of stating his concha[254]*254sion that the deceased was murdered, and if a motion to strike said answer upon that ground had been made, it might be considered that a refusal of it would have tended to impress the jury that the conclusion of the witness as to the crime charged was competent testimony and might have resulted in harmful error, but it is apparent that the testimony was treated as of no consequence, and what did really occur was probably equivalent to striking it out. However, no exception was taken by the defendants to the court’s refusal to strike the testimony, and this is a sufficient legal answer to the objection urged, and it is also evident from the whole course pursued that the defendants as well as the court treated the testimony of the witness as trivial and entitled to little or no weight.

When the state rested, the defendants moved to discharge Michael McCann on the ground that there was not sufficient evidence of guilt as to him to warrant submitting the matter to the jury. Michael McCann was acquitted, and of course he was not injured by the ruling, but it is contended that the other defendants were, on the ground that they would have been entitled to have certain of the testimony relating to the doings of Michael McCann stricken from the case after he was discharged. However this may be, we are of the opinion that there was sufficient evidence as to the guilt of Michael McCann, and of a conspiracy upon the part of all three of the defendants to warrant the court in submitting the whole case to the jury-

It appears that the McCanns, father and sons, lived together upon a farm. Cicero, the deceased, lived upon another farm near by, his house being about an eighth of a mile from McCann’s house, and they had all resided at said places respectively for some con[255]*255siderable time previous to the homicide. The deceased and the McCanns had been upon bad terms for some time. At the time of the homicide, Cicero was working upon the road with a Mr. Davis and a Mr. Provan, at a point about one-third of the way from his house to McCann’s house. The tragedy occurred soon after the noon hour of said 21st day of August. At some time in the forenoon of said day Michael McCann came up to where Cicero was at work and had a wordy altercation with him relating to a coming election for road supervisor, for which position one of the McCann boys was a candidate. Cicero was opposing him and supporting another candidate. One Mr.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
49 P. 216, 16 Wash. 249, 1896 Wash. LEXIS 45, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-mccann-wash-1896.