State v. McLane

15 Nev. 345
CourtNevada Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 15, 1880
DocketNo. 1014
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 15 Nev. 345 (State v. McLane) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nevada 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. McLane, 15 Nev. 345 (Neb. 1880).

Opinions

By the Court,

Beatty, C. J.:

The defendants were jointly indicted, tried together, and both found guilty of murder in the first degree. They unite in appealing from the judgment and from the order denying their motion for a new trial.

Each is nevertheless represented here, as he was throughout the proceedings in the district court, by his own special counsel, and each relies upon one or more assignments of error, based upon exceptions in which the other did not join. For this reason the case must be treated as if there were two separate appeals, though some points, common to both, will require to be noticed but once.

[352]*352And, first, as to the indictment. The defendant, Mclntire, demurred, and both defendants moved in arrest of judgment, on the ground that it was fatally defective in failing to describe the weapon used in the commission of the alleged offense.

The indictment charges: “ That the said George W. McLane, Jr., and Frank McIntire, at the said county of Lincoln, in the said state of Nevada, on the thirteenth day of December, A. D. 1879, or thereabouts, without authority of law, willfully, feloniously, and with malice aforethought, killed Frederick "Wallbaum, by then and there shooting him, the said Frederick,” etc.

The substantial form to be followed in an indictment for murder is prescribed in section 1859 of the Compiled Laws, and in that form the words “ by shooting him ” are followed by the words, “with a pistol (or with a gun or other weapon, according to the facts”).

Judged by this section alone, this indictment would seem to be defective. But by the very next section (1860), it is expressly enacted that: “It shall not be necessary to set forth in the indictment the character of weapon used, nor that any weapon was used in the commission of the offense, unless the using of such weapon is a necessary ingredient in the commission of the offense.”

The meaning and application of this provision is plain. In such offenses as assault with a deadly weapon, drawing and displaying a deadly weapon, etc., the character of the weapon used is an essential ingredient, and in charging such offenses, the necessity of setting this forth in the indictment is readily perceived. But in murder it is not essential that a weapon of a,ny sort should be used, and in such cases the law has wisely dispensed with the necessity of describing a weapon.

The stricter rule, which formerly prevailed with reference to this matter, rested upon.two grounds of supposed necessity. It was thought necessaiy to make the charge in the indictment as specific as possible, in order, first, that a judgment thereon might be an effectual bar to a second prosecution for the same offense; and, second, to afford the [353]*353defendant a reasonable guide in the preparation of his defense.

But as the record of a conviction or acquittal, unaided by parol testimony, is not in itself sufficient to sustain a plea of former conviction or acquittal, it is clear that, for this purpose, the difference between charges more or less specific is a difference of degree merely, not of kind, and that the simplification of the charge, although it might, in some rare instance, subject a defendant to greater trouble in sustaining such a plea, .does not deprive him of any right guaranteed by the constitution.

As to the second ground, it was long ago discovered that the tendency of the rule requiring the defendant to be informed by the indictment of the exact particulars of the charge against him, was greatly to facilitate the escape of the guilty, without materially contributing to the protection of the innocent; and the courts accordingly proceeded to correct the evil, not by a direct abrogation of the rule, but by resorting to a clumsy expedient by which its effects were neutralized. They sanctioned the practice of charging, in separate counts of the indictment, the use of as many different means of producing death as the pleader might think the uncertainties of his case demanded, thus preserving the rule in form, while abandoning the ground upon which it was supposed to rest; for it is clear that an indictment, which charges the use of every possible means of producing death, is exactly as indefinite as one that charges the killing in the simplest and most general terms.

The present case serves very well to illustrate the foregoing observations. It would have been easy to charge the shooting to have been done with a pistol, in one count of the indictment, with a gun and pistol in another, with two pistols in another, and so ad infinitum. But supposing the defendants to have been innocent, how could they have prepared their defense against such a' charge, better than against the simple allegation that they killed Wallbaum by shooting him ? ' The difference would have been in this respect a difference of form merely, not of substance, and it can not, therefore, be pretended that the legislature has ex-[354]*354ceeclecl its powers in prescribing the simpler in place of the more cumbrous form.

It is only necessary to say, vVitli respect to the cases cited by counsel for appellants, to prove that this indictment is bad, that they all have reference to the rule of pleading in force prior to the adoption of our statutory rule. (Comp. L. 1860). We think the district court did not err in overruling the demurrer and motions in arrest of judgment.

In order to a proper understanding of most of the remaining points urged in behalf of the appellants, it will be necessary to make a statement of some of the more important facts developed by the testimony adduced at the trial.

It appears that the deceased, Frederick Wallbaum, resided on a ranch in Pahranagat valley. He was unmarried, and had no one living with him except the defendant Mclntire, who for some months prior to Wallbaum’s death was employed by him as a vaquero. His nearest neighbor was George W. McLane, Sr., father of the other defendant, who resided on a ranch five miles distant.

That Wallbaum was murdered at his ranch on the twelfth or thirteenth of Deeembei-, 1879, was very clearly proved. On the eighteenth of December his body was fished out of a well on the premises, where it had been thrown and held down by apile of stones. Death had evidently been produced by two gunshot wounds, one in the back of the head, and the other in the side of the head, and the evidence all tended to show that these wounds were inflicted by one or the other, or both of the defendants, not earlierthan the twelfth nor later than the thirteenth of December. Mclntire was at Wallbaum’s ranch on both the twelfth and thirteenth. McLane was there only on the thirteenth. They left the ranch together early on the fourteenth, going first to the ranch of the elder McLane, and thence to the town of Hiko, where they spent that night. The next day, the fifteenth, they started home, and went as far as Pierson’s ranch, which was about a half mile from the elder McLane’s. Mclntire remained at Pierson’s that night, but McLane went home, and, rousing up his father, informed him that Mclntire had told him, on their return from Hiko, that [355]*355lie had murdered Wallbaum. By his father’s advice, he started back to Hiko early in the morning, procured a warrant and an officer, and had Mclntire arrested. After this' he assisted in the search for Wallbaum’s body, which, as above stated, was found in the well on his own premises, on the morning of the eighteenth of December.

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Bluebook (online)
15 Nev. 345, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-mclane-nev-1880.