State v. Mueller

168 N.W. 66, 40 N.D. 35, 1918 N.D. LEXIS 64
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedMay 9, 1918
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 168 N.W. 66 (State v. Mueller) 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. Mueller, 168 N.W. 66, 40 N.D. 35, 1918 N.D. LEXIS 64 (N.D. 1918).

Opinions

Bruce, Ch. J.

The defendant in this ease was convicted of the crime of murder in the second degree. Practically the only defense is that of insanity. The abstract contains nearly six hundred printed pages. Appellant’s brief contains seventy-three assignments of error, and the rules of this court are entirely ignored which require “the assignments upon which he relies to be set forth,” and that “the brief shall contain such portions of the record as will enable the court to clearly understand the nature of the case, and, where rulings on the testimony constitute the errors complained of, sufficient explanatory facts or evidence shall be recited.” See rule 34.

These omissions are no doubt due to the fact that the principal counsel has been called to the service of his country, and are ignored by this court for that reason, and for the reason that it does not desire that anyone shall be imprisoned for thirty years without a full opportunity for a hearing. Defendant’s omissions, however, have rendered an examination of the case extremely laborious and extremely difficult.

The defendant, John Mueller, is charged in the information with the murder of Valentine, otherwise Fulda Iiins, on December 25, 1915. Valentine was seventeen years of age and the defendant was twenty years old. The defendant lived with his parents, 6 miles north of Medina, in Stutsman county, and Valentine Hins lived with his parents 4 miles north of Medina. The Hins family had lived there about five years, at the time the crime was committed. The Hins and Mueller families appear to have been friendly and visited back and forth until January, 1915, when they became unfriendly because of undue intimacy between Gustave Hins, a brother of the murdered boy, Valentine, and Anna Mueller, a sister of the defendant, John Mueller. Some time about January 9, 1915, Gustave Hins, having been charged by the Mueller family with this offense against Anna Mueller ran away and left the country. From that time until the time of the murder, on December 25, 1915, the two families did not visit back and forth and were not very friendly. The defendant, John Mueller, had not been to the Hins home for a year prior to the evening of December 24, 1915, the night before the murder was committed.

The defendant went to the Hins home on the afternoon of December 25, 1915, and together with Valentine Hins and Frederick Hins, the father of Valentine, went to the barn on the Hins farm to do their [40]*40chores. Valentine Hins and the defendant, John Mueller, went into the barn. Frederick Hins, the father of Valentine Hins, was working outside trying to drive some colts into the barn. When he got close to the barn he noticed that someone had shut the door which he had opened a short time before. "When he opened the door the defendant, John Mueller, began shooting with a revolver. Frederick Hins describes what happened, as follows: “Somebody had closed the door, but I don’t know who it was. It was not me. I then got behind the colt to drive it into the barn. Mueller was standing behind the horse which Fulda had watered last. I did not see Fulda. ... I wanted to drive the colt back to its place. I got about 8 feet from where Mueller was. It was John Mueller, the defendant. I did not see any gun from where he shot me. He shot me, then I saw it. When he shot me he was standing there until I came up and until he shot me. Was so scared I don’t know where he shot me first or where the shot hit me first. After he shot me, he shot me immediately again. The second time he hit me up here. I noticed he struck me up here. I did not say anything. I turned around and ran out, and he shot me again. He shot me through the foot, I mean he hit me through the leg instead of the foot. In the barn he shot me three times. After I was hit the third time, I fell down. I did not quite fall down altogether, but almost fell down or collapsed. I got out of the barn. My rvife came running. She was feeding the pigs in the old barn. I did not see anything else besides my wife when I got out. I did not see Mueller after I got out. I did not see Mueller until my wife was shot dead. I mean she fell doAvn before me and was completely dead. She did not die. She got up again after a while. When I saiv my wife shot doAvn like she was dead, I saw Mueller. He was standing beside me. . He was standing quiet and looking. He did not point the gun at me right away. My wife got back upon- her feet. She was holding my arm when she was shot. He came up behind and shot her and she fell dorvn before me. She was shot in the neck. After she got up she said, ‘John, are you shooting on purpose, or what is the matter?’ John said, ‘Yes.’ He said, ‘We had this made up three months ago already that this was to happen to you.’ He did not say anything else. . . . My wife said you were with us last evening and we thought you were good. He said, ‘Well, we are Muellers.’ [41]*41My little daughter came out and got hold of me and said, 'Oh, God! Father is shot.’ Mueller put the revolver up to her breast and said, 'Get away or I will shoot you.’ Then he put the revolver up 'to the breast of my wife and said, 'Go away or he would shoot her.’ And then he pointed the revolver at me and said I should go away or he would shoot. I said, 'John, have pity on me and do not kill me altogether.’ Then my wife said I should come along. Then I went in. Up to this time I had not seen Fulda.”

The witness then details going to the house and their son Valentine, or Fulda as they sometimes called him, coming to the house in a wounded condition, and details an attempt made by the defendant, John Mueller, to get into the house, and how they refused to let him come in until he had put down his revolver. Prior to the shooting of Frederick Hins and his wife, the defendant and Fulda Hins were in the barn with the door shut, and Fulda, or Valentine, was shot while in the barn. After the defendant had laid down his gun the Hins let. him into the house. Mr. Hins, the father, said to the defendant: “John are you drunk or what is the matter with you?” And the defendant replied, “I am as sober as you.” And it appears from the testimony that the reason given by the defendant for shooting was that he wanted to marry Johanna Hins, daughter of Frederick Hins, and that he “could not get her.” These same statements are testified to by Mrs. Hins a little later on in the abstract. The witness Frederika Hins, mother of Valentine Hins, details what happened in almost the same language. She says that she heard Frederick Hins ask the defendant, John Mueller, “Are you drunk, or what is the matter with you that you shoot all of us ?” And the defendant-replied, “I am as sober as you.” The witness says she said to John Mueller, the defendant, “You were with us last night and I thought you were favorably inclined towards us.” He said, “Well, we are Muellers.” She asked him if he was shooting on purpose, and he said, “Yes, we decided three months ago that we were going to do this to you.”

This same witness describes what happened after the shooting, as follows: “I next saw John after he and Valentine came up to the house. I was inside the house then. The first, thing that called my attention to their coming up was Fulda saying quietly, 'Mother, open [42]*42tbc door.’ Frederick said, ‘Is John. Mueller there too?’ Fulda said, ‘Yes.’ I said, ‘Then we will not open because he will shoot us again.’ John said we should open up or he would shoot through the door.” Then the witness details how the defendant finally put down his revolver and came up to the door and was let in. She also describes how Valentine Hins, or Fulda as he was called, looked when he came into the house.

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Related

State v. Butler
25 N.W.2d 648 (South Dakota Supreme Court, 1946)
State v. Carter
195 N.W. 567 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 1923)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
168 N.W. 66, 40 N.D. 35, 1918 N.D. LEXIS 64, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-mueller-nd-1918.