State v. Nesbeth

277 N.W. 36, 65 S.D. 613, 1937 S.D. LEXIS 112
CourtSouth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 30, 1937
DocketFile No. 8125.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 277 N.W. 36 (State v. Nesbeth) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering South 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. Nesbeth, 277 N.W. 36, 65 S.D. 613, 1937 S.D. LEXIS 112 (S.D. 1937).

Opinion

FOLLEY, J.

The information in this case charges that the defendants, Lee Bradley, William R. Nesbeth, and Harry Reeves, murdered one Floyd Parker, who went by the name of Harold Baker, some five or six miles southeast of Sioux Falls on the evening of the 31st day of December, 1936. Bradley fled the State immediately after the murder and has not been apprehended. Reeves was arrested in Sioux City three or four days after the *614 murder, charged with the robbery of a jewelry store in Sioux City on the 22d day of December, 1936. He pleaded guiltv to- that charge and was sentenced to a long term in the penitentiary at Fort Madison, Iowa. Nesbeth was arrested in the State of Oklahoma about the last day of February, 1937, and was tried alone for the murder of Baker. Reeves was brought back from Fort Madison and testified on behalf of the State at the trial of Nesbeth, while Nesbeth testified in his own behalf.

During the afternoon of December 30, 1936, the three defendants, Bradley, Nesbeth, and Reeves, left Sioux City, Iowa, in an automobile and drove to Omaha, Neb. They went to No. 522 North Nineteenth street in that city where they picked up Baker, the decedent, and Helen Seiler. Baker and Mrs. 'Seiler were not expecting the defendants and, upon some questions being raised as to where they were going, Blradley replied that they were going to Sioux Falls to get some dynamite. From Omaha they -drove by way of Norfolk, Neb., to Yankton, where they crossed the Missouri river, and from there to Sioux Falls, where they arrived about 5 o’clock on the morning of December 31st. On their arrival in Sioux Palls, Baker and Mrs. Seiler went to the A Y P Hotel, where they remained until the following evening-. Reeves went to another hotel, where he stayed all day, while Bradley took Nesbeth w-ith him to the home of his mother who lived in Sioux Falls, where they stayed at least part of the day. They had an understanding when they separated that morning that they would all get together that evening. Reeves and Nesbeth do not agree on just what happened in the evening. Rleeves testified that when Bradley and Nesbeth -came around with the car in the evening that Reeves got into the car and Bradley drove out about six miles southeast of Sioux Falls to what was known as the Parson Company’s powder house, or “dynamite shack,” as some of the witnesses called it, which stood out in a field about 125 yards from the road. At that time the powder house contained 310 25-pound kegs of powder and approximately three tons of dynamite. Bradley and Nesbeth pryed the lock off the door. Bradley went inside and pryed the lid off a box of -dynamite and put some of the dynamite, in his pocket. All three of them then got into the car again and. went back to Sioux Falls. They picked up- Baker and Mrs, Seiler. *615 Reeves, Baker, and Mrs. Seiler getting into the rear seat of the car while Bradley and N’esbeth rode in the front seat, with Bradley driving. They then drove back to the dynamite shack; they parked the car in the road, and Blradley told Nes'beth and Baker to' come over to the shack with him while he got some dynamite, and told Reeves to stay in the car with Mrs. Seiler. After an interval of five to ten minutes, Nes'beth came back to the car and told Mrs. Seiler and Reeves that Bradley and Baker were fighting and asked Mrs. Seiler to come over and see if she could get them to stop. All three, Nesbeth, Reeves, and Seiler, then went over to the powder shack. When they arrived there, Baker was lying on the ground apparently dead. Mrs. Seiler ran over and, as she bent over him, Reeves or Nesbeth knocked her down and Reeves or Bradley or both of them shot her; together they shot eight bullets into her body and Bradley kicked her. Then, apparently believing both Baker and Mrs. Seiler to be dead, all three of them picked her up and threw her into the shack, and then picked up Baker, and threw him in on top of her. Bradley then lighted a fuse he 'had in his pocket, and which was attached to a stick of dynamite. He threw the stick of dynamite with the burning fuse attached into the powder house, then all three of them ran for the car and made their getaway as fast as possible. The fuse burned until it ignited the dynamite and the entire contents of the powder house exploded. The powder house itself was completely obliterated, and only a few small fragments of Baker’s body were ever found; but Mrs. 'Seiler was not injured in any manner by the explosion. i In spite of the fact that she had been kicked and beaten and shot until she was supposed to' be dead, one bullet lodged .in her head back of her right eye, and permanently blinded her eye, and another bullet lodged in her spine, neither of which had been removed at the time of the trial, she did not at any time lose consciousness until the explosion occurred. She testified that she felt each bullet as it was shot into 'her body; that she knew when she was thrown into the powder house; that she saw Nesbeth give Bradley a match with which he lighted the fuse, and saw him and Reeves and Nesbeth when they ran for the car. The instant they left she started to crawl out of the powder house. She tried to drag B'aker out. She took hold of his coat collar and tried to' pull him out, but her *616 hands were so bloody they slipped off and she was unable to move him. She was not able to get up on her feet and run, but she continued to walk and crawl as best she could, and by the time the explosion took place she was far enough away to escape further injury. Some little time after the explosion she was found lying in the snow by the side of the road by some boys who put her into-their car and took her to a hospital in Sioux Falls.

So far as is shown by the evidence in the record there had been no idea in the mind of either of the defendants prior to their leaving Sioux City of murdering or disposing of the bodies of Seiler and Baker. The matter does not appear to have been mentioned by either of the defendants, ■ nor does any motive for the commission of the crime appear to have existed. Yet the whole enterprise appears to have been carefully planned, by Bradley at least, and this assumption is strengthened by the remark: “We are going to Sioux Falls to get some dynamite,” made by Bradley when they started from Omaha.

In order to show the motive of the defendants in disposing of Baker and Seiler, the court admitted evidence of the commission of a robbery in Sioux City, Iowa, on the evening of the 22d day of December, 1936, ten days prior to the murder. This was known as the Ehlerman robbery. Ehlerman had a jewelry store in 'Sioux City. He appears to have been very hard up and conceived the idea of realizing on his burglary insurance. He made arrangements with Nesbeth. to rob his store. Nesbeth took Bradley, Baker, and Reeves in on the venture. Bradley and Baker committed the actual robbery. Reeves acted as lookout, but Nesbeth stayed away and took no part in the actual robbery. Ehlerman had agreed to give Nesbeth $1,000 for “pulling the job,” to be paid as soon as he (Ehlerman) got his money, and Reeves said he was to have $1,000. Wlhat the others were to have does not appear in the record, other than that Baker claimed he was to have $250 for his “share.”

Mrs. Seiler knew of the plan to rob the Ehlerman store before the robbery took place, and knew the particulars of the robbery when it was committed. Whether Ehlerman. paid Nesbeth the $x,ooo he was to have does not appear from the record, but Baker did not receive what he was expecting.

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Related

State v. Rose
324 N.W.2d 894 (South Dakota Supreme Court, 1982)
State v. Houghton
272 N.W.2d 788 (South Dakota Supreme Court, 1978)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
277 N.W. 36, 65 S.D. 613, 1937 S.D. LEXIS 112, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-nesbeth-sd-1937.