State v. Nolan

61 N.W. 181, 92 Iowa 491
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedDecember 12, 1894
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 61 N.W. 181 (State v. Nolan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Nolan, 61 N.W. 181, 92 Iowa 491 (iowa 1894).

Opinion

Robinson, J.

On the fifth day of October, 1892, one J. B. Hurto received injuries which caused his death a few days later. At that time the defendant was working for him as a farm laborer. At about 10 o’clock in the morning of the day named, Hurto returned from an absence of about ten days in the states of Missouri and Nebraska, and was accompanied [492]*492by a neighbor named Janes, who had been with him on the trip. Both were somewhat under the influence of intoxicating liquor. Soon after their arrival, the defendant, Nolan, came to the house from a field, where he had been at work, and drank whisky or brandy which was given him by Hurto and Janes. The three men drank together several times, and after a time Nolan was told to harness a team to take Janes to his home, which was something more than two miles distant. Hurto finally concluded to go with them, and the three started away together in a light wagon or buggy. All occupied one seat, Nolan driving. They took Janes home, all continuing to drink the liquor. After they had finished it, Hurto and Nolan left for their home, the latter driving, and both being somewhat intoxicated. Hurto is described as being “pretty noisy” at the time. The road they took to reach home led eastward from Janes’ nearly three fourths of a mile, thence northward three fourths of a mile to G-oodwin’s corner, thence westward the same distance to a schoolhouse, thence northward about one fourth o.f a mile to Hurto’s house. At about 2 o’clock in the afternoon Nolan reached home, but without Hurto. In reply to a question of Mrs. Hurto, he said her husband was “down here a little way, laying on the roadthat he was not hurt; that the team ran away, the wagon was upset, the horses became detached from it, and that defendant had all he could do to hold them. She told him to go back and get Hurto, but he objected that he could not get Hurto into the wagon, and said, “Let the drunken fool lay there.” She then told the defendant to go to a neighbor’s for help, and to bring Hurto home. The defendant drove away, and appeared at Janes’ house at about 3 o’clock, and told him that the wagon had been upset, that Hurto had been thrown out and hurt, and that Nolan wanted Janes to help place Hurto in the wagon. [493]*493The two men started for Hurto, but Janes says he understood Nolan to say that the accident occurred on the road south of Groodwin’s, and that they did not go west of Groodwin’s, and did not find Hurto. Janes went home afoot, and Nolan drove into a road which led from the road south of Groodwin’s to a place called “Rhodes.” There he purchased a quantity of cider, and returned to Janes’ house, reaching there after 5 o’clock, and reporting that he had not found Hurto. Janes then went with him, and they found Hurto lying on the side of the road, west of Groodwin’s, placed him in the wagon, carried him home, and placed him in the barn. At nearly 10 o’clock at night they went for a physician, about ten miles away. At midnight the physician arrived, and caused Hurto to be carried to the house, and examined him. He found bruises on his face, head, and body, that his spinal column was fractured, that his lower limbs were paralyzed, and that he was without sensation in his hands and arms.- Some of the bruises might have been made with a man’s boot. It is claimed by the state that defendant pounded Hurto, threw him from the wagon against a fence post,' and kicked him, thereby inflicting the injuries which caused his death. It is the theory of the defense that the team became unmanageable by reason of the acts of Hurto while intoxicated; that it ran away, became detached from the wagon, which was overturned, and that both were thrown out, and that in that manner Hurto received the injuries in question.

1 [494]*4942 [493]*493I. The court charged the jury as follows: “Drunkenness does not disqualify a witness from testifying in court, provided he be sober at the time of testifying; but if he give evidence concerning an event at the time of the occurrence of which he was intoxicated, or under the influence of intoxicating liquors, such intoxication or degree of intoxication should be considered by you as a circumstance not [494]*494affecting his credibility, but the probability of his correctly remembering what transpired while so intoxicated. And if in this case you find from the evidence that the deceased, James B. Hurto, was intoxicated at the time he received his injuries, or was to a considerable extent under the influence of intoxicating liquors, you will consider such fact, and its effect, if any, upon the probability of his correctly recollecting the events, of which he spoke, and which have been introduced here as dying declarations, if you And that he did make such declarations.” The appellant complains of the words “not affecting his credibility,” as used in the following portion of the charge: “Such intoxication or degree of intoxication should be considered by you as a circumstance not affecting his credibility, but of his correctly remembering what transpired while so intoxicated.” It is said that Hurto had been a drunkard for years, and was affected with ■chronic alcoholism, mental symptoms of which are the impairment of the intellect, the loss of memory, the loss of the sense of right and justice, and actual aberration of mind. That chronic alcoholism may produce such results, and others of a similar character, is shown by the authorities, and it follows that the credibility of a witness may be thereby affected. It is said the words in question were used in a moral sense, but we think the credibility of the witness was a fact for the jury to determine, and that they were entitled to weigh his evidence in view of all the facts disclosed by the record. The evidence tends to show that Hurto was an habitual drunkard. His declarations made after receiving the injury were of vital importance to the state to convict the defendant, and it is not probable that he would have been convicted of the crime of murder in the first degree had the declarations not been received. Some of them are claimed by the defendant to have been unreasonable and contrary to uncontra[495]*495dieted facts. It may be the jury would have found the claims thus made to be unfounded, and that the credibility of Hurto had not been affected by his habits, and it is possible that the words complained of could not have been prejudicial in view of the charge as an entirety; but their use was erroneous, and should be avoided on another trial.

3 II. The only other question we find it necessary to determine is whether the verdict is sustained by the evidence. We are of the opinion that it must be answered in the negative. .There was evidence which tended to show that the injuries which caused the death of Hurto were inflicted by the defendant willfully. Hurto stated repeatedly, when he believed death to be imminent, that the defendant pounded him, kicked him,, and threw him against a stub and a post. When the defendant and Hurto left Janes’ house to return to their own, the defendant was driving.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
61 N.W. 181, 92 Iowa 491, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-nolan-iowa-1894.