State v. Pennington

182 N.W. 962, 149 Minn. 109, 1921 Minn. LEXIS 605
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedMay 20, 1921
DocketNo. 22,207
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 182 N.W. 962 (State v. Pennington) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Pennington, 182 N.W. 962, 149 Minn. 109, 1921 Minn. LEXIS 605 (Mich. 1921).

Opinion

Holt, J.

Early on October 25, 1918, a man was found dead at a haystack within less than a mile from the easterly city limits of Anoka. The haystack was about 70 feet north of a road running east and west called Main street road. The ground indicated a struggle and the crushed skull clearly proved that some one had inflicted a fatal wound. J. B. Pennington, Peter Eauslange and Lorenz Stoppler were indicted, and the two first named, tried together, were convicted of murder in the second degree and sentenced. Each appeals from the order denjdng his separate motion for a new trial.

The errors assigned are by appellants discussed under the heads: (1) the evidence is insufficient to support the verdict; (2) errors in the admission of prejudicial testimony; -and (3) errors in the charge.

"Who the dead man was has never been ascertained. That his life was feloniously taken is conceded. The disputed proposition is defendants’ connection with the crime. Pennington, 52 years of age, owned a sedan car which he used as a taxicab in Minneapolis. Eauslange, 46 years old, who will be referred to hereafter as Miller, the name he generally was known by, worked around saloons, and usually roomed over them. The two defendants became acquainted when both were serving sentences at the Minneapolis workhouse for liquor law violations. Thereafter they frequently associated, taking women out for joy rides, and to some extent drinking together.

The theory of the state was that Miller met Stoppler in the afternoon on October 24, 1918, and, while drinking with him, concluded that he had some money which it was worth while to obtain, and, when the company of some girls suggested itself, Miller conceived the -plan to take a, taxicab ride out in the country, ostensibly to gratify Stoppler’s desire, but in reality for the purpose of robbing him; that to that end Pennington was engaged to take them out to- Bertha, Minnesota, a place some 30 miles north of Long Prairie, the home of one Edith with whom Miller associated; that Miller told Stoppler that the place was but 18 miles out in the country; that the party left Minneapolis at about 11 o’clock in the evening, and on the road to Anoka picked up- a confederate of the defendants, the man killed; that, when Stoppler became dead to his surroundings, he was robbed of his watch and $320 in bills which [111]*111he carried concealed upon his person, and that the confederate, the dead man, and Miller became involved in a dispute over the spoils, and in the altercation Miller gave the 'blows that caused the death.

It is not our purpose to give a resume of the evidence, but only to state the more conspicuous circumstances which tend to connect defendants with the crime.

From the testimony of the physician who conducted the post mortem the jury could find that the crime was committed shortly after 2 o’clock in the morning of the twenty-fifth; that, at 1:4-3 a. m. that day, defendants inquired the way to Bertha of one Hoy-t, a farmer, living o% miles south of Anoka; that not far from that time an automobile stopped a few minutes near the haystack mentioned and then proceeded rapidly toward Anoka; that at 2:35 a. m. defendants stopped at the mill in Anoka and inquired the road to Bertha; that they exhibited nervousness when they arrived at the home of Edith’s sister, near Bertha; that when arrested at Long Prairie, after being informed that the chief of police at Anoka had been killed, Miller told Stoppler it was not the chief of police, and that defendants then cautioned Stoppler to stick to his story that he had been robbed before they started on the trip-, for, if he did, they would be freed at Anoka and he would get his money back. Also, that after the preliminary hearing Miller told Stoppler that the dead man was trying to kill him, Stoppler, and that he, Miller, would not let him; that the dead man had got $120 of Stoppler5 s money; that in the fracas the door of the car was slammed on Miller’s hand, and then he hit the man twice, but did not expect him to die; 'that the man was a crook and safe blower; that the altercation took place outside the car, and that Pennington was no.t out of the car at all.

Stoppler also testified that afterwards Miller said they just took him, Stoppler, out to rob him. In corroboration of the robbery there was evidence that Miller had no money when they started, but had money to spend when they got to St. Cloud; that he did not carry a watch, but when asked the correct time at the home of Edith’s sister he had one, and that in ;a little pocket inside the coat pocket of the dead man were found $136 in bills, one of which was a one hundred dollar bill, and one a twenty dollar bill. Stoppler testified that the money of which he was relieved consisted of two one-hundred, two fifty, and one [112]*112twenty-dollar bills. It is readily seen that, 'if the jury accepted Stop-pier’s story of the robbery and of Miller’c confession as 'true, the verdict as to the latter is justified, even though there were many circumstances that might seem to discredit both. The jury could find a design to effect death from the force and brutal - manner in which the blows were evidently struck by a deadly bludgeon or weapon. Rosemond v. State, 86 Ark. 160, 110 N. W. 229.

But as to Bennington the situation is different. The only thing connecting him with any admission of guilt is that, at Long Prairie, after their arrest, he heard Miller tell Stoppler to keep quiet about his being robbed on the trip and they would all be freed, and also he, Pennington, then told Stoppler the same thing. The admissions 'by Miller, after the preliminary hearing of his connection with the killing, were not made in the presence of Pennington, and, as correctly ruled by the learned trial court, could not be made use of against him. Nor were these admissions of Miller made by a coeonspirator under such circumstances as to be admissible against Pennington, for they were made long after the commission of the crime. But, even were it otherwise, Miller’s statements exculpate Pennington. Taking the whole of the state’s case, including all of Stoppler’s testimony, we think no jury justified in connecting Pennington with the killing other than as an accessory after the fact, in that he aided Miller to 'escape. But as such he could be indicted and tried only under section 8479, Gr. S. 1913, as the court correctly charged the jury.

That there existed a conspiracy or tacit understanding between Pennington and Miller to harm or take the life of the dead man, is negatived ■by Miller’s statement of the affair to Stoppler, and is wholly out of harmony with the theory of the prosecution, which was that the one killed was a confederate, taken along to help rob Stoppler. Miller’s confession contains no suggestion that Pennington, either directly or indirectly, induced, encouraged, or counseled Miller to strike their companion. There is no foundation for a claim that defendants had conspired to either rob or harm their confederate, the dead man. Pennington made no attempt to obtain any money from the victim. This case is readily distinguishable from State v. Shea, 148 Minn. 368, 182 N. W. 445, where the evidence was clear that Shea, after knowledge that Reden[113]*113baugh had slain Mrs. Dunn for an agreed reward, eagerly sought and secured a share thereof. This was persuasive proof that he aided and abetted the crime committed in his presence.

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Related

State v. Dolliver
191 N.W. 594 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1923)

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Bluebook (online)
182 N.W. 962, 149 Minn. 109, 1921 Minn. LEXIS 605, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-pennington-minn-1921.