State v. Rader

186 P. 79, 94 Or. 432, 1919 Ore. LEXIS 239
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 23, 1919
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 186 P. 79 (State v. Rader) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon 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. Rader, 186 P. 79, 94 Or. 432, 1919 Ore. LEXIS 239 (Or. 1919).

Opinions

BURNETT, J.

Substantially the facts disclosed by the evidence are these: The defendant is a man about thirty years of age, weighing about one hundred and eighteen pounds. He had ridden on the range after stock since he was a small boy, and had been dragged by a horse, injuring him severely and breaking his ribs. His arm had been broken and one of his legs had been fractured in two places. The deceased Mc-Oue was a man described in the testimony as weighing about two hundred pounds, well formed and muscular. The defendant attended to business for his father, who was a stock-raiser and owned the premises where the homicide occurred. It was known as the Johnson ranch and had been leased to a man named Stubblefield, who had assigned the lease or sublet the same to McOue. Contending that the tenant’s transfer was void, the senior Rader had been [435]*435endeavoring to get McCue off the place and had caused the defendant to serve upon him a notice to quit. No litigation on the subject is revealed by the testimony. In addition to this there was an unsettled account between McCue and Rader respecting the use and occupation of the Johnson place and some witnesses say that McCue admitted owing a balance to Rader, which he promised to pay, without admitting any certain amount. Some time in the autumn of 1917 he had vacated the Johnson place and taken up his residence in Malheur County. On his way, the defendant sought to collect the balance from him and he promised to pay when he returned. He came back in February, 1918, and brought with him some horses to which he intended to feed some hay left on the Johnson place.

On the day' of the homicide the defendant was at what is known as the "Wright place, some distance northerly from the scene of the tragedy. A neighbor, Mr. Hale, came along on his way to the town of Long Creek, which was still farther south than the Johnson place, and asked the defendant to accompany him to Long Creek, to which the defendant assented. The latter took with him an automatic pistol in the pocket of his chaps, also a rifle which he carried in a scabbard attached to his saddle. Both Hale and the defendant traveled on horseback. Before he reached the Johnson place the defendant dismounted, took the rifle from its scabbard and carried it across the saddle in front of him after remounting. He explains this change of its position by saying that he was afraid of one Guy Lunceford, who was in the immediate vicinity and with whom he had had some trouble before. He explains carrying both firearms by saying [436]*436that it had been his habit for several years while riding in the livestock business and that it was customary among range riders in that country to carry.firearms for the purpose of shooting wolves and other predatory animals, and that he had been riding after stock within the previous day or two.

On arriving at the house on the Johnson place, a one-room' cabin described as being fourteen by sixteen feet in dimensions, he said to Hale in substance that he wanted to see McCue for a moment, and went into the house, carrying the rifle on his arm. After a few minutes he reappeared at the door and invited Hale to dismount and come in to warm himself, as the day was very cold. Hale went in and found the defendant with his rifle still on his arm, and rolling a cigarette. After having been introduced to McCue, the conversation proceeded upon indifferent subjects, without any appearance of anger, until Eader asked McCue, “What are we going to do about this business?” and the latter answered, “I ain’t going to do a damn thing’ about it,” took up a pan that was on the stove and slammed it on a bench. At this point Hale, apprehending trouble, left the cabin and mounted his horse. Soon afterward he heard considerable noise as of a struggle in the house, and the defendant called to him for help. Hale at once dismounted, re-entered the house and found that McCue had the defendant prostrate on the floor, face downward, and was “churning” his head upon the floor. Hale intervened by telling McCue to let him have Eader and he would take him away. He says in substance that he was compelled to lift Eader from the floor, grasp bim under one arm and place the other over his shoulder and that he had dragged him around and while he was' [437]*437in a half reclining position in Hale’s arms they reached the door, when McCue made a dive at Rader and either struck at him or grabbed at him, saying, “You son-of-a-bitch, I will learn you something! ” At this juncture Rader, who had said nothing nor made any demonstration since Hale re-entered the house, fired his pistol twice in quick succession. These shots took effect in the abdomen of McCue. Hale found the rifle lying on the floor. It was not fired during the melée. Hale released Rader at the discharge of the pistol and started in pursuit of their saddle-horses, which had run away. On his return he found McCue lying on the bed in the southeast comer of the room. The dying declaration of McCue indicates that he went outside of the house and returned at once to his bed. In this he is corroborated by the defendant.

The defendant’s narration of the affray is to the effect that when he went into the house to see McCue there was no ill feeling manifested and nothing hostile occurred until he asked McCue what he was going to do about the business and the latter replied qs stated. He says that he had set his rifle down by'a small cupboard in the comer and was looking out of the west window when suddenly, without warning, McCue leaped upon him and struck him several severe blows, rendering him at least partially unconscious; that he-was engaged in beating him when Rader called to Hale for help, and that it was not until McCue had renewed the attack upon him while he was still in Hale’s arms that he fired, taking the pistol from his pocket. Rader and Hale immediately procured help and summoned a surgeon, who operated upon the decedent, but the latter died the following day.

[438]*438The dying declaration of the decedent is the only other evidence about the details- of the fatal affray. As narrated by the surgeon, McCue said:

“ ‘Fritz [meaning the defendant] came in here hunting trouble, with his gun and I knocked him down trying to get his gun away from him. ’ Mr. Hale came in — first—I think he said Hale — he said that — ‘Hale was going to take him out so he wouldn’t bother me. ’ Fritz began shooting, twice in the house and two or three times outside, he didn’t remember, McCue didn’t remember just how many times he shot outside. ‘He knocked me down and then I think there was two shots.’ One shot outside knocked him down, and then he -shot him through the head and arm. I don’t remember just the exact words, but that is as near as I can remember.”

Another witness, Charles Lunceford, attributes these words to McCue in his dying declaration:

‘ ‘ He came in and started trouble.' I saw he was going to use his gun, and I hit him and knocked him down and got his gun away from him, and would have got his pistol away and made it all right, but the other fellow came in [and had reference to Hale], and said he would take care of him, and he took him and started out with him, and he shot me twice in the stomach, and I' started towards him, and outside I fell, and he shot me in the head and arm after I was down. ’ ’

George Baird and Norman Caverhill give substantially the same account of the declaration.

In addition to the wounds in the- abdomen there was another in McCue’s right arm, and a fourth through the head from temple to temple.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
186 P. 79, 94 Or. 432, 1919 Ore. LEXIS 239, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-rader-or-1919.