State v. Radon

19 P.2d 177, 45 Wyo. 383, 1933 Wyo. LEXIS 14
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 14, 1933
Docket1785
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 19 P.2d 177 (State v. Radon) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming 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. Radon, 19 P.2d 177, 45 Wyo. 383, 1933 Wyo. LEXIS 14 (Wyo. 1933).

Opinion

*389 Blume, Justice.

Tlie defendant Dan Radon was tried for killing one Marco Ragonovich and was convicted of murder in tlie first degree, without recommendation, and was sentenced to be hung. He thereupon appealed the case to this court.

Much of the testimony vital in this case was given by foreigners, mostly Serbians, not able to speak English well, and hence it is somewhat difficult to measure the exact effect of the testimony. The following is a brief summary of the facts or testimony as developed on the trial. Both deceased and defendant were Serbians. The homicide took place on the morning of September 25th, 1931, at Gebo in this state. Early that morning the defendant had gone to the hills, for the purpose, as he claims, to shoot rabbits, and carried the gun with which the deceased was killed. About 9 -.30 he went to the pool hall, in which a number of men were then gathered. He watched a game of cards, and Mike Jukovitch suggested that he, the deceased and the defendant play a game of rummy. The latter answered that he did not want to play, because the deceased would “cry too much” in the game, which we take to mean that he would complain if he lost any money. Witnesses both for the state as well as for the defendant testified that the deceased thereupon became angry, twice got up to fight with the defendant, and that he abused and reviled the latter. He spoke in the Serbian language, not understood by the Americans present. According to a number of witnesses who spoke Serbian, including a witness for the state, the language used was extremely vile. We hesitate to set it out, and it is not necessary. So disgusted was the presiding judge that he remarked that he would not permit the interpreter to go “into the vilest stuff that can be used in the slums of America or Europe. ’ ’ He allowed the witnesses for the defense, however, to testify in full concerning it. Suffice it to say, that, without stating what effect it had upon *390 the mind of the defendant, it was apt to arouse the ire and passion of the ordinary man, and some of it implied threats of violence upon the person of the defendant, the extent of which it is hard to state. Soon thereafter the deceased left the pool hall, and perhaps ten minutes after that time the defendant did likewise. Up to that time the latter showed neither by words nor by gestures any intention of his subsequent act, but stood by substantially silent without any indication of resentment. He went to one of the offices and inquired whether or not he could go back to work in the mines and was told that there was no place for him at that time. About 11 o’clock he returned to the pool hall, noticed that the deceased also was coming toward that place and halted at the front steps. The latter had a small package in his right hand. Defendant testified that while he did not know what the deceased had in his hand, his attitude was menacing; that it made him afraid, and he feared that the deceased would kill him; that he told him to stop, and when the deceased failed to do so, he, the defendant, fired a shot, but that deceased continued coming toward him and that he, defendant, fired two more shots; that he was excited, and confused, went to or toward his rooming house, in the neighborhood of which he was soon thereafter placed under arrest. Other witnesses testified that five different shots were fired.

No special motive for the murder appears in the evidence, and if not committed in self defense would appear to have been committed either out of revenge for the insults heaped upon defendant by the deceased, or because, the defendant let his ire and his passions get the better of him, goaded on, as he perhaps was, by the conduct of the deceased on the morning of the homicide and by similar conduct on previous occasions, in connection with which much uncontradicted testimony was given by witnesses called on behalf of the defendant. The latter and *391 the deceased had both lived in Butte. In fact defendant had come from that place only a few weeks previous to the homicide in question, going to Gebo in the hope of finding work there in the coal mines. While both were at Butte, the deceased, according to the testimony, had a number of times assaulted the defendant, once having a gun in his hands, the assaults generally accompanied by insulting remarks — once at least by a threat that he would send the defendant to the graveyard. The defendant testified that he was afraid of deceased, and that the latter was in the habit of carrying a gun or a pair of knuckles. After the homicide in question, no gun or knuckles, however, were found on the deceased. The defendant sought to show by the county attorney that at the time when the room of deceased was searched, immediately after -the homicide in question, these deadly weapons were found. But that was denied. We might say in that connection, that there is in the record an affidavit on the part of Mary Yanich, with whom both the defendant and the deceased roomed, that the county attorney and the sheriff came to her home to search the room of the deceased, and that they found a large knife, a pistol and some shells. The sheriff, by affidavit, denied this, but claimed that Mrs. Yanich handed him a pistol, which was found in another part of the house, telling him that it was the gun of the deceased. The gun with which the homicide in question was committed was found near the defendant when placed under arrest. Other facts will be stated hereafter. A number of errors are assigned. Most of them we deem to be without merit or not prejudicial. Only a few need be noticed.

1. Before the trial of the case, the appellant filed a motion to direct the jury commissioners of Hot Springs County to certify to the clerk of court the names of all taxpayers on the tax list, and whose names should appear upon the combined assessment roll and tax list of that *392 county for the year 1931, and that the jury panel of 42 selected from the list already made be set aside. This motion was denied and this action of the court is assigned as error. It is the contention that John W. Sapp, who at the time of making the list acted as chairman of the board of county commissioners of Hot Springs County, was not authorized to assist in making the list. One Virgin was chairman at that time, but was absent from the county. Section 61-206, Wyo. Rev. St. 1931, provides that the chairman of the county commissioners, the county treasurer and the county clerk shall make the jury list for the ensuing year. Section 30-607 provides that the county commissioners shall choose one of their number as chairman who shall preside at all meetings when present and in case of his absence one of the other members may act as temporary chairman. In view of the fact that Virgin, the chairman, was absent from the county at the time, we think that John W. Sapp was authorized in assisting to make the list. It has been held, under a statute under which a deputy may act in place of his principal, that such deputy may assist in making up the jury list. State v. Turner, 114 Ia. 426, 87 N. W. 287; Stevens v. State, 53 N. J. L. 245, 21 Atl. 1038, State v. Reeves, 129 La. 714, 56 So. 648; Sturgis v. Sugar Co., 184 Mich. 456, 151 N. W. 746. The situation in the case at bar is analogous. The ease of State v. Payne, 6 Wash. 563, 34 Pac. 38, is cited as holding the contrary.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
19 P.2d 177, 45 Wyo. 383, 1933 Wyo. LEXIS 14, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-radon-wyo-1933.