State v. Ratkovich

105 P.2d 679, 111 Mont. 19, 1940 Mont. LEXIS 2
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 21, 1940
DocketNo. 8,018.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 105 P.2d 679 (State v. Ratkovich) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana 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. Ratkovich, 105 P.2d 679, 111 Mont. 19, 1940 Mont. LEXIS 2 (Mo. 1940).

Opinion

MR. JUSTICE ERICKSON

delivered the opinion of the court. This is an appeal from the judgment of the district court of Musselshell county. The appellant, Nick Ratkovich, was found guilty of murder upon a jury trial and sentenced to life imprisonment in the state penitentiary. Briefly stated, the facts are these:

On the night of December 13, 1938, the decedent, one Steve Roncevich, came to the home of defendant’s parents. During the course of the evening the deceased, the defendant and the defendant’s mother “visited”, and the testimony is that they drank a certain amount of wine and beer. Later in the evening at the request of the deceased, defendant left the house to go to a neighboring beer parlor to purchase some beer; the money, twenty-five cents, was furnished by the deceased. The testimony is that he took this money from a tobacco sack which he kept inside of his shirt. While the defendant was gone his mother assisted Roncevich, who was about 72 years of age, out the back door onto a small porch with several steps leading down therefrom, so that deceased might urinate. The testimony is that the door into the house was left partly open. Within a very short time after this, the defendant carried the deeedent into the house and laid him on a pile of coats and blankets on the floor which articles had been previously put there by defendant’s mother, as a bed for the deceased, as he had been invited to spend the night. When defendant brought the deceased into the house he was unconscious, and he had some blood about one ear which defendant washed off. The defendant called a doctor who came immediately, and with the de *22 fendant the doctor took Roncevieh to the hospital in Roundup. The testimony of the various medical witnesses was to the effect that Roncevieh’s skull had been fractured by a very severe blow. The witness Lydia Ramsey testified that the deceased was unconscious and incoherent all of the time he was in the hospital and that he died there early on the next morning.

The defendant told the doctor and others, including members of the sheriff’s force, that he had found the deceased lying along the road. He later changed this story and said that he found him in one position in the backyard, and subsequently changed the story and stated that he had found him in another position near the steps coming down from the porch.

The testimony further is that on the second day following the injury to the deceased the defendant spent some two or two and a half dollars for drinks in various beer parlors, and that, when pressed for explanation, he said that he had stolen the money from his mother. When questioned about this she denied that she had any money and that he took it from her. Subsequently, about the third day after the occurrence of the night of December 13, it is testified the officers of Musselshell county secured a confession from the defendant, and this alleged confession recites that when the defendant was returning from the beer parlor, the deceased was standing in the backyard; that some argument arose and that the defendant went into a coal shed and there secured a hammer with which he hit the deceased on the head and that he took from the person of the deceased a tobacco sack containing two or two and a half dollars, ° and that defendant subsequently burned the tobacco sack and kept the money. Other pertinent facts will be discussed in our consideration of the legal points involved.

A motion for new trial was made, based upon certain affidavits which purport to set out newly discovered evidence. These affidavits were followed by other affidavits by the same persons to the effect that they had been bribed to testify in behalf of the defense, and more particularly that they had been bribed to make the affidavits on which the motion for new trial was based. The motion was by the court denied. The first speeifica *23 tion of error we will discuss is based on the admission of testimony as to certain tests made by witnesses for the state.

The testimony, of the witness Lydia Ramsey, who was in charge of the hospital to which Roncevich was removed on the night preceding his death, was that Roncevich was incoherent. The testimony of the witness Edith Ford was that on the night in question she occupied a room in the hospital adjacent to that occupied by Roncevich; that during the night she heard him say, among other things, “Steve pa,” and that he repeated those words several times. The witness Frances Spek testified that she occupied on the same night a room immediately above that occupied by Roncevich; that there was an open stairway adjacent to her room which ran into the hallway immediately outside of the door of the room occupied by Roncevich, and that she heard him on the night in question repeat the words “Steve” and “pa” several times. She further testified that she was Austrian, as was Roncevich, and that the word “pa” in that language means “fall.”

It was the theory of the defense that the injury which caused the death of Roncevich was caused by a fall, and this testimony as to statements made by him after the injury was material in proving this contention. On rebuttal three witnesses were asked if they had made any tests in the hospital in question to determine whether a conversation in the room occupied by Roncevich could be heard in the rooms occupied by the witnesses Edith Ford and Frances Spek. The witnesses testified that they had made such tests and that, unless they were in a very loud voice, words spoken in the room occupied by Roncevich could not be heard in the rooms occupied by the witnesses Edith Ford and Frances Spek.

Examination of the record seems to indicate that no sufficient foundation was laid for the testimony as to this test. However, only in the case of one of the three witnesses was the objection made in time. With reference to another witness no objection was made at all, and in the case of the third it was made only after the evidence was substantially in without objection. ■ But whether or not the testimony was properly ad *24 initted, it was prejudicial error on the part of the court to exclude the offered surrebuttal testimony on the part of the defense to rebut this testimony as to the experiment.

Evidence as to the tests made by witnesses for the state, if true, would effectively destroy the value of the testimony of the witnesses Edith Ford and Frances Spek. If the jury believed the evidence as to the test they would disbelieve the testimony of these two defense witnesses. The offer of proof made by the defendant was to the effect that certain named persons, whom he wished to call as witnesses, had, after the testimony referred to previously concerning the test made by state witnesses, made similar tests and it was possible to hear very clearly the words uttered in the room occupied by Roncevich in the two rooms occupied on the night in question by the two defense witnesses. When the trial court sustained the state’s objections to this evidence of tests, the defendant asked for the reopening of the case and to have the jury conducted to the hosptial for a view of the premises. This too was denied by the trial court. Rulings of the court on these questions were so prejudicial that the judgment must be reversed for a new trial of the cause. If the testimony of the two defense witnesses was believed by the jury, it would have a great bearing on their determination of the question presented to them.

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Bluebook (online)
105 P.2d 679, 111 Mont. 19, 1940 Mont. LEXIS 2, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-ratkovich-mont-1940.