State v. Rhone

275 N.W. 109, 223 Iowa 1221
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedSeptember 28, 1937
DocketNo. 43796.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 275 N.W. 109 (State v. Rhone) 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. Rhone, 275 N.W. 109, 223 Iowa 1221 (iowa 1937).

Opinion

Parsons, J.

On the 6th day of March, 1936, an indictment was filed in the district court of Madison County, Iowa, against the defendant Ivan Rhone, charging him with the crime of murdering one Sherwood Carney. The plea to the indictment was “Not Guilty”, and the case was tried to a court and jury, trial beginning on May 4, 1936, and the defendant was found guilty of manslaughter. The effect of such a verdict is that the defendant cannot again be put on trial for this crime under a degree higher than that of manslaughter.

Ivan Rhone and Sherwood Carney were neighbors, residing on adjoining farms in Madison County. The defendant owned his farm, and had owned it for about five years, the farm adjoining the town plat of Barney, a station on the Great Western Railroad. The town had a very small population. The defendant had lived in that township 43 years, being absent therefrom and living in Nebraska from 1883 to 1892. He weighed about 132 pounds, was five feet sis inches tall; age 53 years; his health had been very poor for over seven years following a sick spell which developed into a stroke of paralysis. Rhone lived on his 160-acre farm, batching it for three years. He first met Carney early in 1935, and then saw him again about May 1st of that year, while he was putting cattle in the pasture. The fence between the two farms was practically down, and Rhone went to Carney and told him about it, and told Carney which end of the fence was his. Carney was a tenant of a land bank, owner of the farm, and his tenancy began in 1935.

The Chicago Great Western Railway runs through the Rhone farm, about 40 or 50 acres of the farm lying south of the railroad, the balance on the north of it. There were some buildings on the east side of the farm for stock, but the dwelling house *1223 and appurtenance buildings were on the west end, and on or about the line between the town of Barney and the farm owned by defendant in what would be called the town plat.

The railway also ran through Carney’s land, on a grade of sixteen or eighteen feet high. The agent for the federal land bank, which owned Carney’s land, agreed to get material so Carney could fix the fence, and sent it down to the farm. About the middle of September, 1935, Rhone walked down to.Carney’s place, taking a hammer and a spade, and asked Carney if he were ready to put in the fence, and told Carney he was there to help put it in. Carney said he didn’t intend to put it in, he was going to work in his beans; he said he was tired of being told about the fence, and if Rhone didn’t get out of the way he would give him a damn good whipping. Rhone said, “You are too big a man for me”, Carney being a man weighing about 175 or 180 pounds, stockily built, and between 47 and 48 years of age, at least five years younger than the defendant. After Rhone said, “You are too big a man for me”, Carney said he would come up on the grade, and he went up on the railroad track, coming up menacingly. Rhone didn’t want Carney to hit him, so he ran, and said he was going to call the sheriff; then Carney called him a “son of a bitch” and went into his barn and got something, that Rhone thought might be a gun. Carney said, “I will kill you”, and had a corn knife in his hand. He came after Rhone, who kept on running through the corn. After he got home, Rhone then changed his clothes and went to Winterset to see the sheriff, who told him to report the matter to the county attorney, which Rhone did, but nothing was done. After this, whenever Rhone went to the east side of his farm he went on horseback, because he was afraid of Carney, and Rhone hired a man to help him fix the fence, having the man go on Carney’s side, and he stayed on his own side. When he went after cattle he had a man go with him. Rhone had been told that Carney intended to kill him. He had heard of the reputation Carney bore in Cass County, from where he came.

One Fred Davis owned some stock, and Rhone heard Carney was going to take care of the stock. Francis Koehler acting for Davis asked Rhone if he could take this stock through his farm, and Rhone said he could; but he said if Carney was taking care of the cattle, he didn’t want him on the place. Koehler told Rhone he would have Carney come only as far as the line fence, *1224 and then have him go back. Rhone told Koehler he was afraid of Carney; didn’t want anything to do with him; that he was afraid of him and didn’t want him on his place; he was afraid that sometime Carney would slip up on him when he was in the field. The next morning Rhone saw Davis and a man named “Fred” pass, and he told them he would not have given permission for the cattle to go through the farm if Carney was to accompany them. At this time the snow was deep. On the morning of February 21,1936, Rhone saw the cattle being driven from his place. At this time, and before, he testified, that if he wanted to go to the store in Barney he would watch ánd see that Carney wasn’t at the store; that he did this because he did not want to meet him. Rhone’s eyesight was not very good, he wore eyeglasses; could not hear much out of one ear. When he got to the gate on the farm he asked if Carney was to be there, and was told he was. He then called out that he did not want Carney on the place; but Carney said he was going through, said it several times. Rhone went to the field, just a short distance from the gate, and when Carney began to come on Rhone backed up; said he was scared. Carney had with him a hammer, an ordinary carpenter’s hammer, in his right hand, and an iron bar in his left hand. This bar was about three feet long, must have weighed 8 or 10 pounds; it was curved at one end, with two rather sharp points; the other end having a sharp edge; this bar was used in tearing down fences. Either of these was a deadly weapon, and when struck from the hands of a man of Carney’s physical makeup, would be sufficient to kill an ordinary individual if rightly placed. Rhone testified that when Carney began to crowd him he backed up, he was scared. Carney called Rhone a “son of a bitch”, and kept crowding him, while Rhone was backing up all the time. Then Carney got up pretty close three different times. Then Rhone saw Carney coming up with a bar in his hands and he didn’t know whether he intended to hit him or not, and when Carney drew back his hammer Rhone thought he better do something, and he just pulled the trigger of a gun he had in his hand. This was a small gun with a single barrel, caliber .22, which could be fired but once without reloading. This is Rhone’s testimony in the matter.

Rhone knew none of the men with Carney, except Davis, who was on the outside of the gate. Rhone testified he believed it necessary to shoot to save his life. Carney had told him he *1225 would strike him, and had the hammer above his head and was coming straight at Rhone who was moving backward. Rhone further testified that Carney would weigh probably 180 or 185 pounds; that he was well built, a stout and strong man, and was not crippled in any way, and that he (Rhone) was not able to take part in a physical encounter. Rhone said he left the gate and sat down for awhile; then he went over to see his father and mother and tell them what he had done; he told the sheriff, and his deputy took the gun away from Rhone, and took him to Winterset and locked him up in jail. He made substantially the same statement to the sheriff at the time the sheriff took charge of him.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
275 N.W. 109, 223 Iowa 1221, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-rhone-iowa-1937.