State v. Riddel

37 P.2d 802, 38 N.M. 550
CourtNew Mexico Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 30, 1934
DocketNo. 3995.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 37 P.2d 802 (State v. Riddel) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico 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. Riddel, 37 P.2d 802, 38 N.M. 550 (N.M. 1934).

Opinion

WATSON, Chief Justice.

Appellant was indicted for the killing of his wife. Three separate counts charged, respectively, murder in its two degrees and voluntary manslaughter. The first trial resulted in a conviction of murder in the second degree. That judgment was reversed. State v. Riddel, 37 N. M. 148, 19 P.(2d) 751. That eliminated the count for murder in the first degree, and appellant was put to a second trial on the remaining counts. The present appeal is from a conviction of voluntary manslaughter.

At about S:30 p. m. of the day in question, sounds of a fight or struggle came from the building occupied by appellant and the deceased, in front as a grocery and meat mar.ket, and in the rear as living quarters. Appellant had entered the building from the front but a few moments before. The deceased had entered slightly before that. Following these sounds, the deceased came out bearing a hammer and crying for help. After crossing the street, she fell and soon died. She had suffered numerous knife wounds, among them one severing the jugular vein. Appellant was also seen to come from the house, and was found later a block or two away with numerous cuts and bruises on his body. He was unconscious, and remained so until the next day.

The homicide occurred in a small room immediately in the rear of the room devoted to the business. Appellant’s version is that, having supplied himself with a cigarette, he started from the store for the living quarters for a match. Entering this small room which was dark, “ * * * something struck me on the back of the head and it seemed like I made a rush forward, the way I was going, and run into a man, and when I run into him I got another lick and turned me back another way, and seemed like I started back the way I come, and I got a lick and I don’t remember anything else until the next day about eleven o’clock I come to myself in a hospital.”

Evidence was adduced for the defense tending to show that the deceased, on her way home, had telephoned some one an invitation to her house. The state’s evidence disclosed that, before entering from the front, she had gone to the rear. There she might have admitted or made possible the admission of the person invited. A witness for the defense testified to having seen an unidentified man come out of the building following the exit of the deceased as described, and followed by that of the appellant.

There was opinion evidence that the hammer carried by the deceased could have inflicted the bruises which appellant suffered, and that the deceased could not have inflicted these bruises after having received the fatal cut in the neck.

Otherwise than as stated, the evidence was circumstantial. It tended to show ill feeling between husband and wife, jealousy on the part of the former, and threats made by him.

Appellant contends that the first verdict, murder - in the second degree, was in legal effect an acquittal of voluntary manslaughter, just as it was an acquittal of murder in the first degree. The contention is based solely on the circumstance that the pleader elected to employ three counts instead of relying, as he might have done at that time, on a single count for murder in the first degree. This result, it is argued, necessarily follows from State v. Taylor, 33 N. M. 35, 261 P. 808, and State v. Parker, 34 N. M. 486, 285 P. 490. "We do not so consider. The fact that the Legislature once saw fit to require each degree of homicide relied upon to be distinctly pleaded did not vary the fact that voluntary manslaughter is an offense included in the charge of murder. Cf. State v. Burrus (on motion for rehearing), 38 N. M. 462, 35 P.(2d) 288. The first jury eliminated the element of deliberation from the case. But it found everything necessary to manslaughter, plus m'aliee. The present juiy differs with the first as to malice, but agrees as to the other elements of criminality. We find no merit in the contention.

It is also contended that there was no evidence to warrant the submission of voluntary manslaughter. Referring only to the evidence on the part of the state, counsel argues that, if appellant in fact killed his wife, he was guilty of murder in one or the other of its degrees, and could not have been guilty of manslaughter. He asserts that the state’s px-esented theory was “that the defendant, being jealous of his wife, went out to find her, and kill her, and when he found her at home, murdered her by cutting her throat with a knife.” On the other hand, he says: “The theory of thei defendant was that the wife and her paramour were in the house, and when the defendant entered the dark room, the wife struck him with a hammer and continued to beat him until she was cut, the other man cutting the defendant with a knife. The deceased Was killed by accident, by her paramour, while both she and her paramour tried to kill the husband, this defendant. The defendant himself was unconscious and incapable of knowing what occurred after he was first struck by some person whom he did not know when he went into the room where his wife and her paramour were.”

This is to renew the discredited contention that the jury must accept one theory or the other in a case of this kind. Cf. State v. Smith, 26 N. M. 482, 194 P. 869; State v. Greenlee, 33 N. M. 449, 269 P. 331. In this connection it is interesting to note that, while the evidence offered by the state may have tended to show and might have justified a vex’dict of murder in the first degree, the jury was instructed that, if it should so determine, it must acquit appellant, because he had already been acquitted of, and was not on trial for, that offense. And, on the other hand, while, if appellant’s testimony was true and his theory as stated he should have been exonerated, his counsel insisted upon consideration of the theory of self-defense.

It is plain that the jury was at liberty to conclude that appellant killed his wife with a deadly weapon. Unexplained, this would make a case of murder in the second degree. State v. Gilbert, 37 N. M. 435, 24 P.(2d) 280.

Ho one can know to a cei’tainty what occurred in this room. We have no means of knowing just what parts of the evidence the jury accepted as true and what parts it rejected as false. The verdict reflects the inference that the homicide was committed upon a sudden quarrel or in the heat of passion. The evidence faix-ly lays the seexxe for a sxxdden quax-rel and for heat of passion. That this infei-ence is drawn from all the circumstances, rather than from the lips of an eyewitness, does not alter the ease. State v. Smith, State v. Greenlee, supra.

The state produced Geoi'ge Harris, who testified that he was a justice of the peace and recalled a conversation with the appellant about a week or ten days before the homicide in his office at Hobbs. This then occurred:

“Q. What was the subject of your conversation with Mr. Riddel? A. The subject of my conversation with Mr. Riddel was Mr. Riddel's conduct at that time and prior.
“Judge Neal: Now, if Your Honor please, we had no reason for knowing, the answer to that question, and ask that it be stricken.
“The Court: Overruled.
“Judge Neal: Exception.

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37 P.2d 802, 38 N.M. 550, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-riddel-nm-1934.