State v. Rigley
This text of 62 P. 679 (State v. Rigley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
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The defendant was informed against upon a charge of assault with intent to commit murder. He was convicted of an “assault with a deadly weapon likely to produce great bodily injury.” From the judgment, as well as from the order denying defendant’s motion for a new trial, this appeal is taken.
It appears from the record that the defendant and one Rice were or had been engaged in litigation in regard to some mining property. The defendant had been drinking hard for some time; in fact, as appears from the evidence, at one time shortly prior to the alleged assault, his debaucheries had brought him very near, if not quite, to the point of delirium tremens; but it does not appear that at the time he committed the assault he was delirious, although it is quite evident from the testimony that he was drunk. The theory of the defense is that the defendant was insane. There is no evidence to support such a theory. The kind of alcoholic insanity which simply tends to accelerate the party in seeking revenge for either a real or imagined injury, and which is directed solely against the author of such injury, is a very different disease from that which is motiveless, and results in a mere “delirious fancy and a muscle raised obedient to its impulse.” The defendant approached Rice while the latter was quietly reading a newspaper, with his feet elevated upon a table, and, calling Rice’s attention to the fact of the difficulty between them, informed him (Rice) that he (defendant) was going to kill him like a dog, and proceeded to carry his threat into execution by drawing and cocking his revolver; and Rice thereupon sprung up, [294]*294and seized the revolver. Quite a struggle ensued between Rice and the defendant for the possession of the revolver, during which it was exploded three times, the last shot taking effect in the leg of defendant. That it was the deliberate intention of the defendant, when he made the assault upon Rice, to kill the latter, cannot, we think, under the evidence in the record, be doubted for a moment. If the contention of the defendant is to find recognition, it were best that we should amend our criminal statutes, and make whisky a justification for homicide. "We have examined the record in this case with care, and we find no prejudicial error therein. The attempt to justify the alleged assault upon the ground of insanity is not supported by the facts or the law.
As to the other question raised by appellant, to wit, the impeachment of the verdict by affidavits made after verdict rendered, we have to say that such practice has never been recognized by this court. (State v. Davis, 6 Idaho, 159, 53 Pac. 678.)
Finding no reversible error in the record, the judgment of the district court is affirmed.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
62 P. 679, 7 Idaho 292, 1900 Ida. LEXIS 46, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-rigley-idaho-1900.