State v. Sloan

149 Iowa 469
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedDecember 13, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 149 Iowa 469 (State v. Sloan) 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. Sloan, 149 Iowa 469 (iowa 1910).

Opinion

Evans, J.

The defendant was indicted for the alleged mnrder of one Wallace. On May 22, 1909, the defendant and Wallace and one Payette hoarded a train of the Northwestern Bailroad Company at Omaha or Council Bluffs for the purpose of stealing a ride to Missouri Valley or farther. They first took a position between the baggage car and the tender. Wallace and Payette were strangers to the defendant. The train left Council Bluffs at 1:10 p. m. Within a few minutes after the train had left Council Bluffs, the defendant and Wallace got into some altercation which resulted in a fight between them. They were then on the tender and on top of the coal. The attention of the fireman was directed in their direction, and he went back to where they were. The defendant had Wallace down on his back and was pounding him. Wallace was covered with blood and was then quite helpless. The fireman caused the defendant to desist momentarily. Wallace tried to rise, but could not. He tried to talk, but the fireman was unable to understand anything he said except the one remark, “Put that fellow off the train.” While the fireman was present, the defendant struck Wallace again and threatened to throw him off the train. He also picked up a shovel, but laid it down upon the demand of the fireman. The fireman returned to his cab. Within a few moments the defendant came also to the cab and was ordered away by the engineer. A few moments later Payette appeared. Just what information was given to the engineer by Payette does not appear in the record, but the train was immediately stopped. Wallace was. missing from the train. The defendant hurriedly left the train and was pursued by the fireman and brakeman. He was put under arrest and taken to Missouri Valley. The trainmen were unable to find Wallace that night, although they backed the train down the track for some distance. His body was found alongside of the track the next morning. When the fireman interfered in the altercation between the defendant [472]*472and Wallace, the train was about a mile and a half south of Crescent, the first station out of Council Bluffs. The body of Wallace was found at a point three-quarters of a mile south of Crescent. There was no stop at the Crescent station, and the point at which the train finally stopped was two miles or more north of Crescent. At the time the fireman saw the altercation on the coal tender, the train was running forty or fifty miles an hour. An exa.mi.nation of the body of Wallace disclosed many hurts, including a crushing of the skull. That Wallace disappeared from the train almost immediately after the fireman left him is indicated by the short distance between the point at which the body was found and the place where the fireman first went upon the tender, when considered in the light of the speed of the train. The foregoing is a general outline of the evidence and is sufficient for the present for us to proceed to a consideration of the errors relied upon for a reversal.

i. Criminal law: under: self defense: submission of issue. 1. The defendant complains in that the trial court submitted to the jury the question of self-defense. It is argued that there was no claim on the part of the defendant that the death of Wallace occurred while the defendant was exercising any right of self-defense, and that the 'instruction was therefore' misleading. The evidence in the case was clearly such as to require the court to direct the attention of the jury to the consideration of the question of self-defense. We have already referred to the testimony of the fireman. The defendant himself testified that Wallace assaulted him and struck him. The following is a part of his testimony: ’ “I had one foot on the ladder when he struck me the second time. I was hanging on with my left hand and held my hands just like that, with my right. I didn’t move a step. When this man struck at me the second time, I knocked his lick off and whipped at him at the same time. I licked with my left on the nose [473]*473and with my right I kept right on going np this ladder, and then I struck at him again. I didn’t hit him over three or four times. I jumped on top of the tender, closed up the ladder to get away from him, and he came up over the tender and pounded at me, and I got him down on the tender. I didn’t hit the man any more at all. The fireman came over and stopped me. lie told me to stop and I did.” True, the defendant did not admit that he killed Wallace, nor did he admit that he threw him off the train; but the evidence on the part of the state was sufficient to warrant the jury in finding that he did kill him either by pounding him to death while on the train or by disabling him and throwing him off the train whereby he was killed. The above quotation from defendant’s testimony is his answer to the testimony of the state tending to show his .guilt. One Mrs. Whistler also testified that she was at a certain park when the train went by and saw two men fighting, and that one of them fell. The question of self-defense was, therefore, clearly involved. No complaint is made as to the correctness of the instructions on that question in the abstract.

It is manifest also that such instructions could not be deemed prejudicial to the defendant. By the instructions such question was submitted to the consideration of the jury only in the event that it should first find from the evidence “that the defendant did kill the said James Wallace.” If, therefore, the jury should find from the evidence that the defendant did kill the Said Wallace, it was manifestly advantageous to him that the attention of the jury should be directed to the question whether he might not have done so in self-defense. By the instructions the burden was laid upon the state to prove not only the killing, but to prove also that it was not done in self-defense. There was no error at this point. State v. Partipilo, 139 Iowa, 474.

[474]*4742. Same: circumstantial evidence: instructions. [473]*473II. It is next urged that the conviction of the de[474]*474fenclant rested wholly upon circumstantial evidence, and that the court failed to fully instruct as to the rules governing proof by that form of evidence. This •contention is also without merit. The conviction of the defendant did not by any means rest wholly upon circumstantial evidence. That it rested to some extent upon circumstantial evidence is true. Thefe are few cases which do not involve circumstantial evidence to some extent. Direct evidence connected the defendant with the alleged offense in a very conclusive way. No request for additional instructions at that point was made by defendant’s counsel. We have heretofore held that the failure of the court, under such circumstances, to instruct more fully on the question, is not ground for complaint. State v. Bartlett, 128 Iowa, 518; State v. Judd, 132 Iowa, 296.

3. Same: evidencc. III. Payette was not a witness upon the trial. Brakeman Peterson was permitted to testify to a conversation between himself and Payette and the defendant. Peterson testified that Payette said to the witness in the presence of the defendant: “This man threw the other man off, or knocked him off the train. Q. What did this man say about that? A. He did xxot say anything right then. In -about a minute afterwards he says to Payette, ‘I did not knock him off,’ and Payette says, ‘No, I guess not,’ in a kind of joking way.” Thereupon defendant’s counsel moved to strike the words “kind of a joking way” as incompetent, immaterial, and irrelevant. The motion was overruled. Complaint is now made of such ruling.

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Bluebook (online)
149 Iowa 469, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-sloan-iowa-1910.