State v. Smith

181 P.2d 800, 51 N.M. 184
CourtNew Mexico Supreme Court
DecidedJune 10, 1947
DocketNo. 4947.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 181 P.2d 800 (State v. Smith) 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. Smith, 181 P.2d 800, 51 N.M. 184 (N.M. 1947).

Opinion

SADLER, Justice.

The defendant, L. O. Smith, was convicted of murder in the jirst degree and his punishment fixed at life imprisonment in the penitentiary in lieu o'f death by direction of the jury trying him. He prosecutes this appeal from the judgment of conviction so pronounced upon him.

The killing occurred at Artesia in Eddy County, New Mexico, on August 3, 1945. The deceased, Dr. Craig Cornett, was an osteopathic physician and surgeon residing and practicing his profession at Artesia at the time of his death and for some years, prior thereto. The two families, that is to say, the deceased and his wife and the defendant and his wife, had been on. friendly terms prior to and at the time of the fatal shooting which resulted in the death of the deceased. The defendant, a worker in the oil fields, with his wife, paid frequent visits to the home of the Cornetts, sometimes spending the night as. did the Cornetts with them on occasions. They went on fishing and hunting trips, together not infrequently. However, incidents had occurred, so the defendant testified, both at the home of the deceased, and on one of the fishing trips, which caused him to suspect undue intimacy between his wife and the deceased.

The doubts entertained by defendant concerning his wife’s fidelity were not shared by deceased’s wife to whom he-divulged his suspicions following the claimed incident on the fishing trip above mentioned. Apparently her own faith in her husband and defendant’s wife caused her to attribute defendant’s suspicion to. insane jealousy without support in fact. Nevertheless, whatever the basis for this, feeling on defendant’s part, whether with or without reason, it no doubt was responsible for the domestic unhappiness and difficulty which developed in his family resulting in a separation and the institution on April 14, 1945, of a divorce suit by him against his wife in Eddy County, New Mexico. The separation continued for about two months when a reconciliation took place. The reunion lasted for a short time, then another separation occurred. It was followed in due course by the filing of the second divorce suit, this time by the wife of defendant, on June 29, 1945. It was still pending undetermined and untried when defendant shot and killed deceased as hereinafter related. Soon after the second and final separation, the defendant’s wife went to the Cornett home to reside where, apparently in exchange for her room and board, she did the cooking and housework for the Cor-nett family.

On the night of August 3, 1945, at about 9:00 o’clock, the deceased with his wife, her nephew, a young boy fifteen years of age, an infant granddaughter, one and a half years old, and the defendant’s wife, entered the Longacre Cafe in Artesia and seated themselves at the first table to the right near the plate glass window at the front facing west. The windows were equipped with Venetian blinds which at the time, although lowered, were adjusted so that the slats in same rested horizontally and anyone on the outside, with little effort, could see inside.

The Cornett party had been seated in the cafe for about fifteen minutes and had been partially served with their orders when the defendant drove up in his automobile and parked at the curbing. He got out of his car and walked to the front of the cafe and looked through the window opposite which the Cornett party was seated. He then returned to his automobile, took from it a 300 Savage rifle, returned to the cafe, entered same carrying the gun under his left arm and when inside drew his rifle on Mrs. Cornett, wife of the deceased. Mrs. Smith sprang up immediately, grabbed the rifle by the lower end of its barrel and endeavored to keep same pointed toward the floor. A bystander, one - Clem B. Kukenmier, who happened to be in the cafe at the time, came to the aid of defendant’s wife and joined in the scuffle over the gun. Just about the time he did so, the rifle was discharged into the body of the deceased; killing him instantly. Throughout the struggle for possession of the gun, the effort of Mrs. Smith was to keep its barrel pointed toward the floor until defendant could be relieved of it. It was obvious that his effort was to keep possession of the gun and get it pointed in the direction of the deceased or some member of the party sitting at his table.

The shot which killed the deceased also passed through the left arm of the nephew of his wife sitting at the same table before entering the body of deceased, inflicting a flesh wound. Following the discharge of the rifle, the scuffle over its possession carried those participating out the front door of the cafe on to the sidewalk and, finally, across the sidewalk and in between some cars parked at the curb. During the progress of the scuffle, Kukenmier had called for aid, bringing in response one J. C. Mitchell who was in the cafe at the beginning of the affray. He seized defendant around the neck with his arm and choked him into submission.. Indeed, he applied so much pressure that when he released it, the defendant dropped limply to the ground unconscious and so remained for more than ten minutes. The defendant was relieved of his rifle by Kukenmier who had assisted Mrs. Smith in the scuffle with defendant over its possession. It was found to have in its chamber one discharged shell and four loaded ones. Officers were quickly summoned, who took defendant into custody and removed him to jail.

Mrs. Cornett, deceased’s wife, followed the struggling group out of the cafe and attempted to strike and kick the defendant. When she first laid hands upon him he said to her: “I am going to kill you yet.” This threat was in line with others previously made by defendant against the Cornett family or some member of it. At the time defendant related to deceased’s wife the incident which he said occurred on the fishing trip and caused him to doubt his wife’s fidelity, he made the threat to Mrs. Cornett that he would kill her and her husband, ,Dr. Cornett, and his own. wife. Several different persons had heard him make threats against the life of deceased, one as recently- as two weeks prior to the time he actually killed him.

While defendant was still in front of the cafe and before he had been taken to the jail he was heard to say: “I got the one I wanted.” When one of the officers-arrived to take him into custody and while still at the scene of the shooting, defendant said: “It is me, fellows; it is me, fellows I did it.” When they arrived with him at the city jail he said to still another officer r “Well, I told the son-of-a-bitch I would get him.”

All of the foregoing facts are within the verdict returned by the jury finding the defendant guilty of murder in the first degree and assessing his punishment at life imprisonment in the penitentiary. He took the stand in his own defense and denied knowing the Cornetts and his wife were in the Longacre Cafe when he went there shortly after 9:00 o’clock p. m. to eat. He gave as an explanation for looking in the window before entering that it was to learn whether or not the cafe was too crowded for him to get a seat. He admitted seeing his wife seated at the table but denied that he saw any of the Cornetts-. He testified to a wish to effect a reconciliation with his wife, so returned and got his gun and entered the cafe, certain in his own mind that the Cornetts were there even though unobserved by him and fearing there was a pistol or two in the party.

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Bluebook (online)
181 P.2d 800, 51 N.M. 184, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-smith-nm-1947.