State v. Sorrentino

224 P. 420, 31 Wyo. 129, 34 A.L.R. 1477, 1924 Wyo. LEXIS 14
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 25, 1924
DocketNo. 1181
StatusPublished
Cited by79 cases

This text of 224 P. 420 (State v. Sorrentino) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming 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. Sorrentino, 224 P. 420, 31 Wyo. 129, 34 A.L.R. 1477, 1924 Wyo. LEXIS 14 (Wyo. 1924).

Opinion

Blume, Justice.

The defendant Mike Sorrentino was convicted of murder in the second degree and sentenced to the penitentiary for a period of from 35 to 40 years, and he appeals.

The homicide in question occurred about ten o’clock on the night of December 21, 1922, in a cement block house on the comer of Eleventh Street and Capitol Avenue, in the City of Cheyenne. The house faces north on Eleventh Street and has a front and a rear entrance, and a front and a rear porch. It is a one story house which has a basement to which access may be had by a stairway leading from the kitchen. Only four rooms are in the house, of almost equal dimensions. The south two rooms are the two rooms mainly concerned in this case and consist of a kitchen, on the southeast comer of the house, and a bedroom, on the southwest corner of the house. The door leading from the south porch into the kitchen is close to the west end of the latter, and swings inward from east to west; the door — and the only door — leading into the bedroom is close to the south [134]*134side of the house, swinging inward from north to south. In other words, the two doors mentioned are close to each other and in the same comer.

The decedent, one George McGough, was about 24 years of age. He and Vance Homan, a hoy of about 17 years of age, met about seven o 'clock of the evening of the homicide with the intention to go into the house in question for the purpose of stealing some so-called moonshine whiskey. They had been in the house on the previous Sunday, had found the door unlocked, though closed, had gone in and found nothing. It is not clear just what they did at 7 o’clock on the night in question, but they did not go in. They returned at eight o’clock, tried to enter by the rear door, but finding it locked, went away, the deceased intending to get some keys which would open the house. These keys were procured by said deceased and about nine o ’clock he, in company with said Vanee Homan and two other boys returned to the house. The two latter were stationed round the house as guards. The deceased and Vance Homan went on to- the back porch, unlocked the door with a key and entered the kitchen. The night was dark, no light was in the house, and its windows were covered. The deceased was equipped with a flashlight, and used it to some extent in the kitchen, no doubt for the purpose of finding some whiskey. Vance Homan testified that they were in that room for perhaps two minutes. They were there, no' doubt, just long enough to- discover that no whiskey was to be found, and they then proceeded toward the bedroom already mentioned. It was open ;to the extent of five inches. .Homan pushed the door open and the deceased used his flashlight, throwing it upon the face and upper part of defendant who was standing on or by a bed in the middle of the room, and who thereupon, so Homan testified, shouted “hands up” and almost immediately thereafter began to shoot. Two or three -shots were fired from a shotgun, one of which struck the deceased, inflicting a wound from which death resulted soon [135]*135after. It does not appear whether Homan or deceased threw up their hands as commanded.

The defendant’s testimony varied to some extent from that of the witness Homan. According’ to him he heard four men come onto the porch, trying two or three keys before the kitchen door opened; that he was awakened from sleep; that he dressed as soon as he heard the noise on the porch ; that he was frightened; that when the bedroom door was pushed open and the flash-light thrown on him, he heard someone say “hands up, I shoot;” that he himself shouted “hands up, come from me ;” that he saw the deceased with his hands back and pulling a -revolver, whereupon he shot. After shooting, defendant fled precipitously to Colorado. Testimony of reputable witnesses show him to have had the reputation as a peaceable and law-abiding citizen.

The north two rooms in the house and the basement were upon examination immediately after the shooting, found to be empty. In the kitchen were only some empty glass bottles, a bushel basket, a strainer used in straining liquids, with a cloth over it that was wet. A strong odor of “moonshine-whiskey” was in the room.- In the bedroom was a matress-pad, which had on it one comfort, two army blankets and a pillow, and had the appearance of having been occupied by some one a short time before; there was also an oil stove, then burning. The defendant claimed the house to be his home. . The state, however, introduced evidence tending to show the contrary and that it was used for the unlawful purpose of the manufacture of “moonshine whiskey.” Among other things it was shown that a keg of five gallons of that liquid was found in the house some three or four days prior to the date of the homicide. Some of the witnesses testified that the defendant had been frequently seen going to and from the house, with baskets, gunny-sacks, grips and bags, which, whatever its object, tended to show, if nothing more, that the defendant had a right in and to the house. It may be mentioned that it seems clear that at the time of the shooting a Smith & Wesson revolver was also [136]*136used in the kitchen and a shot or shots fired therewith, one shot lodging behind the lock in the kitchen door. The circumstances appear to negative the assumption that it might have been used by the defendant. The witness Homan testified that neither he nor the deceased had the revolver, and none was found on the latter when seen after he was wounded. The incidence is shrouded in mystery; and we must, perforce, ignore it altogether in the consideration of the case.

1.. Counsel for defendant insists that the evidence is not sufficient to sustain the verdict; that it is undisputed that deceased entered the house burglariously, for the purpose of committing a felony therein; that defendant had a right to protect the house as his home and had a right to prevent the commission of such felony therein. The state claims that the house in question was not defendant’s home, and we are cited to Hill v. State, 194 Ala. 11, 69 So. 941, 2 A. L. R. 509. In that ease, it seems, defendant killed deceased in an illicit distillery, used for nothing hut the unlawful purpose, and it was held that defendant had no right to be there, and that hence it was his duty to retreat when attacked. We do not think that we can apply the doctrine of that case to this. The testimony in the case all tends to show that the defendant, even though he had not leased the home-himself, had the right to he there at least as against trespassers. The house had four rooms. Even though part of it was used for the purpose of manufacturing illicit liquor, it would seem to be a dangerous doctrine to go to the extent of holding that by reason of that fact alone the house bebame an unlawful resort for all purposes, depriving a man of the right to sleep or dwell therein or stand his ground in case of attack; for, carried to its logical conclusion, such doctrine would compel the owner of the most sumptuous home who permits nature to do therein its perilous work in producing an unlawful, alcoholic content in beverages, to flee therefrom if attacked. Even in the case relied on by the state, the court stated that while one’s house formerly meant his [137]*137home, his dwelling-, the rule has also been extended to one’s place of business or his place of refug-e; that consequently, a man’s place of business must be regarded pro hoc vice his dwelling. In Russell vs. State, 61 Fla. 50; 54 So. 360, and State vs. Kennade, 121 Mo. 405; 26 SW.

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Bluebook (online)
224 P. 420, 31 Wyo. 129, 34 A.L.R. 1477, 1924 Wyo. LEXIS 14, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-sorrentino-wyo-1924.