State v. Strain

262 N.W. 237, 63 S.D. 639, 1935 S.D. LEXIS 75
CourtSouth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 9, 1935
DocketFile No. 7772.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 262 N.W. 237 (State v. Strain) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering South Dakota 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. Strain, 262 N.W. 237, 63 S.D. 639, 1935 S.D. LEXIS 75 (S.D. 1935).

Opinions

WARREN, P. J.

Defendant was tried and convicted for the crime of murder committed while fleeing from the scene of a bank robbery at Kaylor, in Hutchinson county, S. D., on April 20, 1935, and sentenced to serve a life sentence in the state penitentiary. His motion for a new trial was overruled, and he now appeals to this court. The state’s evidence in part is as follows:

In the early evening of April 17, 1933, a Charles Beatty was held up 'and robbed of his car, a maroon Chevrolet sedan, by two men just outside his home at Estherville, Iowa. On April 20th, at 11 o’clock in the forenoon, three bandits held up and robbed the Farmers State Bank at Kaylor, S. D. Two of the bandits entered the bank, while the third remained near the car, which was a maroon-colored Chevrolet. While making their escape, the bandits shot and killed one Fred Voll, son of one of the bank officials, and wounded another man. On April 21st the car used by the bandits was found abandoned' at Delano, Minn., which car was identified by Beatty as the one stolen from him on the night of April 17th. In June, 1933, the appellant was arrested at. Sioux Falls, S. D., and charged with the robbery of the Kaylor bank and the murder of Fred Voll.

The record, before us contains testimony of the numerous witnesses who testified for appellant, by which testimony appellant seeks to prove that he was not near Estherville, Iowa; nor Kaylor, S. D., on either the 17th or 20th of April, 1933, and that he therefore could not have committed the robberies.

The state produced five witnesses who- positively identified appellant as the driver of the maroon Chevrolet. According to their testimony, two of the bandits were well dressed; one of them being the driver of the car, with whom they talked. The third bandit wore overalls. Charles Beatty, from whom the car was stolen, identified appellant as one of the two men who took his car on the 17th, although he admitted that it was growing dark at *641 the time of the theft and that he didn’t get a very good look at the faces of the men.

Appellant produced a number of witnesses from his home at Milbank, S. D., who positively testified that appellant had not left Milbank from April 17, 1933, to April 21, 1933, for any great length of time, and that they had seen him almost every day during the week of the robbery. From the record it appears that Floyd Strain was living at the City Hotel in Milbank with a Helen Mesler, and that one Martin -Croymans, a man past fifty years of age, came in from the country and stayed with them at their rooms from Monday, April 17th, to April 21st. On April 17th, according to testimony, Floyd' Strain and Helen Mesler had a quarrel which resulted in Strain’s receiving a black eye and two scratches on his cheek and nose. On the 18th of April Helen Mesler went to Ortonville, Minn., to look for work and, failing to find any, returned to Milbank about noon, April 19th. -Croymans testified that he and Floyd Strain went to Twin Brooks, a town some seven miles from Milbank, the afternoon of April 18th. While there, appellant cashed a check, signed 'by himself, on Martin Croymans at Croymans’ request. This check is exhibit 5. They returned to Milbank that evening. On April 20th, according to- appellant’s witnesses, Strain was around the hotel and on the streets of Mil-bank during the day. On April 21st Sheriff Wilson of Grant county called on Strain in regard to the check he had written for Croymans on April 18th and which was marked a forgery by the bank on which it was drawn. Sheriff Wilson’s testimony is, in part, as follows: “He (appellant) always wore work clothes. I don’t remember that I ever saw him dressed up. * * * During the time from March 20th, 1933, to May 13th, 1933, Floyd Strain made no long trips from the City of Milbank, to my knowledge. * * * There was something the matter with his face. I don’t know what it was. It seems to me after he left I thought he had been in a fight. * * * I have known Floyd Strain 15 or 16 years. I know his general reputation for peacefulness, quietude and inoffensiveness in the community where he lives. His reputation for peacefulness is good. I never heard anything against him with reference to quietude and inoffensiveness.” Three other witnesses testified positively to having seen appellant in Milbank every day from April 17th to April 21st.

*642 Tony Strain, appellant’s 'brother, was also identified by the state’s witnesses as one of the bank bandits. The defense produced certain witnesses, members of the Sioux City police force, who testified positively that Tony Strain was in jail in Sioux City at the time of the robbery. Certain records were produced which showed that Tony Strain was picked up by the Sioux City police on an investigation charge on April 17th (the day the car was stolen at Estherville, Iowa), and was confined in the jail at Sioux City until 3 or 3 :3o of the afternoon of April 20th (the day of the robbery). One of appellant’s exhibits is the order of discharge for Tony Strain’s release. It is dated as of April 20, 1933, addressed to Sergeant Joe Young and signed by F. W. Spencer. Thomas Green, chief of detectives of the Sioux City police force, testified that he was holding Tony Strain for the Huron, S. D., officials, and as he was going out of town he gave orders to release Tony Strain at 3 or after in the afternoon of the 20th if the Huron officials had not come for him by that time. Green based the -date of Strain’s release on the fact that he, Judge Kenaston, and a C. C. Bledsoe made a trip to Burke, S. D., on April 20, 1933, and while eating a lunch at Wagner, S. D., heard the radio report of the Kaylor bank robbery. Returning to Sioux City that evening, Green learned that the Huron officials had not come for Strain and that he had been released according to orders at 3 or 3 :3o in the afternoon.

A careful examination of the record in this case fails to reveal to us how Floyd ‘Strain could have been present at the bank robbery in Kaylor, S. D., on April 20, 1933. If we are to believe the witnesses produced by the defense, and among them are numbered a county sheriff and Sioux City police officials, then the element of time would have prohibited the Strain brothers from participating in either the car robbery or the bank robbery. The distance from Milbank to Kaylor is some over 200 miles, and from Mil-bank to Estherville, Iowa, about 250 miles. Croymans testified that Floyd Strain was not away from him during those five days for more than two to three hours at a time, since they were living at Strain’s rooms and eating their meals together.

In describing the appearance of the bandit who- was driving the car at the time of the robbery, none of the witnesses for the state commented on having noticed anything wrong with the *643 bandit driver’s face. In fact, when first taken to view the appellant, none of them admitted that it was he 'who1 had. been one of the bandits. Later on they testified positively that appellant was one of the bandits, but Mr. Voll, the man whose son was killed, did not at any time identify appellant as having been one of the robbers. It is rather strange that if there was anything wrong with appellant’s face the witnesses for the state failed to mention the fact. That there were marks on his face is shown by the testimony of the sheriff of Grant county, who saw him on the 21st of April, or the day after the robbery.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
262 N.W. 237, 63 S.D. 639, 1935 S.D. LEXIS 75, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-strain-sd-1935.