State v. Stringer

13 P.2d 340, 140 Or. 452
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 20, 1932
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 13 P.2d 340 (State v. Stringer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon 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. Stringer, 13 P.2d 340, 140 Or. 452 (Or. 1932).

Opinion

*453 KELLY, J.

A portion of section 11, township 14 south, range 44 east Willamette Meridian, in Baker county, Oregon, is the arena in which the principal events of this case transpired. For the purposes of clarity, we here insert a draft of the premises involved. The squares indicate forty-acre tracts.

In the vicinity of the southeast quarter of the northwest quarter of that section, the defendant and his associates in business were operating a sheep shearing camp. A public highway running between Huntington and Baker, Oregon, known as the Old Oregon Trail, enters the forty-acre tract consisting of the northeast *454 quarter of the southeast quarter of said section at a point approximately midway between the northeast and the southeast corners of said forty-acre tract; continues in a general northwesterly course to a point on the northern boundary line of said last named forty-acre tract approximately 187% feet from the western boundary line thereof; runs thence in a northerly and northeasterly direction, and thence northwesterly and westerly to Baker. By oral lease, the owners of the premises between the Old Oregon Trail and the western boundary line of said forty-acre tract leased said premises to the Stanfield Feeder Company, a corporation, of which R. N. Stanfield, the prosecuting witness, was a stockholder and officer.

Through these premises, starting at said Old Oregon Trail and passing over the government land abutting on the west, there was a roadway to defendant’s sheep shearing plant. At a point about 300 feet westerly from said Old Oregon Trail, a discontinued county road intersected said private roadway. In making said lease of said premises to the prosecuting witness, the use of this private roadway was not reserved either for the lessor or for the defendant. There was a gate across said private roadway approximately 230 feet northwesterly from the center of said section, and another gate at the intersection of said private roadway with said Old Oregon Trail.

On or about April 21, 1931, the prosecuting witness fastened said first mentioned gate by wiring the same shut and posted thereon a no trespass sign.

As to the gate across said private highway at the Old Oregon Trail, the prosecuting witness claims to have taken it out and placed four strands of wire across the opening, thereby making a new panel of *455 fence there, and to have posted a no trespass sign there. The defendant testified that on the 21st of April, 1931, on said trip from his shearing camp, a boy opened the gate for the defendant and, after the defendant had passed through, the boy closed it leaving the trespass sign intact. The prosecuting witness claims that the new panel, which he says he made, was cut and that on the following day, April 22, 1931, he went to the place to repair said new panel of fence.

In any event, on April 22, 1931, the prosecuting witness, with an assistant, went to the place where the last named gate had been and very shortly thereafter the defendant drove up in a Ford automobile, took some pliers and cut the wires of the panel just south of the one the prosecuting witness had made. Some compliments were exchanged between the defendant and the prosecuting witness. The defendant picked up a rock. The prosecuting witness picked up two. After more compliments, the defendant threw his rock down. The testimony is conflicting as to whether the prosecuting witness threw both his rocks down. Some witnesses testified that he did. One witness testified that he placed one rock on the fence post nearest him. The defendant testified that the prosecuting witness held a rock in his hand as if he intended to throw it until defendant’s automobile struck the prosecuting witness, and that such rock was thereafter found between the fender and the hood of defendant’s car. As a gesture of protest against defendant’s entry through- it, the prosecuting witness stood in the opening in the fence caused by the cutting of the wires by defendant. The defendant got into his automobile and drove it through said opening, striking the prosecuting witness with said car and injuring him. Neither a license to use said private roadway nor an *456 express grant of a right of way or easement thereover was shown by defendant. One witness testified that the portion of the private roadway between the old discontinued county road and the sheep shearing camp had been used as such since 1920; and that the private roadway from the old discontinued county road and the highway, known as the Old Oregon Trail, had been in use seven or eight years. There is no testimony tending to show user of the roadway from the old county road to the Old Oregon Trail by defendant, or his predecessors in interest,_for a period long enough to create a prescriptive right thereto. After the lease to the prosecuting witness was made, as above stated, the agent, who was also the husband, of the lessor, sent word to defendant that they (the lessor and her husband) had no objection to defendant making use of said roadway, but this could not have the effect of giving defendant any right of entry.

The first assignment of error is based upon an instruction to the effect that there was some evidence received on the cross-examiination of the defendant with respect to the previous conviction of the defendant of a crime. The defendant testified that another person had paid a fine for him and that he could not say whether he had been convicted or not. In the criticised instruction the trial judge restricted the purpose of this testimony to the effect it might have upon the credibility of defendant and also stated:

“The proof of the conviction of a crime at some former time does not tend In any way to prove the crime with which the defendant is charged in this case. ’ ’

It would have been more accurate to have spoken of defendant’s alleged previous conviction, but, at most, the giving of this instruction was harmless error.

*457 The second assignment of error questions the correctness of the following definition of an assault:

“An assault is an intentional attempt by one person to do an injury to the person of another coupled with the present ability to carry that intention into effect. ’ ’

Defendant calls attention to the omission therefrom of the phrase, “by force or violence,” and urges that this omission constitutes error. As applied to the facts in this case, that omission was harmless. No one suggested that the injury sustained by the prosecuting witness had not been inflicted by force or violence.

The defendant testified that he was driving at a speed of eight miles an hour. Other witnesses testified to a much greater speed. No one could have the hardihood to think that driving an automobile at a speed of eight miles or more an hour against the person of another does not involve force and violence.

The third assignment predicates error upon the failure of the court to give defendant’s requested instruction number three, which is as follows:

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

State v. Hale
367 P.2d 81 (Hawaii Supreme Court, 1961)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
13 P.2d 340, 140 Or. 452, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-stringer-or-1932.