State v. Terrell

186 P. 108, 55 Utah 314, 25 A.L.R. 497, 1919 Utah LEXIS 111
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 2, 1919
DocketNo. 3377
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 186 P. 108 (State v. Terrell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah 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. Terrell, 186 P. 108, 55 Utah 314, 25 A.L.R. 497, 1919 Utah LEXIS 111 (Utah 1919).

Opinions

CORFMAN, C. J.

The defendant was charged by the information in two counts: (1) Assault with intent to commit murder; and (2) assault with a deadly weapon with intent to do bodily harm. A plea of not guilty was entered to each count of the information, and upon the- trial the defendant was convicted of an assault with a deadly weapon with intent to do bodily harm, and was sentenced by the court to an indeterminate term of imprisonment after denial of motion for a new trial. Defendant appeals.

The assignments of error complained of on the appeal are based entirely upon certain instructions given and the failure of the court to charge the jury as requested by the defendant. In substance, the testimony shows: That the defendant, Dennis F. Terrell, is a barber by trade, but prior to May 17, 1918, [317]*317the day upon which the offense with which he was charged and convicted occurred, was engaged in the work of a street ear conductor. He owned a home in the southwestern part of Salt Lake City, which he occupied with his family. Situated upon his city lot or home premises, besides a dwelling house, were several sheds, a toilet, chicken run, and rabbit pens within an enclosure fenced with posts and woyen wire. Between the inclosure and the portion of the premises occupied by the dwelling and other out-buildings an open alleyway extended east and west. 'Within the inclosure above referred to were a couple of sheds situated at the southwest corner, abutting on the alleyway. The doors to the sheds opened to the north. North and to the east of the sheds were the rabbit pens with their doors opening to the south. There Avas an open space through the inclosure about ten feet wide between the rabbit pens and the sheds, and beyond the sheds to the east this open space Avas approximately twenty feet in Avidth. The entrance to the woven Avire inclosure was from the west, by a swinging gateway, near the doors at the northwest corner of the sheds. Seventeen feet east of the westerly fence line of the inclosrire and northeasterly from the doors of the sheds the rabbit pens were constructed, extending easterly for a distance of thirty feet. The rabbit pens were connected and built in tiers, for the most part two and three tiers in height,'their roofs tilting to the north. They Avere built largely upon 2x4 sills with the same materials supporting the roofs, with no uprights except one-inch boards nailed to the sills and 2x4 supporting the roofs. The testimony of the state’s Avitness, the county surveyor, was to the effect that the rabbit pens, as constructed, have no indication that they were portable or designed to be moved; that they covered the space of ground there, and apparently Avere permanently constructed for the purpose of housing some sort' of animal, and not designed to be moved from place to place. The county surveyor also testified that there Avas a street light, at a height of twenty-five feet from the ground, about 250 feet east and 150 feet north from the southeast corner of the defendant’s property, which, in his judgment, would cause a shadow to be cast in the night-time [318]*318across tbe space intervening between tbe rabbit pens and tbe chicken run situated immediately to tbe east of the sheds within the inelosure. The defendant, on May 17, 1918, the day he is charged with the offense complained of, was, and for some time prior thereto had been, engaged in raising and selling rabbits, and had at times sheltered as many as sixty rabbits in the pens. He testified that for some time prior to May 17, 1918, he had been missing rabbits from the pens, and that in order to catch the intruder or thief he had been sleeping in the shed at the southwest.corner of the inelosure. On the above date, at about 10 o’clock in the evening, he undressed himself at his dwelling, put on a bathrobe and went out to the inelosure where the rabbit pens were, examined the doors and their latches, ascertained that the rabbits were secure in the pens, and then retired upon a cot in the shed at the southwest corner of the inelosure. Shortly after retiring he heard voices in the alleyway leading through his premises. After hearing the voices he heard no further sounds until he heard the rabbits jumping or pounding with their feet. As to what followed, the defendant testified:

“When I heard the first noise with the rabbits, I just raised up; must have been asleep, I guess. And then I heard one of them squeal, I got out of bed. I got out of bed, and I had an old wire fastened on the door nailed on the inside to hold it shut, to keep the wind from blowing in and keeping me awake at nights. I unwrapped the wire off the nail' and pushed the door open. I had a gun standing there in reach. I went in the open doorway and looked and saw the door of the rabbit pen open, the east hutch. I did not realize at the time whether it was the east hutch or .the second one, but I noticed one of them standing open, and when I did, I was fully convinced of the fact that some one was stealing my rabbits, and X took up my gun and looked, and I thought I saw some one moving, and when I did I shot. I pointed the gun down low intentionally. I didn’t intend to hit any person that was there in any vital part, but purposely aimed low. When I shot, there was no outcry, no noise made. I was standing with one foot in the shed and one foot out, and I heard no one after shooting, and I looked and could see no one, or hear anything, and I came to the conclusion I must have been mistaken, that I had been too slow in getting out, and they had got away, so I started to walk over toward the rabbit pens slowly, and when I got over well past the shed on the south where the ground is raised on the west end where it first starts to [319]*319raise, just as I had my foot on that, a voice from the ground said ‘Mister, will you please help me up?’ I looked, and I could hardly distinguish the form that was lying on the ground, but the voice when I heard it brought to me the awful fact that it was a boy. I didn’t think, I never had the least thought or any kind of intimation before that time, that it was a boy. I said to him, ‘Get up yourself.’ I really thought I had not hit anything when I shot, even after he spoke and I said, ‘Get up yourself,’ and he said, T can’t; niy knees hurt.’ I walked over to him and put my hands under his shoulder and helped the hoy up. * * * I put my left arm around him and put my gun in my right hand, and helped him to the house, and put him on a chair. When I turned on the light, I saw black socks on him that were dyed, so I took the socks down and got into my clothes, and went across the street to a neighbor’s and phoned the Emergency Hospital, and told them what I had done and to get down as quick as possible. I reported to the police department. When I went over to the pens first, the door on the east pen was open, the only one that was standing open. The latch on the next one was turned straight up and down, so it could open and that one would not stay open unless jt was held open because the hinges are heavy leather and swing shut when they are, released. The east one will stand open. When 1 got over there, there were two rabbits on the ground out of the pen. One was running along to the west, and the other one hopped across in front of me toward the chicken house. When I went to investigate the rabbits that were in the pen, there were five in one pen and four in the other. Two of them I saw on the ground.

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

Related

Brown Ex Rel. Brown v. Martinez
361 P.2d 152 (New Mexico Supreme Court, 1961)
State of Oregon v. Nodine
259 P.2d 1056 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1953)
State v. Couch
193 P.2d 405 (New Mexico Supreme Court, 1946)
Chatwin v. United States
326 U.S. 455 (Supreme Court, 1946)
Commonwealth v. Emmons
43 A.2d 568 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1945)
State v. Law
147 P.2d 324 (Utah Supreme Court, 1944)
Sadleir v. Young, Sheriff
94 P.2d 161 (Utah Supreme Court, 1939)
State v. Turner
79 P.2d 46 (Utah Supreme Court, 1938)
Commonwealth v. Beverly
34 S.W.2d 941 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1931)
State v. Dowell
276 P. 39 (Idaho Supreme Court, 1929)
State v. Martin
147 S.E. 606 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1929)
State v. Marks
260 P. 697 (Idaho Supreme Court, 1927)
State v. Metcalfe
212 N.W. 382 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1925)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
186 P. 108, 55 Utah 314, 25 A.L.R. 497, 1919 Utah LEXIS 111, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-terrell-utah-1919.