State v. Thorp

216 P.2d 415, 70 Ariz. 80, 1950 Ariz. LEXIS 193
CourtArizona Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 27, 1950
Docket999
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 216 P.2d 415 (State v. Thorp) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Arizona 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. Thorp, 216 P.2d 415, 70 Ariz. 80, 1950 Ariz. LEXIS 193 (Ark. 1950).

Opinion

STANFORD, Justice.

The defendant (appellant) Lloyd Thorp was accused on the 7th day of January, 1949, by the county attorney of Maricopa County, of murder of the second degree alleged to have been committed on the 25th day of December, 1948, the information charging that the defendant “did then and there wilfully, unlawfully and feloniously kill and murder one W. O. Thorp, a human being”. W. O. Thorp was the father of-Lloyd Thorp. They lived together at 2042 East Jackson Street in Phoenix.

About 7:50 p. m. on Christmas evening, ■1948, Tony Silvio, operator of an emergency ambulance service, received a call from the city police department requesting •him to go to the premises above mentioned and remove a sick man to the hospital. Upon arriving at the premises Silvio found 'W. O. Thorp on a bed suffering from bruises and marks about the face’ and body; found the room in disorder with blood stains on the floor, and upon such findings Silvio refused to remove W. O. Thorp until the police had been notified of the conditions stated. The record shows that the defendant stated that he did "not want the police to know anything about it and that they had the means to take care of their father at the hospital. In response to Silvio’s call, two deputies from the sheriff’s office went to the scene. They searched the house as well as the premises outside: They found nothing outside that would indicate any struggle, but found, blood upon the floor of the room1 in,which the father was lying. The injured man was then taken to the hospital accompanied by officers Moore and Stockton. While at' the hospital officers found that the clothing of defendant was splattered with blood and that stains of blood were also upon his shoes. They had him to take off his shoes and he was thereupon taken to the sheriff’s officé and interrogated. W. O. Thorp (the father) died four days later as a result of the injuries received.

Defendant was convicted of manslaughter and sentenced to 5 to 7 years in the state prison. From this conviction and sentence the defendant appeals.

By Assignment of Error No. 1 defendant claims “ * * * that the state had wholly failed to establish the corpus delicti of the crime”. Assignment No. 2 asserts that there was no evidence “ * ' * .* independent of the confession, to prove the commission of any act of violence on the part of defendant toward deceased or that the deceased came to his death as the result of any human agency”.

On the subject of corpus delicti, from this court’s case of Burrows v. State, 38 Ariz. 99, 297 P. 1029, 1034, we quote: “ * * * In a murder case, therefore, the state must prove aliunde the confession, that the person named in the information is dead, and that he has been killed by some *83 one. Such evidence, of course, may be either direct or circumstantial, but must be. clear and convincing to that effect. * * ”

The testimony in this case shows that there were fresh wounds upon the body of deceased; that he had bleeding cuts; the room showed that it had blood upon the floor, and that there had been a struggle.

Erstel B.' Stockton, a deputy sheriff called to the scene to investigate, gave the following testimony at the trial:

“Q. And what did you do in connection with making your investigation ? A. I asked the group what had taken place. Lloyd Thorp says, T don’t know.’ I asked him at that time who he was, and he told me his name and that that was his father. I asked him where he found his father. He said, ‘Out there,’ motioned. I says, ‘Out where?’ He says, ‘Out there.’ I says, ‘You mean out in the yard? ’ He says, ‘Out there,’ three different answers was ‘Out there.’ Well, Bill Moore and myself went out in the yard — ”
******
“Q. What did you do after that, Mr. Stockton? A. We went out in the yard to see if there was anything out there.
“Q. And how much of the area did you search there? A. We covered the whole yard and also the street.
“Q. Which street? A. In front of the house.
“Q. Did you go beyond Jackson Street? A. The area of the street.
' “Q. And did you go east and west: on the street? A. East and west, both ways’. ■■
“Q. And did you find anything? .-Ay No. ;
“Q. And when you — did you then terminate your search? A. We come back to> the house.
“Q. And what did you do then? A. We checked the other rooms of the house.
“Q. And did you find anything out of order? A. Nothing, only in the one room.
“Q. What room was that? A. That was the front screen porch.
“Q. The front screen porch. Did you then say anything to Mr. Thorp, the defendant, about that ? A. I asked him then again where he was found. He gave me the same answer as before.”
******
“Q. And what type of a room was that? A. It’s a small screen porch.
“Q. And on what part of the premises is that? A. That is on the front of the house, which is on the south side.
“Q. On the south side. You say the room was in disorder? A. Yes.
“Q. What did you observe about that? A. There was water on the floor, blood on the floor.
“Q. Where was that blood, where did you see it? A. There was blood on the floor by the bed; there was blood on the west, south, southwest corner, and on the south portion of the wall. ’ ■
*84 “Q. And with reference to the foot of the bed, did you notice any blood? A. Yes.
“Q. And where was that? A. That was on the floor also.
“Q. Well, how far from the foot of the bed? A. Oh, probably three or four feet.”

By the foregoing we have covered the first and second assignments of error. The testimony applied to the law is sufficient proof of the establishment of the corpus delicti, and defendant’s conviction therewith independent of the confession.

Assignment No. 3 is that the confession obtained from defendant was obtained by compulsion or force, and by denial of defendant’s constitutional rights, and Assignment No. 4, treated with Assignment No. 3, is that the shoes, pants, •coat and shirt of defendant “ * * * were taken from the person of the defendant against his will and without his consent and he was stripped of his clothing by force by the officers.”

Supporting these assignments defendant quotes from Lyons v. State of Oklahoma, 322 U.S. 596, 64 S.Ct. 1208, 1212, 88 L.Ed. 1481: “ * * * The voluntary or involuntary character of a confession is determined by a conclusion as to whether the accused, at the time he confesses, is in possession of ‘mental freedom’ to confess to or deny a suspected participation in a crime.”

The attorney general directs our attention to this court’s case of State v. Miller, 62 Ariz.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
216 P.2d 415, 70 Ariz. 80, 1950 Ariz. LEXIS 193, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-thorp-ariz-1950.