State v. Tickel

13 Nev. 502
CourtNevada Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 15, 1878
DocketNo. 916
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 13 Nev. 502 (State v. Tickel) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nevada 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. Tickel, 13 Nev. 502 (Neb. 1878).

Opinion

By the Court,

Leonard, J.:

Appellant wa.s indicted for an alleged assault with intent to kill one Hugh Kelly. The result of his trial was a conviction for an assault with a deadly Aveapon with intent to inflict upon the person of said Kelly a bodily injury. This appeal is from the judgment, and from an order overruling appellant’s motion for a new trial.

There wa.s evidence on behalf of the state tending to prove that on the morning of the ninth day of February, 1877, at about eleven o’clock A. m., at Buby hill, in Eureka county, appellant and one Hugh Kelly became engaged in a controversy which arose in the following manner: Kelly and one Madden, at Smith’s saloon, were playing a game of cards, which terminated in a fight. When Kelly was down and being Avorsted, appellant intervened and took Madden off. Kelly, Avho had been drinking to some extent, asked appellant, Avith an oath, whether he Avanted any of it. Appellant replied that he did not. Kelly held in his hand a miner’s candlestick, with which he violently gesticulated. Appellant picked up a stick and raised it to strike Kelly, but did not deliver the blow. Kelly then turned and walked awa.y to Werry’s lodging-house, where he roomed. Appellant dropped his club and immediately Avent to the same house.

There was also testimony to show that Kelly was a miner [505]*505and had come off his shift about one o’clock in the morning; that appellant went up to the upper story of "Werry’s house, and after pushing in the door of Kelly’s room, shot Kelly in the shoulder, producing a serious wound.

Mrs. Kate Demery testified on behalf of the state as follows : “I was present near Smith’s house on the morning of the affray between Tickel and Kelly; shortly after, Kelly turned and went to Werry’s house, where he lodged; I saw a man give Tickel a pistol; the defendant then started toward Werry’s house, after putting the pistol in his pocket, when a man in the crowd, addressing him, called out: ‘Come back, Jimmy;’ to which Tickel replied: ‘Let me alone; I’ll fetch him,’ and immediately started toward Werry’s house; I afterwards heard the shot, and saw Tickel returning up the street.”

Upon cross-examination the witness was asked if she recognized a document shown her as her testimony given before L. W. Cromer, justice of the peace, sitting as a committing magistrate in this case, to which she replied that she did. Appellant’s counsel then pointed out to the witness the language in the deposition referred to, and asked her if she had not sworn at such examination that a man in the crowd said: “Let him go,” and another man said: “Let him go; he’ll fetch him.” The witness answered: “I never swore so; if so written, it was a mistake.”

On re-direct examination, the district attorney asked the witness whether the justice had not made a mistake in taking down her testimony in respect to the person who used' the language written in the deposition in regard to which she had been cross-examined.

Appellant’s counsel objected to the question upon the ground that parol evidence was not competent to vary or contradict a deposition read over, signed and sworn to by the ivitness, and also moved the court to strike out the answer to the previous question on the same ground. The court overruled the objection and denied the motion to strike out. Exceptions were taken, and the witness answered as she had done to the preceding question.

The deposition and testimony referred to, properly signed [506]*506by the wituess and certified by the justice, were then put in evidence without objection. This was the testimony of the witness at the preliminary examination, as appears from the deposition: * * * “ I was standing at the door of my house at the time the difficulty between Tickel and Kelly occurred; I saw Kelly with a candlestick (to the best of my belief) going backward towards Nick Werry’s saloon; a man came out and gave Tickel a shooter; Tickel walked •down fast after Kelly; one man said ‘Don’t let him go;’ another said ‘Tes, let him go; he’ll fetch him;’ * * * I did not hear Tickel say anything, but heard some [one] say: ‘He’ll fetch him.’” On cross-examination it appears that witness stated that she did not hear Tickel say anything at the time Kelly was backing down the street.

L. W. Cromer, the justice before whom the preliminary examination of appellant was had, testified that the testimony of Mrs. Kate Demery, as set forth in the deposition before mentioned, was taken down in his presence by Marshall Attwood, acting as his clerk, and when taken down was read over-to the witness, assented to by her as correct, and her mark affixed thereto in his presence, and that he believed the deposition correctly stated the testimony of the witness given before him on appellant’s preliminary examination. Attwood testified in effect the same.

The court, of its own motion, asked the last named witness the following question: “ Don’t you ever make mistakes in taking down testimony in a justice’s court?” The witness answered, “ It may be possible, your honor, but we try not to.” Whereupon the court replied: “Well, if you don’t, you are the first justice of the peace I ever heard of who does not make a mistake occasionally.”

One of the appellant’s counsel then testified that he took full notes of the testimony of Mrs. Demery at the preliminary examination, and he found that his notes, which he produced, corresponded. entirely with the deposition returned into court by the justice of the peace.

Appellant made himself a witness at the trial. He admitted shooting Kelly in the hallway leading to his (appellant’s) room in Werry’s house, but claimed that he acted in [507]*507self-defense. He testified that he was a miner, and at the time of the affray was at work on the night shift on Ruby hill; that he had quit work about an hour before the difficulty with Kelly; that he had for two Aveeks prior to that time roomed at Werry’s; that he had not slept at all during the preceding night, and was going to his room for the purpose of going to bed, and for no other purpose; that he had no intention of meeting, seeking or encountering Kelly, or of provoking a fresh quarrel, or continuing the previous one; that he met Kelly in the hallway Avhich lead to appellant’s room, and was in the act of passing Kelly, when the latter raised his candlestick and made a stab at him, which he avoided by leaping aside; that Kelly then raised his hand to make another stab at him, Avhen he fired and shot Kelly through the shoulder; that in so doing he was under the belief that it was necessary for him to fire in order to save his life or to protect himself from great bodily harm from Kelly; that he did not shoot Kelly in his room, nor push in the door of the room, but that the whole occurrence happened in the halbvay. There was testimony admitted on behalf of appellant that a miner’s candlestick was a sharp instrument, capable of inflicting a deadly wound; that to the knowledge of the witnesses, men had been killed by stabs inflicted by such instruments, although they were ordinarily used for the purpose of lighting mines.

The transcript does not contain all the evidence produced on the trial. Four alleged errors are discussed and insisted upon by counsel for appellant: 1. It is urged that the court erred in refusing to strike out the answer of Mrs. Demery, “I never swore so; if so written it was a mistake,” given in reply to the question propounded by appellant’s counsel on cross-examination Avhether she did not swear differently at the preliminary examination.

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Bluebook (online)
13 Nev. 502, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-tickel-nev-1878.