State v. Towne

180 Iowa 339
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedNovember 24, 1916
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 180 Iowa 339 (State v. Towne) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Towne, 180 Iowa 339 (iowa 1916).

Opinions

Deemer, J.

I. The facts are not seriously in dispute, and the argument is largely directed to the sufficiency thereof to sustain the verdict.

Defendant was a business man, engaged in handling general merchandise in the town of Jamaica. He lived on the same street on which his store was located, and about five blocks due north thereof, his house being the last one on that side of the street. North of his house was a public highway, and north of this highway was a cornfield. At the intersection of the first street south of his house with the street on which the house is situated, there was a small wooden bridge, and just south of that, a small hill rising some 30 or 40 feet to the sidewalk on the west side of the street. Defendant’s brother lived about midway between his (defendant’s) house and his store, and on the same side of the street. At about 8:30 o’clock in the evening of March 13, 1915, three of defendant’s children, a daughter, Gretchen, 19 years of age, and two boys, one about 15 and the other 12 years of age, left defendant’s store and started for their home up the street which we have just described. They were followed by a stranger, who is described as a tall man, wearing a cap with the visor down and pulled over the eyes. This stranger followed the children as far north as defendant’s brother’s house, where he followed defendant’s daughter into the yard. Defendant followed his children from the store almost immediately, and overtook them at the brother’s house. He found his daughter [343]*343and his sons standing near the house, and the stranger standing 10 or 12 feet north of them. About the time the defendant arrived at the house, the stranger remarked to one of the boys: “Are you just coming home from school ?” As the defendant passed on the sidewalk going north, the daughter went past the stranger to meet her father, and as she did so, this stranger leaned forward with his cap pulled down, took a step or two in advance, and made some remark to the young lady, which none of the bystanders heard or understood. The girl was frightened, and, with her youngest brother, ran past her father and on to her own home. Defendant and his oldest boy walked on together toward their home, and the stranger followed them until they reached their own house. As they approached their house, defendant instructed his son, who was with him, to run into the house and get his gun — a shotgun. The boy obeyed, brought the gun out and loaded it, and handed it to his father, near the south door of the house at the west end thereof. It should be remarked that the streets were not lighted in any manner, and that the night was dark. When defendant received the gun from his son, the stranger being in the yard of defendant’s house and something like 15 feet away, and approaching him, he (defendant) ordered the stranger not to come any closer, and asked him what he was doing there. The stranger replied that “he had just gotten off the train and was walking around.” He (defendant) asked him his name,, and he responded by asking: “Who lives here?” He (defendant) then asked him what his business was, and, instead of answering, he asked another question and continued to walk toward the defendant. Defendant then told him not to come any closer or he would shoot, and at the same time, it is claimed, told him he would take him up town and turn him over to the marshal. Acting upon this suggestion, he ordered the stranger to go ahead of him down town. The [344]*344stranger started toward town, with defendant and his eldest son following him, the defendant with gun in hand. The stranger halted at times, but defendant pressed him on. When they got to the bridge south of defendant’s house, the stranger stopped, and said to defendant that he did not intend to hurt them. Defendant again told the stranger to move on down town, and the stranger proceeded on across the bridge and on to the top of the little hill which we have described, and there stopped. Defendant, with his son, was then at the bottom of the hill. As he reached the top of the hill, the stranger stopped, screamed in a loud tone, “You fellows,” and rushed back with arms extended to where defendant and his son were standing, and came within 8 or 10 feet of defendant, who had then leveled his gun upon the stranger, ahd, as he approached, defendant says he made a motion as if to grab the gun, when he (defendant) fired both barrels at the stranger, resulting in wounds from which the stranger died the next afternoon. This stranger was soon found to be a man named William Berry, an eccentric, if not insane, person, who had a brother living at Jamaica until a few days' prior to the shooting. Berry had lived at Perry until a few months prior to his death, and, after leaving Perry, lived at Waukee, where he was working for his board. He was discharged by the people for whom he had been working, because of his peculiarities and eccentricities, and taken by them to the depot in Waukee on the day he was killed. Before he died, he told defendant that he (defendant) was in no way to blame; that he forgave him; and that, if he. had not followed defendant’s daughter, he would not have been hurt.

The court submitted the case to the jux-y to determine whether or not defendant was acting in self-defense, and instructed that the defendant was not justified in using a deadly weapon simply to effectuate an arrest of the stranger for violation of some town ordinance or for a misde[345]*345meanor. Whilst these instnictions are complained of, they seem to announce correct. rules of law, and, on the whole record, the case was properly submitted to the jury for it to determine whether or not defendant’s act was in lawful defense of his person.

X' SitaeEense • question: 3lUT We are of opinion that it was a fair question for the jury to determine whether or n°t defendant was justified, under all the circumstances, in taking the life of Berry. It cannot be said, as a matter of law, that the case is so plain for defendant as that a conviction should not be had under the circumstances disclosed. Defendant was bound to act as a reasonably cautious and prudent person would, under all the circumstances as they appeared to him at the time, and cannot excuse himself on the theory that, - under the excitement of the moment, he acted with undue haste, or, because of other transactions of which he had knowledge, supposed something might happen which was oiit of the ordinary.

There is some doubt in the record as to whether defendant did those things which would constitute a lawful arrest of Berry, and there is also doubt as to whether or not Berry was guilty of anything more than committing a trespass on defendant’s property. ' But, aside from these doubts, it was for the jury to say whether or -not defendant’s act was in the lawful defense of his person, and whether or not there was not some other reasonable course for defendant to have pursued rather than to take the life of Berry. It is true that defendant did not know the stranger until after he shot him, and did not know that he was an eccentric or partially insane person, and did not know that he was not of ordinary mind and ability; but there was nothing in his conduct, down to the time when he rushed- back to where defendant was, after he was started on his journey down town, to indicate to defendant that [346]*346he intended anyone any physical harm. When he got to the bridge, he assured defendant that he did not intend to hurt defendant or his son, and he displayed no hostile purpose until he reached the top of the little hill, where, as- defendant says, he rushed back upon him and his son.

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Bluebook (online)
180 Iowa 339, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-towne-iowa-1916.