State v. Vettere

248 P. 179, 76 Mont. 574, 1926 Mont. LEXIS 110
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 2, 1926
DocketNo. 5,957.
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 248 P. 179 (State v. Vettere) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana 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. Vettere, 248 P. 179, 76 Mont. 574, 1926 Mont. LEXIS 110 (Mo. 1926).

Opinion

*577 MR. JUSTICE MATTHEWS

delivered the opinion of the court.

On February 23, 1926, the defendant, Tony Vettere, was convicted of the crime of murder in the first degree in the district court of Silver Bow county, and on March 13, 1926, he was by the court duly sentenced to be hanged. From the judgment and from an order of the court refusing him a new trial this appeal is prosecuted. Numerous assignments of error are made and will sufficiently appear hereinafter.

The testimony adduced at the trial tends to establish the following facts: On the night of November 22, 1925, Antone Favero and Joe Ciccarelli, while standing in front of the Antone Favero home at 201 North Main Street, Meader-ville, each received, at short range, a charge of No. 4 shot in the body, discharged from a 12-gauge shotgun. Ciccarelli *578 died immediately and Favero died in tbe Murray Hospital within two Fours after he was shot.

Some confusion was caused at the trial by reason of the fact that most of the witnesses spoke through an interpreter and that there were four houses, apparently within a block of one another, on North Main Street, Meaderville, known as the Favero house or homo. It is clear, however, that the home of Antone Favero was farthest north and stood on the corner of the street and an alley, facing the street; that something like 125 feet to the rear, facing the alley, stood another house occupied by members of the Favero family; next to the south on Main Street, at No. 131, was the home of Ben Favero and his wife; and still farther south, but Just how far not being disclosed, stood another house occupied by the Ben Favero family. Joe Ciccarelli lived across the street from Antone Favero. One Jim Marsetti, with his wife and family, lived a short distance to the north of the Antone Favero home, while the defendant lived in a cabin near the Marsetti home.

In the late afternoon of November 22, 1925, the defendant, an Italian miner, had become drunk and boisterous. He visited the Marsetti home, taking with him a shotgun and a revolver. He created considerable disturbance, caused considerable damage, and attempted to force Mrs. Marsetti to drink some of his wine. He raised some objection to the attentions of a certain young man to Marsetti’s daughter. He finally became so obnoxious that Mrs. Marsetti required her husband and another to put him out of the house. He wanted to leave his shotgun with Mrs. Marsetti, but she told him to take it with him. In the street he met Miss Marsetti and her escort, whereupon he called the young man a vile name and shot at him twice with his revolver. The young man left, declaring he would notify the police, and the defendant disappeared.

Mrs. Ben Favero saw and recognized the defendant in front of her home at 131 North Main on her return from *579 tbe “picture show” that evening, tbongb she did not notice how he was dressed or whether he carried anything in his hands. He was then going south on the street. She fixed the time at about 9:15 or 9:30.

Another witness saw the defendant in front of a drugstore to the south of all of the Favero houses the same evening. He then had a “long gun” in his hands. This witness thought the time a little before 9 o’clock.

A sixteen-year-old girl, going to the drugstore from her home to the north of the Antone Favero home, passed the defendant, as she thought, about ten or fifteen minutes before nine. He was then standing in the street with one Ligui Battestella. He then had a gun about three feet long in his hands. Battestella testified through an interpreter that he roomed in the Ben Favero house.at 131 North Main Street and boarded at the lower Favero house, the number of which he did not know; that about 9:30 he was going from the house where he boarded to the house where he roomed for something to smoke; that he had passed three or four houses and came in front of an empty house which was demolished, when the defendant came from the demolished house and put a long gun in his face. The witness asked why defendant wanted to shoot him, and defendant said, “Who are you?” to which the witness replied, “I am Ligui; don’t you know me?” Witness then asked defendant to come with him and get something to drink, and, while the defendant’s attention was distracted, seized the gun, whereupon defendant produced his revolver and compelled him to return the gun. The defendant then said: “You go your way, and I will go my way.” Asked if the defendant did not then seem excited, the witness answered: “No, he seemed placid.” Battestella frequently stated that he could not fix distances, but, on being urged, fixed the place of meeting at 145 “yards” from the Antone Favero house, but he demonstrated that it was north of 131, for on cross-examination he testified that when the defendant told him *580 to go bis way be went toward Meaderville, or south, to go to tbe bouse where be roomed, or No. 131. Tbe witness further testified that, while be was so progressing and with bis back turned and within a minute and a half of tbe time be left defendant, be beard a shot. He turned around and immediately saw a flash in tbe dark and beard a second shot. He ran to tbe place where tbe shots were fired, taking but three-fourths of a minute to do so. He there found Ciecarelli dead on the ground and Favero, “lamenting pain,” trying to draw himself up by holding to tbe picket fence. The witness testified that he then saw tbe defendant at or in an alley a distance of about twenty yards away, walking fast or running away; that be ran after tbe defendant with tbe intention of detaining him, but that defendant again put tbe gun to bis face, and be therefore ran away; went directly to the bouse where be roomed and to bed, where be spent a bad night with visions of tbe two men be bad seen on the ground. This witness did not see members of the Favero family at tbe scene of tbe shooting, nor did they see him, although they came from tbe rear house immediately on bearing tbe shots. The witness, although con-, fused as to distances, remained steadfast as to the facts be had related and as to the time being about 9:30, though be stated that he bad no watch.

The doctor who received Favero at tbe hospital, to which be was rushed immediately, testified that he was brought in about 9 o’clock. He further testified that Favero was then in a dying condition — no pulse and heart fluttering, “he was in extremis,” but that he rallied to strong stimulation and, after that, was conscious and rational; that be then talked in tbe Italian language with members of bis family, though the doctor could not understand what was said. With regard to these conversations, John Favero, deceased’s eldest son, 26 years old, testified: “I asked him if it pained very much; he says, ‘Tes.’ I said, ‘Well, cheer up,’ I says, ‘Maybe by morning you will feel better * * * tbe nurse is *581 going to get you something to make you sleep.’ He said, ‘I’ll never feel this pain in the morning’ that his father then told him that he was the “oldest one at home now, take care of ma and also take my keys and give them to her”; also to take his pocketbook to her.

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Bluebook (online)
248 P. 179, 76 Mont. 574, 1926 Mont. LEXIS 110, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-vettere-mont-1926.