State v. Warrick

446 P.2d 916, 152 Mont. 94, 1968 Mont. LEXIS 368
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 12, 1968
Docket11478
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 446 P.2d 916 (State v. Warrick) 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. Warrick, 446 P.2d 916, 152 Mont. 94, 1968 Mont. LEXIS 368 (Mo. 1968).

Opinion

MR. JUSTICE CASTLES

delivered the Opinion of the Court.

The appellant, Earl W. Warrick, was charged by information with the crime of assault in the second degree; was convicted and sentenced to six years in the state penitentiary with all but two years suspended.

The events out of which this prosecution arose occurred October 31, 1967 in the community of Trout Creek, Montana, where appellant and his wife, Lou Anna, resided. At that time appellant’s brothers, Sherman and Benjamin Warrick, accompanied by one Fats Westerman, had come out from Illinois for the hunting and were staying in a small trailer parked on appellant’s property. Appellant and his wife also lived on this property in a trailer some 69 feet from the bank of the Clark Fork River.

Since construction of the Noxon Rapids Dam this area of *96 the river is a part of the dam impoundment, and the river bank at this point is high, steep, and rough. The bank is actually about 30 feet high and part of it is too steep to walk on.

The afternoon of October 31st was spent by appellant and. Lou Anna helping a Mrs. Sutton, who had recently sold the' Wayside Bar in Trout Creek to another party, move her belongings from the bar into a trailer. Appellant drank soma beer and had at least one “boiler maker”. Mrs. Warrick had a. beer or two in the bar. The appellant and Lou Anna were still in the bar at approximately 6:00 p.m. when the brothers returned from the hunting trip. The evening was spent drinking with various persons in the bar.

The brothers left the bar first, shortly before 10:00 p.m. Mrs. Mary Miller watched the appellant’s brothers and their friend head in the direction of Thompson Falls until their vehicle went out of sight. They had stated that they were going home to Illinois. Before they left they had quarreled with the appellant. There was also testimony that appellant kicked the stool out from under Lou Anna and she fell to the floor. Appellant was described as “ornery” and “picking” at everyone.

■ Ten or fifteen minutes after the brothers left, the appellant picked Lou Anna up, put her over his shoulder and started to leave. Lou Anna grabbed the door jamb and both fell in a heap on the doorstep just outside the bar. Appellant then picked his wife up and threw her in their pickup. Appellant was seen moving his hands around in the pickup before they drove to their trailer some fifteen or twenty minutes later.

About midnight the appellant knocked on Wayne Welch’s door, who lived about 1,000 feet east of the Warricks, asked for help, and ran away. Mr. Welch stopped at the Warrick trailer first but he could not find anyone and summoned the help of one Mr. Eaton. Together they returned to the Warrick trailer and located the appellant and Lou Anna by the river bank. These men assisted the appellant in lifting and carrying Lou Anna up and over the bank into the trailer. They testified that *97 they did not drag or bump her in any manner. She was unclothed and unconscious.

Mr. Eaton called the sheriff and Dr. Rosedahl of Thompson Falls who arrived at the trailer about 12:45 a.m. The doctor conducted a perfunctory examination, confined to the face and head, checking for a possible drowning. He concluded that Mrs. Warrick was anesthetized by alcohol, her pupils were dilated, but her breathing and color were good. The appellant told the sheriff at this time that he believed his brothers and Westerman had given Lou Anna a “mickey” and had attempted to molest her; that when the appellant drove up to the trailer, Lou Anna ran over the bank and into the river, where he followed her and eventually rescued her. Appellant then demanded that the sheriff stop the brothers’ vehicle.

At 2:20 a.m. the sheriff’s office received a call that an ambulance was needed and Clinton Spindler’s ambulance was summoned from Plains. Mr. Spindler testified that Lou Anna had what appeared to be beating marks on her. The appellant told Spindler that his wife had been picked up by three fellows in a pickup with Illinois license plates, driven to a cliff and thrown over the cliff into the water. The ambulance transported Mrs. Warrick to Bonner General Hospital in Sandpoint, Idaho, arriving there about 3:30 or 4:00 a.m. although there is confusion about the exact time.

Dr. Charles Smick examined her upon arrival and found her to be wet, cold, nude and unconscious with extensive bruises, scratches and abrasions about the head and other parts of the body. Appellant told the doctor he didn’t know how the injuries occurred and he felt that maybe his brothers had something to do with it. He also told the doctor he had gotten her out of the water and had some recollection that she had been in the water for some time.

At the trial Dr. Smick testified that “she (Mrs. Warrick) has a scrambled brain syndrome and is just a vegetable. * * * in order to have this, you must have multiple injuries to the *98 brain tissue itself. * * * this * * * can happen when people have had repeated blows to the head, either side of the head, and sort of a bouncing back and forth of the brain.” His opinion after viewing the place on the river was that she was dragged from the trailer down to the beach and felt her back could not have been abrased the way it was by rolling in.

Dr. Smick testified there were abrasive wounds on her entire back with a considerable amount of skin removed. In the doctor’s opinion she had been dragged where her back lay in a flat position some length on more of an even surface; he was referring to the rough bank. The doctor further testified that if Mrs. Warrick had fallen off the bank that there would be “evidently ample skull fracture” and the X-rays disclosed no such evidence of a skull fracture.

Our foregoing description of the bizarre happenings on a Halloween night in the small rural community of Trout Creek is pieced together from various witnesses to the preliminary drinking bout in the “Wayside Bar”. The subsequent events are equally bizarre. The appellant, the prime actor, gave various conflicting stories at the immediate times, at one time trying to get the sheriff to arrest his own brothers. With his wife in an unconscious beaten state, the appellant returned to the bar for help but, according to his own version, took time for one more beer.

The appellant in his testimony to the jury stated that he had no recollection of any thing that transpired prior to midnight. The first thing he did remember was Lou Anna standing unclothed on the river bank and he was in his pickup with the lights on. He then “hollered” at her and she went over the bank. He had no recollection of anyone else being there. He slid down the bank behind her and got her out of the water.

Mrs. Warrick was later transferred to Sacred Heart Hospital in Spokane, and is now in a home in that city being cared for by her mother. There is little or no hope that she will ever regain consciousness.

*99 Appellant divides the alleged errors on this appeal into four parts. We shall discuss them in the same manner. These parts are: (1) verdict contrary to law and evidence, (2) error in admitting certain photographs, (3) error in jury instructions, and (4) error in denial of pre-trial motions.

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Bluebook (online)
446 P.2d 916, 152 Mont. 94, 1968 Mont. LEXIS 368, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-warrick-mont-1968.