State v. Weems

65 N.W. 387, 96 Iowa 426
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedDecember 13, 1895
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 65 N.W. 387 (State v. Weems) 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. Weems, 65 N.W. 387, 96 Iowa 426 (iowa 1895).

Opinion

Granger, J.

I. On the nineteenth day of May, 1894, one L. B. Ridpath, a passenger conductor while on his way from his heme to his train, in the city of Des Moines, was shot and hilled. This defendant, John Hamil, and John Kraut, were on the first day of [429]*429June, 1894, jointly indicted for the murder, the offense being charged in the first degree. The cause was as Jo the defendant Weems called for trial July 9, 1894, resulting in a verdict of guilty of the crime as charged, and the jury recommended the death penalty.

A few facts may appropriately be stated in this connection. On the night that Ridpath was killed, the three defendants, as indicted, were together from about 6 or 7 o’clock in the evening until the killing took place, which was on Third street, near Center. They met on the east side of the river, at a house, and afterwards went to the west side and visited two or three places together, when they went north on Fourth street to Center street. From the testimony of Kraut, who- was a witness for the state, it is made to. appear that while on Fourth street, and near Center, Weemssaid he had to have some money before morning, and said that he must have a suit of clothes in a certain length of time. While on Fourth street, either Weems or Hamil made the remark that he “was going to hold up the first plug that came along.” On Center street they all went east to Third street, and saw one man pass. Weems and Hamil talked of “holding him up,” but it was said: “Them kind of people haven’t got no money.” Soon after Ridpath came along, and Weems and Hamil crossed the street,' and met him, and soon Kraut heard a pistol shot, and looking, saw Weems and Hamil run away, and he crossed over and saw that Ridpath was killed. Later in the evening, Kraut saw Weems and Hamil at Mrs. Whitcomb’s, on the east side of the river, and Hamil inquired if the man was hurt, and he was told by Kraut that he was dead. On the twenty-second day of May, 1894, three days after the killing, Weems made a confession, which is in the abstract; and in most of the particulars, to the time the three men reached Third street, it corroborates Kraut substantially. This statement is so [430]*430important that we give the part of it referring to what was done after reaching Center street. It is as follows: “Just as we got to Center street we saw a .young fellow going east on the north side of Center street. Barney said: ‘Shall I stick him up?7 I said: ‘No; he has got nothing. He is nothing but a kid.7 Hamil said: ‘I have a notion to hold him up anyhow. Those are the kind of people that generally have money.7 We then started east on Center street to Third street, and started south on the west side of Third street, when we saw a man going south on the east side of Third street, carrying a satchel. He was about sixty feet north of us. Hamil and myself started diagonally across the street ahead of him, to hold him up, and Kraut was to stay on the west side of the street and come over and'help us if he was needed. We got on the sidewalk about fifty feet south of the man that was shot. We walked down the street ahead of him until we came to a large tree by the side of the walk. Just before we got to the tree, we met a man and woman going north. ■ Hamil was standing behind the tree; I, on the edge of the sidewalk. Just as the man came up to us Hamil pulled the revolver out of his pocket, and said, ‘Hold up your hands.7 The man threw up his grip, and hit the revolver. As he hit it, it discharged it. Then Hamil grabbed the grip, and started to run. We both ran across the street and into a blind alley. Hamil cut the grip open. He got one large and one ■small leather pocket book, and an ivory handled revolver, out of the grip.77

With this partial history of the case we may better present some of the questions to be considered.

[431]*4311 [430]*430II. On the twentieth day of June, 1894, the defendants in the indictment, Weems and Hamil, made their application to change the place of trial, because first, the minds of the people of the county had been [431]*431poisoned and prejudiced against them by the publication, in all the daily newspaper published in the city of Des Moines, of “inflammatory and highly-colored, display-headed, doubled-headed accounts of what purported to be detailed recitations of the facts of the alleged crime, and connecting defendants with the same,” which accounts are attached to the application as exhibits; second, because the excitement had reached such a state that violence was threatened, and even attempted., against them, and the officers of the law were compelled to remove them, to protect their lives; third, because the person killed was a railway conductor, and popular with all classes of railroad men, and the minds of such were especially appealed to and poisoned and prejudiced against the defendants; and fourth, because the lives of the defendants will be in danger of mob violence while on trial in the county. The application, besides being sworn to by Wéems and Hamil, is supported by the affidavits of three parties, to conform to the law in such matters. There is also an affidavit signed by nineteen others, residents and citizens of Polk county, in which they say that they “believe that the said defendants cannot obtain a fair and impartial trial in said county, because of the public excitement against the defendants, because of the many inflammatory newspaper articles published in all the papers of said county, concerning the alleged crime of said defendants.” The showing for a change is resisted by an affidavit of J. D. McGarrah, sheriff of said county, to the effect that he was absent from the county when said, defendants were arrested; that some of his deputies, as a matter of overcaution, removed the defendants from Polk county on Saturday evening; that he returned on Monday after, and upon investigation to know if it was necessary for them to be kept out of the county, because of passion or feeling of the [432]*432people of the county, he became satisfied that there was no such feeling or passion; and that on Tuesday he brought them back into the county. He also states that he became satisfied that there was never any danger of mob violence, and that the crowd of people* men, women, and children, that assembled upon learning of the arrest, was composed of curiosity seekers, who were interested in the arrest of persons charged with crime. There were also affidavits signed by two hundred and ninety-five inhabitants of Polk county, who say, each for himself, that he is acquainted with the people of said county, and knows their sentiments and feelings in relation to the case, against Hamil and Weems; that there are one hundred thousand inhabitants in the county; that only a small portion of the people of the county have given any attention to the facts of the case, or have particular knowledge of the case; that most of the people of the county are not only without prejudice, but have no knowledge whatever in relation to the case; and that defendants can have as fair a trial in Polk county as in any other county in the state. The court denied the application, and complaint is made of the ruling. .

[433]*4332 [434]*4343 [432]*432It will be well to here state that what is represented of the publications as to their being “highly-colored, display-headed accounts” of the affair is true. These exhibits cover about thirty pages of typewritten matter.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

State v. Kimball
176 N.W.2d 864 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1970)
State v. Moore
251 N.W. 737 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1933)
State v. Reding
13 P.2d 253 (Idaho Supreme Court, 1932)
State v. Archibald
226 N.W. 186 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1929)
Fogler v. State
117 So. 694 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1928)
State v. Mueller
208 N.W. 860 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1926)
State v. Leeper
200 N.W. 732 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1924)
State v. Hodges
198 Iowa 1208 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1924)
State v. Wimpsett
189 N.W. 983 (South Dakota Supreme Court, 1922)
State v. Bower
191 Iowa 713 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1921)
State v. Levich
174 Iowa 688 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1916)
State v. Graves
157 P. 160 (New Mexico Supreme Court, 1915)
Sloan v. State
69 So. 871 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1915)
State v. Dodson
136 N.W. 789 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 1912)
State v. Carlisle
132 N.W. 686 (South Dakota Supreme Court, 1911)
State v. Casey
34 Nev. 154 (Nevada Supreme Court, 1911)
State v. Rutledge
113 N.W. 461 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1907)
State v. Quirk
112 N.W. 409 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1907)
State v. Crouch
107 N.W. 173 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1906)
People v. Provost
107 N.W. 716 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1906)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
65 N.W. 387, 96 Iowa 426, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-weems-iowa-1895.