State v. Welch

257 P. 1010, 79 Mont. 614, 1927 Mont. LEXIS 124
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedJune 29, 1927
DocketNo. 6,141.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 257 P. 1010 (State v. Welch) 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. Welch, 257 P. 1010, 79 Mont. 614, 1927 Mont. LEXIS 124 (Mo. 1927).

Opinion

MR. CHIEF JUSTICE CALLAWAY

delivered the opinion of the court.

On Sunday afternoon, December 27, 1925, two hunters observed the body of a dead man in Skelly Gulch on the Fletcher ranch, a remote spot in Lewis and Clark county. Their attention was first attracted by a bloody trail in the snow, indicating the course over which the body had been dragged. They notified the sheriff of the fact and he, with one of the hunters, and some others, proceeded to the Fletcher ranch, arriving there about midnight. On this ranch there is a log cabin, which serves as a dwelling-house, with a door in the *617 east end. At the west end and four or five feet distant from the main building is a smaller cabin with a door opening to the south. This small building was used for the purpose of making moonshine whisky and when the sheriff arrived there Frank Gray and Jay Welch, the defendant, were engaged in that nefarious work. The sheriff asked Gray what he was doing there, to which Gray answered that he had arrived there about dark. The sheriff then asked where the other party was, and Gray said: “Who do you mean, Billstrom?” The sheriff .said, “.Yes, Billstrom.” Both Gray and Welch said he had gone to town. The sheriff asked, “When did he go to town?” and Gray replied: “About four or five days ago.” The sheriff then suggested that there must have' been a rough-house before Billstrom pulled out, and in response to that, according to one of the witnesses, the defendant said, “The Wop had throwed him out, had a row with him and throwed him out and went to town.” By the “Wop,” George Sass, a Roumanian, was meant and it was ascertained that he was sleeping in the dwelling-house. At this time the defendant was under the influence of liquor. Sass when awakened was found to be in a like state. As soon as Sass was dressed, the sheriff and his party took Gray, Welch and Sass to the place where the body was found, Otten, one of the hunters, acting as guide. The body was that of John Billstrom. His head had been beaten in with a blunt instrument.

On the next day an examination of the premises disclosed that two men had dragged the body of Billstrom from the northeast comer of the dwelling-house to a point in Skelly Gulch about 400 yards distant. Blood spots were found on the floor of the dwelling-house and on the logs outside at the northeast comer of the house.

Gray, Welch and Sass were charged by information with the crime of murder in the first degree. The ^defendants pleaded not guilty. While the record does not disclose it affirmatively it is evident that they demanded separate trials. *618 At the trial of the defendant Welch, Sass became a witness for the state. He testified that on Christmas Eve, Gray, Welch, Billstrom and himself were at the ranch. Gray slept in the small cabin while Billstrom, Welch and himself slept in the dwelling-house. On Christmas morning Gray told Billstrom to get ready to go to town but Billstrom said he could not do so because he was sick. Gray told him he would make him go pretty soon. Gray then told Sass to go after the horses and to get ready to go to the bridge, meaning the railroad trestle across Greenhorn Creek. Sass was gone about half an hour. When he left the house Gray, Welch and Billstrom were there. When he returned to the cabin he saw Gray and Welch standing in the door. Billstrom was on the ground alongside the cabin with a rope around his body; he was dead. In the cabin there was blood all over the floor. There was a double-bitted ax lying about ten yards from the body of Billstrom upon which there was blood and hair. “It had the drops here and there all over it; on the bit of the ax it had just a few drops here and there.” There was an ax behind the door in the cabin with a broken handle and upon this ax there were a few drops of blood. Gray told Sass to help Welch drag Billstrom “into the draw.” When Sass hesitated Gray said, “Do you see that man over there?” and from this expression Sass believed that if he did not do as he was ordered, something would happen to him as it had to Billstrom, and so he obeyed. He and Welch wrapped the rope around the handle of the double-bitted ax. Then each took hold of an end of the ax! handle and they dragged Billstrom’s body to the spot where it was found. It took about fifteen minutes to drag the body down to the gulch. After leaving the body there Sass and Welch came back to the cabin. Gray then told Sass to get a pan of water, “and then Gray and Welch washed one another in the water that I brought over from the cabin. The part they washed was everywhere there was blood. I never paid any attention to where the blood was on them. *619 Yes, I said that after Welch and I dragged the body down the gulch I got some water for Frank Gray and Welch. Frank Gray told me to get the water and Gray and Welch washed themselves. They washed their hands, and shoes and clothing and everything.” Immediately after this Gray and Sass took ten gallons of whisky to the Greenhorn trestle where Gray’s automobile was. Gray told Sass to return to the ranch and to clean up the blood and if necessary to take ashes and cover it, and this he did. He washed the doublebitted ax but not the other. Gray and Welch never told him anything about the killing of Billstrom and he never asked any questions because he was afraid. Gray told him not to say anything if anybody inquired about John Billstrom; that nobody would look for Billstrom because he was an old man and had nobody to look after him. Gray said to him that if he told anybody, that would happen to him which had happened to Billstrom. When Sass got back to the ranch he found that Welch had removed the mattress upon which Billstrom had slept, and Billstrom’s clothes, from the cabin. After starting to clean up the blood Sass talked with Welch and Welch said, “Everything is all right.”

Upon cross-examination Sass admitted that he had told a different story but said it was not true; he had told it at the instance of Gray; Gray had offered to give him $500. The defendant did not take the stand nor did the defense offer any testimony. The jury found the defendant guilty of murder in the second degree, and on March 8, 1926, the court imposed a penalty of not less than thirty nor more than sixty years in the state prison. The defendant on March 5, 1927, appealed from the judgment.

To bring about a reversal of the judgment counsel for defendant insist that the evidence is insufficient to justify the verdict.

As the defendant did not move for a new trial our review of the evidence may extend no further than to determine *620 whether there is any substantial evidence to sustain the verdict. (State v. Brantingham, 66 Mont. 1, 212 Pac. 499.)

While Sass was charged jointly with Gray and Welch, that fact alone does not make him an accomplice. It is true that we said in State v. Smith, 75 Mont. 22, 241 Pac. 522, the test to determine whether one is an accomplice is to ascertain whether he could be indicted for the offense for which the accused is being tried” (12 Cyc. 445), but this language of course implies that the facts are such as to justify the indictment of the person for the offense for which the accused is being tried. One might be indicted with another wholly without justification.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
257 P. 1010, 79 Mont. 614, 1927 Mont. LEXIS 124, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-welch-mont-1927.