State v. Zachmeier

441 P.2d 737, 151 Mont. 256, 1968 Mont. LEXIS 309
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedJune 11, 1968
Docket11352
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 441 P.2d 737 (State v. Zachmeier) 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. Zachmeier, 441 P.2d 737, 151 Mont. 256, 1968 Mont. LEXIS 309 (Mo. 1968).

Opinion

MR. CHIEF JUSTICE JAMES T. HARRISON

delivered the Opinion of the Court.

This is an appeal by the defendant from a conviction for second degree murder.

The appellant, Kenneth Eugene Zachmeier, was charged with themurder of his wife. The death of Mrs. Zachmeier first came to light on the afternoon of October 16, 1966, when defendant called his employer and friend, Guy Reese, from a bar in Billings, Montana, and asked Reese to come down and talk to him. When Reese arrived he found defendant drinking near the bar. The defendant told him that he thought he had killed his wife. Mr. Reese did not believe this but the defendant kept *258 insisting; finally Reese said that if defendant really thought he had killed his wife, he would call the sheriff’s office and send an officer to defendant’s apartment."' Refese then called the sheriff’s office. When the officer, Deputy Sheriff Howard Moe, arrived at the bar Reese told him why he had called. Mr. Moe approached the defendant and asked him what was this between him and his wife. The defendant replied, “I have killed my wife.” The officer asked him where and how; defendant said he had choked her in their bedroom, and she was there now. Mr. Moe then asked the defendant to stand up and the officer frisked him. The officer next asked the defendant to take him to defendant’s wife. The officer drove defendant and Reese to defendant’s home. Defendant directed the officer to a bedroom. Defendant said he had locked the door. He gave Officer Moe a pair of manicure scissors and Officer Moe opened the door with them. Inside Officer Moe found a body which defendant identified as that of his wife. Officer Moe testified that he then advised defendant of his constitutional rights. At this time Deputy Sheriff James Meeks was summoned. The defendant was taken to the county jail, he was questioned by Officer Meeks and a detailed written “statement” or “confession” was made by him.

Prior to the trial of this matter defendant moved to suppress the written statement. The court reserved ruling on the motion at that time. Before the opening of the prosecution’s case the motion was renewed. At that time the court denied the motion “with leave to renew it” at the time the statement is offered. When the statement was offered into evidence, the court determined that it was inadmissible. However, during the course of the prosecution’s opening statement, the county attorney had told the jury of the making of the statement and its contents.

On this appeal defendant makes 6 specifications of error, being that the court erred (1) in allowing the endorsement of witnesses; (2) in failing to grant the defendant a continu *259 anee to examine the witnesses endorsed; (3) in allowing Deputy Sheriff Howard Moe to testify to statements made by the defendant; (4) in failing to grant the motion to suppress the written “statement” or “confession” of the defendant, prior to the County Attorney’s opening statement; (5) in permitting the County Attorney to comment on the details of the “statement” or “confession” in his opening statement; and (6) in its instruction to the jury on the question of “intent.”

Hereafter it will appear that specifications 4 and 5, with regal’d to the written “statement”or “confession” and the county attorney’s comment on the details thereof in his opening statement, will be crucial to this appeal and require that a new trial be ordered, but to preface that discussion we shall first take up specification 6.

The court instructed the jury: “The question of the specific intent to take life need not enter into the killing at all in order to make it murder in the second degree.” Defendant concedes that this instruction has been approved by this Court. State v. Chavez, 85 Mont. 544, 281 P. 352; State v. Dillon, 125 Mont. 24, 230 P.2d 764. He now asks us to reverse that ruling.

Sections 94-2501 and 94-2502, R.C.M.1947, were copied from California. California adheres to the same rule as Montana. People v. Jones, 160 Cal. 358, 117 P. 176 (1911); People v. Curry, 192 Cal. App.2d 664, 13 Cal.Rptr. 596. Defendant provides no reasoning which convinces us that this Court and California were or are in error. We decline to overrule the established law on that issue.

The next question with which we shall deal is defendant’s specification 3. The issue raised is, at what point in time did it become necessary for Officer Moe to advise defendant of his constitutional right?

To begin with, after a close reading of Miranda v. State of Arizona, 384 U. S. 436, 86 S.Ct. 1602, 16 L.Ed.2d 694 (1966), we feel that the underlying test of admissibility of *260 statements, admissions or confessions is still voluntariness. The requirements of Miranda are a means to this end.

Defendant asserts that . the investigation focused on Mm when’Mr. Reese told Officer Moe the reason for the call. It is further asserted that defendant was in custody at least at the time of the frisk. Therefore, defendant contends that the Miranda warnings of his constitutional rights should have been given right away. Since they were not so given, it is asserted that none of the statements made by defendant to Officer Moe are admissible.

The State’s position on this point is: that Officer Moe did not know a crime had been committed and therefore there could be no focus; that this was just part of the investigatory stage and the accusatory stage was not reached until there were disclosed physical facts indicating a crime had actually been committed; that this was not an in-custody interrogation. State ex rel. Berger v. District Court, etc., Mont., 432 P.2d 93 (1967).

The line between the investigatory and the accusatory stages of a criminal proceeding is never easily determined. Here, the water is further muddied because there is no knowledge at this point of a crime being committed. We find the state’s view to be the proper one. We cannot say, under the facts in this case, that when a policeman walks into a bar and is told a story by a person drinking at the bar, this is sufficient to begin the accusatory stage of a criminal proceeding. It is enough for the officer to begin investigating the purported facts.

Because of the difficulty in doing it, we do not rely alone on our determination of the beginning and end of the investigatory stage. Rather, in deciding the issue, we find the reasoning in Miranda important.

The Supreme Court said, in reference to the cases before it in Miranda, “They all thus share salient features — incommunicado interrogation of individuals in a police-dominated atmosphere *261 * * Miranda v. State of Arizona, 384 U. S., p. 445, 86 S.Ct., at p. 1612.

We also find it pertinent that the court points out the police manuals say privacy is “the 'principal psychological factor contributing to a successful interrogation’.” Miranda v. Arizona, supra, 449, 86 S.Ct. 1615.

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State v. West
617 P.2d 1298 (Montana Supreme Court, 1980)
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598 P.2d 198 (Montana Supreme Court, 1979)
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580 P.2d 1387 (Montana Supreme Court, 1978)
State v. Kolstad
531 P.2d 1346 (Montana Supreme Court, 1975)
State v. Ruona
499 P.2d 797 (Montana Supreme Court, 1972)
State v. Warwick
Montana Supreme Court, 1972
State v. Zachmeier
453 P.2d 783 (Montana Supreme Court, 1969)
State v. Graves
163 N.W.2d 542 (South Dakota Supreme Court, 1968)
State v. Lucero
445 P.2d 731 (Montana Supreme Court, 1968)

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Bluebook (online)
441 P.2d 737, 151 Mont. 256, 1968 Mont. LEXIS 309, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-zachmeier-mont-1968.