United States v. Wood

33 N.W. 59, 4 Dakota 455, 1887 Dakota LEXIS 8
CourtSupreme Court Of The Territory Of Dakota
DecidedMay 26, 1887
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 33 N.W. 59 (United States v. Wood) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court Of The Territory Of Dakota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Wood, 33 N.W. 59, 4 Dakota 455, 1887 Dakota LEXIS 8 (dakotasup 1887).

Opinion

Palmer, J.

The defendant, Charles A. Wood, was indicted for murder. The indictment was in the usual form, and charged a feloneous killing. Prom the evidence it appears that on the night of October 16, 1885, the deceased, George Pleury, [456]*456in his own house, on the Fort Buford military reservation, was shot and killed by defendant, Wood. The defendant interposed the plea of not guilty, and insisted that he was acting in self-defense, believing his life was in danger, etc.

What may be considered substantially the undisputed facts disclosed by the evidence, and briefly stated, are as follows:

The defendant, at the time of the homicide, was a private of the cavalry guard, L troop, Seventh United States cavalry, and Stationed at Fort Buford, Dakota. He enlisted at Baltimore, Md., in May, 1883, and had been stationed at Fort Buford since the summer of 1883. He had never before been arrested nor apprehended for any crime, and had never been the subject of discipline by court-martial or otherwise, under or by virtue of any of the rules and regulations of the military service of the United States. The deceased, George Fleury, was a halfbreed Indian; and had lived upon the Fort Buford military reservation all the time that defendant had been there, and was acting in the capacity of post interpreter. Mrs. Fleury was a German half-breed, 22 years old, born at Fort Union, and was married to deceased in the summer of 1885, a few months previous to the homicide. That deceased and defendant had been acquaintances, and had lived upon quite intimate terms, all of the time since the summer of 1883; and the relations between the defendant and Mrs. Fleury had been friendly all of the time since their acquaintance, a year and a half prior to the homicide.

On the evening preceding the shooting, the deceased, George Fleury, Mrs. Fleury, defendant Wood, and one Mrs. Clyde, went together from Fleury’s house to a dance somewhere in the immediate vicinity, remaining at the dance until 2 or 3 o’clock the next morning. Both the deceased and the defendant had been drinking freely during the night. After the dance, the defendant, the deceased, Mrs. Fleury, and Mrs. Clyde, returned to Fleury’s house, and Mrs. Clyde passed directly on to her own home. There is some conflict in the evidence whether Mr. Fleury or Mrs. Fleury went to her home with her, but the evidence is undisputed that, whichever did go, they had re[457]*457turned, and had entered Fleury’s house before the homicide. George Fleury and the defendant continued drinking after the return to Fleury’s house. The entrance to the house was into the kitchen, and from the kitchen through a door to a bedroom, where the shooting was done. There were no other rooms in the house, except two sheds, one of which was occupied by a squaw called “Fug,” and two papooses. There were no other occupants of the premises on the night in question, and the squaw Pug was not a witness to any of the proceedings.

The shooting was done in the bedroom. The furniture of this room at the time was a bed, wash stand, table, sewing-machine; and on the bed or table was a revolver owned and kept by deceased, and, standing in one corner of the bedroom, was a Winchester rifle, also owned and kept by deceased. At or immediately preceding the shooting the deceased, Mrs. Fleury, and the defendant, were alone together in the bedroom. Just before any shots were fired, Mrs. Fleury ran from the room, and, after the shots were fired, the defendant likewise made his escape. Fleury is supposed to have died almost instantly; certainly he was dead when he was first examined, a few moments later. •

It will thus be observed that the only living witness to what happened on that occasion between the defendant and the deceased was the defendant himself and Mrs. Fleury.

The direct evidence relied upon by counsel for defendant to establish his theory of self-defense is that of the. defendant himself, and is substantially as follows, as to what occurred in the bedroom: “After I arrived at the house, Mrs. Clyde and Mrs. Fleury went down to Mrs. Clyde’s, and George Fleury and myself went into the house, and the quarrel took place there. Question. State what you mean by a quarrel; state all. that happened. Answer. When I went in he said to me that I was a nice kind of a fellow to let that man dance with his wife in the way he did; and I asked him why; and he said I was bad as he was. Charles Foster I think is his name. I .told him I did not think there was anything wrong between his wife and Foster. Q. Was Mrs. Fleury there then? A. No, sir. He said there [458]*458was a man told me — Carland. How long before the shooting took place? A. About ten minutes. He said: ‘When I was down here at Bismarck after some horses, when I came back a man told me you had been committing adultery with my wife every night while I was away. ’ I asked him could he prove it. He said he did not need any proof He said one was as bad as the other; and about that time Mrs. Fleury came in. She sat down on the bed and commenced taking off her shoes. She said to her husband; ‘George, Fleury — ■’ Mr. Carland. Is that a competent conversation ? Court. It seems that only what passed between defendant and Fleury would be competent. Q. Did you shoot Fleury that night after the ball? A. I did. Q. What did you shoot him for? A. Because he threatened to kill me. Q. What position was he in, and what did he say? A. He said, ‘You son of a bitch, I’ll blow your head off.’ He was sitting on the bed, and jumped to the corner, and grabbed the Winchester rifle. Q. After he grabbed it what did he do? A. He pointed it at me. Q. Did he say he would blow your head off. Did you believe it? A. Yes, sir. Q. What did you do? A. I immediately j umped for the door, and struck against the sewing machine, and when I jumped back against it my eye fell on the revolver, with the handle out of the basket. Q. What did you do? A. I fired. Q. Right away? A.. Yes,sir. Q. Why did you fire? A. Because he was aiming the gun at me. Q. And you believed he was going to kill you? A. I thought my life was in danger. Q. Did you aim? A. No, sir; I did not. Q. How did the room appear as soon as you fired? A. The smoke came in my face, and I could not see. Q. Did you say how many times you fired? A. No, sir. By the report of the shots, I could not tell whether he was firing or whether I fired. Q. Did you try to get out of the house before you fired? A. Yes, sir; I did. Q. How many times do you think you fired, Mr. Wood? A. I have no idea how many times I fired. Q. As soon as you finished firing what did you do? A. I ran out of the house. Q. Did Mrs. Fleury go out of the room be - fore you fired? A. I do not remember how she got out. * * * Q. Now, whose revolver did you use, in fact? A. I cannot [459]*459say whose it was. Q. You found it in Fleury’s house? A. Yes, sir. Q. It was not yours? A. No, sir. Q. Had you ever seen it on Fleury before? A. I had seen him with one like it, but I cannot say that it was the one. Q. What became of it after you used it? A. I threw it down as I ran out of the kitchen. Q. Where did you throw it? A. I do not remember. Q. Inside or out? A. I guess it was inside the kitchen.”

And upon cross-examination Wood testified as follows: ‘ ‘Question. When you got into the kitchen, which way did you go? Answer. Went into the bedroom. He went in first, and sat down by the table. Q. Where did you go? A. I stood along side of him. Q. What did you do there, if anything? A. I moved from there to the bed on the left hand side of him. He wanted me to take a drink of whisky, but I did not do it. Q. Mrs.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
33 N.W. 59, 4 Dakota 455, 1887 Dakota LEXIS 8, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-wood-dakotasup-1887.