Walrath v. State

8 Neb. 80
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 15, 1878
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 8 Neb. 80 (Walrath v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Walrath v. State, 8 Neb. 80 (Neb. 1878).

Opinion

Lake, J.

The plaintiff in error was indicted jointly with one Harry Dubois for the crime of murder in the first' degree, in shooting to death Charles Phillips. On a separate trial she was convicted of murder in the second degree, and sentenced to the penitentiary for the term of ten years. She now brings the case here, alleging several errors as grounds for a reversal of the judgment.-

[82]*82The first ez'ror assigned is that the verdict is not sustained. by the evidence. Ve have carefully examined the evidence as preserved by the bill of exceptions, and are clearly of opiziion that this objection to the vez’dict is well taken. We find a total want of evidence to show that the prisoner either committed, or was present, aiding or abetting in the commission of the crime. The .utmost that the evidence tends to establish against her is, that knowing of its commission by Dubois, she concealed the fact, and also harbored and protected him from prosecution. But this, if fully established, would only make her an accessory after the fact, a crime not charged by the indictment, and for which she was not on trial. The testimony may also have shown that Dubois had previously threatened to take the life of the deceased, in her presence.

To have justified a conviction under this indictment it was necessary for the prosecution to prove, either that the prisoner herself gave the fatal wouzzd, or else was present, aiding and abetting in giving it. 2 Broom & Hadley’s Com. (Am. Ed.), 353. In other words, she must have been what is known in czfiminal jurisprudence as a principal, either izi the first or second degz’ee. The theory of the prosecutiozi seems to have been that she was the latter. Principals in the second degree are those who did not with their own hands commit the act, but were present aiding and abetting it. 3 Greenleaf on Ev., Sec. 40. 1 Hale P. C., 615. But facts showing the prisoner to have been an accessory only, whether before or after the fact, would not warrant her conviction under an indictment charging her as principal. State v. Wyckoff, 31 N. J., 65. Connaughty v. The State, 1 Wis., 159. Hughes v. The State, 12 Ala., 458. 1 Bish. Crim. Law, Sec. 663.

The only evidence upon which reliance was placed as conziecting the prisoner with the.homicide, in any [83]*83manner, consisted of so called “confessions” made just previous to, and at the time of her arrest. The most of these confessions however, after having been erroneously admitted, were very properly excluded, so far as they could be, from the consideration of the jury on the ground that they were not voluntary. The principal ones not excluded were the following, viz:

William Radcliff, a witness called by the state, in answer to a question by the district attorney, said: “ I asked her (the prisoner) where Charley (the deceased) was. She stopped awhile and did not speak for some time; then she said, if she had a friend she had a secret to tell him. Then she said Charley was not a thousand miles from there, and told me that by going down a mile or a mile and a quarter from the ranch I would find where he had been killed.”

Q. How did she say you would find the place?

A. Well there was a small clump of trees about a mile from the house, and she said if I would go down there I would find where he had been killed; and if I would uncover that pile of sand that was there I would find blood and then I would see a frail that led to the river. .

Q. Did she say how he had been killed? ■

A. Yes, sir. She did.
Q. Well how was it?
A. She said he had been shot.
Q. Well, go on.

A. She told me if. I would go over to the bridge I would find some cartridges that were shot out of a pistol. She told me where he was shot, right here, pointing to her cheek and neck; and she said those who did that ought to be punished.

This witness then went on and narrated how, in accordance with the prisoner’s directions thus given, he made search and found the blood, cartridges, and a [84]*84trail leading to the river, such as would be made by dragging some object over the ground. And this disclosure led to the discovery of the body of the deceased shortly afterward, in the river a short distance from where this trail struck the water’s edge.

On cross-examination the following facts were drawn out from this witness:

Q. Did she not state to you during that conversation that she was afraid of Dubois ?

Q. Did she tell you not to tell Dubois what she had told you?
A. Yes, sir.
Q. Did she state as a reason she had not told this before was fear of Dubois?
Q. Did she state to you how she had learned these facts?
Q. How was it?
A. She told me that Dubois told her.

It was also proved that Dubois and Phillips for some months before and at the time of the murder were living with the Walraths, and that Dubois remained there and seemed to be upon very intimate terms with the family up to the time of his arrest.

.Also, M. 0. Cook, a witness called by the prosecution, testified:

Q. Well, go on and give the particulars of the conversation.

A. She (Mrs. Walrath) told me she had a secret to tell me — that if I would not tell she would tell me. She told me that Charley Phillips was murdered; and told me where he was murdered. She said he was murdered down by some little willow trees; that he [85]*85was murdered there, then dragged south and thrown into the river.

Q. How did she say he was killed?
A. She said that he was shot.
Q. Who by and how?

A. She did not say how. She said that he went out without Harry Dubois; she said that Dubois told him that he had a hand in the train robbery at Big Spring station; that he had money hidden there; he told him if he would go out with him that night he would make him wealthy; that he had the money buried. She said they had a fight a few nights before, and that Phillips was afraid of Dubois; that Phillips told he was going out that night, and was afraid of Dubois, and wanted her promise to see to it, that if anything came out wrong, to have it cleared up. She said that when they got down to the place where he was killed, Dubois said to Phillips, “ What is that coming down the railroad?” Phillips turned to look, when he was shot twice — once in the cheek as he turned his head to see, and then in the neck.

Q. Did she say what he was shot with ?
A. She did not say.

Q.- Did she say what arms they took with them from the house?

A. Yes, sir. That Phillips took a Winchester rifle, •and Dubois a revolver.
Q. How did he fall?

A. She did not say how he fell, but that he was shot down, and then dragged down, and thrown into the river.

Q.

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Bluebook (online)
8 Neb. 80, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/walrath-v-state-neb-1878.