v.
FISHER
delivered the opinion of the court.
Some time between 7 and 9 o’clock in the evening of September 3, 1913, two men — one tall and one short — were observed by a Mrs. Henry Stone near the old Tabernacle, at the corner of Wyoming and Porphyry Streets, in the city of Butte, engaged in a “hold-up,” in the course of which Thomas Higgins was shot. The two men ran away, crossing the vacant lot which lay west of the Tabernacle, to the alley which passes the rear of the Oxford Hotel. The scene is sketched below. Point A shows approximately where the shooting occurred; point B, Mrs. Stone’s place of observation, and the dotted line from point A, the line of flight as indicated by her.
At about the point C were two men, the witnesses Davis and Giles; Davis heard the shooting, and Giles saw it; within a [*213] very few minutes both noticed two men — one tall, one short— come rapidly from the direction of the Tabernacle into the alley and pass on toward Silver Street; one of them (the short man) told Giles “to run down there and see how bad this man was shot”; upon the trial, Giles claimed to be uncertain whether the appellants were the two men he had thus seen, but his testimony leaves the indelible impression that they were. Giles went down to the Tabernacle, found Higgins and remained there until Higgins was removed to the emergency hospital shortly afterward. Some time about 11 o’clock the appellants Fisher (who is tall) and O’Neill (who is short) were arrested' and searched; but no weapons were found upon either. On the following day Fisher and O’Neill were taken before Higgins who identified O’Neill as the man who had shot him, but was not sure about Fisher. O’Neill responded: “Brother, look here; this is a very serious proposition; be careful, you know, and be sure”; Higgins rejoined: “I am quite sure; it was either you or your ghost.” The appellants were also taken to the office of "the county attorney and there pronounced by Giles to be the men he saw run up the alley right after the shooting, whereupon Fisher exclaimed: “That son-of-a-bitch of a nigger; but for him they wouldn’t have hardly any evidence against me at all. If I ever get out of this trouble I will kill Jerry Murphy” (the chief of police). Toward the last of September the appellants, pursuant to a promise made them by the officers, were again taken before Higgins in the St. James Hospital; Higgins had been told that the officers did not wish the appellants inculpated unless they were the guilty parties, yet upon their presentation Higgins said to O’Neill, “You are the man that laid me here in bed; you are the man that shot me, I am positive of that,” to which O’Neill answered: “This is a very serious proposition; be careful. Are you sure I am the maní” and Higgins rejoined: “You are the man.” Within a day or two thereafter Higgins died, the cause of his death being septicemia due to the gunshot wound received on the night of September 3.
[*214] The foregoing, which constitutes an outline of the state’s case, the appellants endeavored to meet by their testimony alone; and the effect of their testimony is to deny presence at or complicity in the shooting, and to dispute the evidence of their identification out of court by Higgins and Giles. Many of their statements touching their whereabouts at the time of the homicide should, if true, have been susceptible of corroboration; but none was offered. In some respects their testimony did not agree with their previous statements to the county attorney, or with the facts, if the state’s witnesses are believed. What their demeanor on the stand was we, of course, are unable to say. One serious contribution, however, they did make to the case, vis.: Both testified that on September 3 they were continuously together from about 4 o’clock in the afternoon until their arrest at about. 11 o ’clock that night.
On the whole evidence the jury found both the appellants guilty of murder in the first degree, leaving the punishment to be fixed by the court. They were adjudged to pay the extreme penalty, and from the judgment as well as from an order denying their motions for new trial, these appeals are taken. Thirty-five alleged errors are assigned, many of which are obviously without merit. Those which suggest matters of any consequence follow:
1. Dr. C. A. Johnson was called as a witness for the state and
2. By motion to strike the testimony of the witness Malloy and by objections to questions asked the witness Prlja, the appellants endeavored to exclude the confrontation of them by Giles in the county attorney’s office,- particularly was it sought to exclude the declarations and conduct of the appellants at the time, and failure in that behalf is the basis of vigorous
3. So, too, and upon the same authority, there was no error in receiving the evidence touching the identification by
4. The policeman, Prlja, having testified to the occurrence
5. The most vigorous contention in the briefs relates to the
6. Complaint is also made of the refusal of certain other instructions, but we find that the substance of them, so far as proper to be given, was fully covered by the charge.
7. Discussing the refusal to grant a new trial, appellants insist that the evidence is utterly insufficient to justify the verdict, and particularly to justify the imposition of the extreme penalty. With the penalty we have nothing whatever to do, so long as it complied with the statute prescribing punishment for the crime of which the appellants stand convicted. It may be that, considering the possibility of error in all human testimony, one could wish to avoid the infliction of death; but there cannot be the slightest doubt that as a matter of law the evidence was sufficient to justify the verdict, to establish that Higgins was fatally shot by O’Neill while O’Neill and his companion were engaged in the perpetration, or attempt to perpetrate, a robbery. Since both O’Neill and Fisher admit and insist that Fisher was with O’Neill at the hour the homicide [*217] occurred, Fisher must have been the companion of 0 ’Neill in the affair and is likewise guilty.
The judgment and order appealed from are affirmed.
Affirmed.