Court Opinion

ID: 6739311
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-20 23:20:46.306879+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:01:54.559024
License: Public Domain

Robinson, J.
The information charges that in August, 1919, in the county of Ward, the defendants made an assault on W. H. Sibbald with a dangerous weapon, to wit, a hammer of 2 pounds, with intent to do great bodily harm. The jury found defendants guilty of the crime of a simple assault. The sentence of the court was that each defendant pay a fine of $25 and the costs of the prosecution, taxed at $80.25, and in default of payment be imprisoned for thirty days. The assault is well proven by several witnesses. Mr. Sibbald—an attorney at law—the complaining witness, testified: “On August 6th, at Kemmare, I was at the sheriff’s sale held in a room. Klemmons wanted me to get out. Mrs. Ewarts laid her hand on me and tried to shove me out. Klemmons came up behind her and said: 'Knock the brains out of the —of-a—.’ He handed her a monkey wrench, saying: 'Take this and knock his brains out.’ The deputy sheriff grabbed the monkey wrench and threw it on the floor. Klemmons grabbed a hammer, handing it to her and saying, 'Use this.’ She took the hammer, raised it up, threatening to strike him, when the deputy took it from her. The hammer weighed a pound and a half or two pounds.” The testimony is corroborated by three witnesses.
*179The defense is that the assault was made by defendants in defense of their property. In appellants’ brief it is said: At the time of the alleged assault the defendant Ewarts was the owner of a certain garage, in which she was conducting a garage business, and defendant Klemmons was working for her in such business. The sheriff of Ward county had advertised a sale and was conducting the sale in the building. The property being sold by the sheriff was the property of Birda Ewarts and one Wallin. The sale was upon an execution against Klemmons, and he did not own the property. Mrs. Ewarts owned the building. The sheriff and those with him were trespassers upon her property. She requested them to get out of the building. They refused to do so. She seized a hammer which the other defendant handed to her, and was about to threaten Sibbald with the hammer in order to get him off the premises, when the hammer was seized by the bystanders.
The assault was the result of an old grudge and bitterness. It was not made in defense of property. Sibbald was not a trespasser. He had a right to be present at the sale. Mr. Sibbald testified: “It is a little more than two years since Anton Klemmons was removed as administrator of the Olmstead estate. I am attorney for the estate. Two years ago I was acting for the estate in handling the case in which this execution was issued that is in evidence. I got that judgment against him.”
Klemmons testified: “I have known Sibbald two years. He was a trouble maker. He had me arrested. He has been after me for two years. His coming there that day and selling Mrs. Ewarts’s property was part of the same deal. I was the administrator of the Olmstead estate. He started this lawsuit against me. He claimed that I was wasting the estate and had done away with a lot of property. I was removed. He secured a judgment against me. I have been working for Mrs. Ewarts about four years and have been managing her business.”
Defendants may well be thankful that the timely intervention of the deputy sheriff prevented the use of the hammer.
Affirmed.
Christianson, Oh. J., and Birdzell, J., concur.
Grace, J., disqualified, did not participate.