Judge Wells Spicer B. ? D.
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Ike Clanton (outlaw)
About Phin Clanton (outlaw)
About Johnny Ringo (outlaw)
About "Old Man" Clanton" (outlaw)
Frank
Stillwell (outlaw)
About Frank McLaury (outlaw killed at the OK Corral)
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About Billy Clanton (outlaw killed at the OK Corral)
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William Breckinridge (Deputy Sheriff)
About Fred White (Marshal)
About George Parson
About Wells Spicer (Judge)
About George Goodfellow MD
About Nellie Cashman (Angel Of Mercy)
About Big Nose Kate (prostitute & Doc Holiday's girlfriend)
About Ed Schieffelin
About
John Clum (editor/publisher of Tombstone Epitaph)
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Morgan
Earps Death In The Tombstone Epitaph
Tombstone Epitaph Story The Day After
The OK Corral Shootout
Tombstone Pioneers Burial Places
Mistakes In The Movie
Tombstone
For fallacies in the movie
Tombstone please visit this web site:
http://www.ferncanyonpress.com/tombston/movie.shtml

Wells Spicer was born
near Monmouth, Illinois, and was related to the brothers, Virgil Earp, James
Earp, Wyatt Earp and Morgan Earp.
Spicer became a lawyer
and worked as a attorney and mining engineer at Salt Lake City. He also played
an active role in politics and was a unsuccessful candidate for election to the
Utah Legislature in 1874. He was also unsuccessful in his attempt to defend John
D. Lee when he was charged with the Mountain Meadows Massacre.
In 1878 Spicer moved to
Tombstone where he worked as an attorney, mining broker and U.S. Commissioner
for Deeds. Spicer lost his reputation as a honest lawyer when he used his role
as Kate Holliday's attorney to get her to leave town after she provided evidence
that Doc Holliday was guilty of murder and robbery.
Spicer was the judge in the court
case that followed the Gunfight at the OK Corral. After
a 30 day trial Spicer decided decided that the defendants (Virgil Earp, Wyatt
Earp, Morgan Earp, Doc Holliday) had been justified in their actions. This
judgement brought his law career to an end and after 1881 worked as a mining
engineer.
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Decision of Judge Wells Spicer after the
Preliminary Hearing in the Earp-Holliday Case
November 30, 1881
Territory of Arizona
VS.
Morgan Earp, et al Defendants
Defendants Wyatt Earp and John Holliday,
two of the defendants named in the above entitled action were arrested upon a
warrant issued by me on the 29th day of October, on a charge of murder. The
complaint filed, upon which this warrant was issued, accuses said defendants of
the murder of William Clanton, Frank McLaury, and Thomas McLaury on the 26th day
of last month, at Tombstone, in this County.
This case has now
been on hearing for the past thirty days, during which time a volume of
testimony has been taken and eminent legal talent employed on both sides.
The great importance of the
case, as well as the great interest taken in it by the entire community,
demand that I should be full and explicit in my findings and conclusions and
should give ample reasons for what I do.
From the mass of evidence before-much of which is upon collateral matter-I
have found it necessary for the purposes of this decision to consider only
those facts which are conceded by both sides or are established by a large
preponderance of testimony.
Viewing it in this manner, I find that on the
morning of the 26th day of October, 1881, and up to noon of that day, Joseph
I. Clanton or Isaac Clanton, the prosecuting witness in this case, was about
the streets and in several saloons of Tombstone, armed with revolver and
Winchester rifle, declaring publicly that the Earp brothers and Holliday had
insulted him the night before when he was unarmed, and now he was armed and
intended to shoot them or fight them on sight. These threats were communicated
to defendants, Virgil Earp and Wyatt Earp.
Virgil Earp was at this time the chief of
police of Tombstone and charged as such officer by the city ordinance with the
duty of preserving the peace, and arresting, with or without warrant, all
persons engaged in any disorderly act, whereby a breach of the peace might be
occasioned, and to arrest and disarm all persons violating the city ordinance
which declares it to be unlawful to carry on the person any deadly weapon
within the city limits, without obtaining a permit in writing.
Shortly after noon of October 26th, defendant
Virgil Earp, as chief of police, assisted by Morgan Earp, who was also at the
time a special policeman in the pay of the city and wearing a badge, arrested
and disarmed said Isaac Clanton, and in such arrest and disarmament, inflicted
upon the side of his head a blow from a pistol-whether this blow was necessary
is not material here to determine.
Isaac Clanton was then taken to
Justice or Recorder Wallace, where he was fined and his arms, consisting of a
revolver and Winchester rifle, taken from him and deposited at the Grand
Hotel, subject to his orders.
While at Justice Wallace's court and awaiting
the coming of Judge Wallace, some hot words passed between Isaac Clanton and
Wyatt Earp. Earp accused Clanton of having previously threatened to take his
life, and then proposed to make a fight with him anywhere, to which Isaac
Clanton assented, and then declared that "Fight was his racket," and that when
he was arrested and disarmed, if Earp had been a second later, "there would
have been a coroner's inquest in town.”
Immediately subsequent to this, a difficulty
occurred in front of Judge Wallace's courtroom, between Wyatt Earp and the
deceased Thomas McLaury, in which the latter was struck by the former with a
pistol and knocked down.
In view of these controversies between Wyatt
Earp and Isaac Clanton and Thomas McLaury, and in further view of this quarrel
the night before between Isaac Clanton and J. H. Holliday, I am of the opinion
that the defendant, Virgil Earp, as chief of police, subsequently calling upon
Wyatt Earp, and J. H. Holliday to assist him in arresting and disarming the
Clantons and McLaurys-committed an injudicious and censurable act, and
although in this he acted incautiously and without due circumspection, yet
when we consider the conditions of affairs incident to a frontier country; the
lawlessness and disregard for human life; the existence of a law-defying
element in [our] midst; the fear and feeling of insecurity that has existed;
the supposed prevalence of bad, desperate and reckless men who have been a
terror to the country and kept away capital and enterprise; and consider the
many threats that have been made against the Earps, I can attach no
criminality to his unwise act. In fact, as the result plainly proves, he
needed the assistance and support of staunch and true friends, upon whose
courage, coolness and fidelity he could depend, in case of an emergency.
Soon after the conclusion of proceedings at
Judge Wallace's court, Isaac Clanton and Thomas McLaury were joined by William
Clanton and Frank McLaury, who had arrived in town. In the afternoon these
parties went to [the] gun shop, where they were seen loading their guns and
obtaining cartridges. These proceedings were seen by Wyatt Earp, who reported
the same to Virgil Earp, chief of police, said Wyatt Earp at the time being a
sworn policeman.
After this, the Clantons and McLaurys went to
the Dexter Stables, on Allen Street, and shortly after, crossed the street to
the O.K. Corral and passed through to Fremont Street. With what purpose they
crossed through to Fremont Street will probably never be known. It is claimed
by the prosecution that their purpose was to leave town. It is asserted by the
defendants that their purpose was to make an attack upon them or at least to
feloniously resist any attempt to arrest or disarm them that might be made by
the chief of police and his assistants.
Whatever their purpose may have been, it is
clear to my mind that Virgil Earp, the chief of police, honestly believed [and
from information of threats that day given him, his belief was reasonable],
that their purpose was, if not to attempt the deaths of himself and brothers,
at least to resist with force and arms any attempt on his part to perform his
duty as a peace officer by arresting and disarming them.
At this time Virgil Earp was informed by one
H. F. Sills, an engineer from the A. T. & S. F. R. R., then absent from duty,
on a lay-off furlough, and who had arrived in town only the day before and
totally unacquainted [with] any person in town, or the state of affairs
existing here. Sills had overheard armed parties just then passing through the
O.K. Corral say, in effect, that they would make sure to kill Earp, the
marshal, and would kill all the Earp.
At the same time, several citizens and a
committee of citizens came to Virgil Earp, the chief of police, and insisted
that he should perform his duty as such officer and arrest and disarm the
cowboys, as they termed the Clan tons and McLaurys.
Was it for Virgil Earp as chief of police to
abandon his clear duty as an officer because its performance was likely to be
fraught with danger? Or was it not his duty that as such officer he owed to
the peaceable and law-abiding citizens of the city, who looked to him to
preserve peace and order, and their protection and security, to at once call
to his aid sufficient assistance and persons to arrest and disarm these men?
There can be but one answer to these
questions, and that answer is such as will divest the subsequent approach of
the defendants toward the deceased of all presumption of malice or of
illegality.
When, therefore, the defendants, regularly or
specially appointed officers, marched down Fremont Street to the scene of the
subsequent homicide, they were going where it was their right and duty to go;
and they were doing what it was their right and duty to do; and they were
armed, as it was their right and duty to be armed, when approaching men they
believed to be armed and contemplating resistance.
The legal character of the homicide must
therefore be determined by what occurred at the time and not by the precedent
facts. To constitute the crime of murder there must be proven not only the
killing, but also the felonious intent. In this case, the corpus delicti
or fact of killing is in fact admitted as well as clearly proven. The
felonious intent is as much a fact to be proven as the corpus delicti,
and in looking over this mass of testimony for evidence upon this point, I
find that it is anything but clear.
Witnesses of credibility testify that each of
the deceased or at least two of them yielded to a demand to surrender. Other
witnesses of equal credibility testify that William Clanton and Frank McLaury
met the demand for surrender by drawing their pistols, and that the discharge
of firearms from both sides was almost instantaneous.
There is a dispute as to whether Thomas
McLaury was armed at all, except with a Winchester rifle that was on the horse
beside him. I will not consider this question, because it is not of
controlling importance. Certain it is that the Clan tons and McLaurys had
among them at least two six-shooters in their hands, and two Winchester rifles
on their horses. Therefore, if Thomas McLaury was one of a party who were thus
armed and were making felonious resistance to an arrest, and in the melee that
followed was shot, the fact of his being unarmed, if it be a fact, could not
of itself criminate the defendants, if they were not otherwise criminated.
It is beyond doubt that William Clanton and
Frank McLaury were armed, and made such quick and effective use of their arms
as to seriously wound Morgan Earp and Virgil Earp.
In determining the important question of
whether the deceased offered to surrender before resisting, I must give as
much weight to the testimony of persons unacquainted with the deceased or the
defendants, as to the testimony of persons who were companions and
acquaintances, if not partisans of the deceased. And I am of [the] opinion
that those who observed the conflict from a short distance and from points of
observation that gave them a good view of the scene, to say the least, were
quite as likely to be accurate in their observation as those mingled up in or
fleeing from the melee.
Witnesses for the prosecution state
unequivocally that William Clanton fell or was shot at the first fire and
Claiborne says he was shot when the pistol was only about a foot from his
belly. Yet it is clear that there were no powder burns or marks on his
clothes. And Judge Lucas says he saw him fire or in the act of firing several
times before he was shot, and he thinks two shots afterwards.
Addie Bourland, who saw distinctly the
approach of the Earps and the beginning of the affray, from a point across the
street, where she could correctly observe all their movements, says she cannot
tell which fired first-that the firing commenced at once, from both sides, on
the approach of the Earps, and that no hands were held up; that she could have
seen them if there had been. Sills asserted that the firing was almost
simultaneous. I could not tell which side fired first.
Considering all the testimony together, I am
of the opinion that the weight of evidence sustains and corroborates the
testimony of Wyatt Earp, that their demand for surrender was met by William
Clanton and Frank McLaury drawing or making motions to draw their pistols.
Upon this hypothesis my duty is clear. The defendants were officers charged
with the duty of arresting and disarming armed and determined men who were
expert in the use of firearms, as quick as thought and as certain as death and
who had previously declared their intention not to be arrested nor disarmed.
Under the statutes [Sec. 32, page 74 of Compo Laws], as well as the common
law, they have a right to repel force with force.
In coming to this conclusion, I give great
weight to several particular circumstances connected with [the] affray. It is
claimed by the prosecution that the deceased were shot while holding up their
hands in obedience of the command of the chief of police, and on the other
hand the defense claims that William Clanton and Frank McLaury at once drew
their pistols and began firing simultaneously with [the] defendants. William
Clanton was wounded on the wrist of the right hand on the first fire and
thereafter used his pistol with his left. This wound is such as could not have
been received with his hands thrown up, and the wound received by Thomas
McLaury was such as could not have been received with his hands on his coat
lapels. These circumstances being indubitable [indubitable] facts, throw great
doubt upon the correctness of the statement of witnesses to the contrary.
The testimony of Isaac Clanton, that this
tragedy was the result of a scheme on the part of the Earps to assassinate him
and thereby bury in oblivion the confessions the Earps had made to him about
"piping" away the shipment of coin by Wells Fargo & Co. falls short of being a
sound theory, [on] account of the great fact, most prominent in this matter,
to wit: that Isaac Clanton was not injured at all, and could have been killed
first and easiest, if it was the object of the attack to kill him. He would
have been the first to fall; but, as it was, he was known or believed to be
unarmed, and was suffered and, as Wyatt Earp testified, told to go away, and
was not harmed.
I also give great weight in this matter to
the testimony of Sheriff Behan, who said that on one occasion a short time ago
Isaac Clanton told him that he, Clanton, had been informed that the sheriff
was coming to arrest him and that he, Clanton, armed his crowd with guns and
was determined not to be arrested by the sheriff-or words to that effect. And
Sheriff Behan further testified that a few minutes before the Earps came to
them, that he as sheriff had demanded of the Clan tons and McLaurys that they
give up their arms, and that they "demurred," as he said, and did not do it,
and that Frank McLaury refused and gave as a reason that he was not ready to
leave town just then and would not give up his arms unless the Earps were
disarmed-that is, that the chief of police and his assistants should be
disarmed.
In view of the past history of the county and
the generally believed existence at this time of desperate, reckless and
lawless men in our midst, banded together for mutual support and living by
felonious and predatory pursuits, regarding neither life nor property in their
career, and at the same time for men to parade the streets armed with
repeating rifles and six-shooters and demand that the chief of police and his
assistants should be disarmed is a proposition both monstrous and startling!
This was said by one of the deceased only a few minutes before the arrival of
the Earps.
Another fact that rises up preeminent in the
consideration of this said affair is the leading fact that the deceased, from
the very first inception of the encounter, were standing their ground and
fighting back, giving and taking death with unflinching bravery. It does not
appear to have been a wanton slaughter of unresisting and unarmed innocents,
who were yielding graceful submission to the officers of the law, or
surrendering to, or fleeing from their assailants; but armed and defiant men,
accepting their wager of battle and succumbing only in death.
The prosecution claims much upon the point,
as they allege, that the Earp party acted with criminal haste that they
precipitated the triple homicide by a felonious intent then and there to kill
and murder the deceased, and that they made use of their official characters
as a pretext. I cannot believe this theory, and cannot resist the firm
conviction that the Earps acted wisely, discretely and prudentially, to secure
their own self preservation. They saw at once the dire necessity of giving the
first shots, to save themselves from certain death! They acted. Their shots
were effective, and this alone saved the Earp party from being slain.
In view of all the facts and circumstances of
the case, considering the threats made, the character and positions of the
parties, and the tragic results accomplished in manner and form as they were,
with all surrounding influences bearing upon resgestae of the affair, I cannot
resist the conclusion that the defendants were fully justified in committing
these homicides-that it is a necessary act, done in the discharge of an
official duty.
It is the duty of an examining and committing
magistrate in this territory to issue a warrant of arrest in the first place,
whenever from the depositions given there is reasonable ground to believe that
the defendant has committed a public offense [Sec. 87, page 111 of Compo
Laws].
After hearing evidence, however, the statute
changes the rule, and he is then required to commit the defendant only when
there is "Sufficient cause to believe" him guilty. [Sec. 143, page 111 of
Compo Laws].
My interpretation is that the rule which
should govern an examining magistrate is the same as that which should govern
the conclusions of a Grand Jury. That such as prescribed by statute [Sec. 188,
page 121 of Compo Laws] is: "The Grand Jury ought to find an indictment when
all the evidence before them, taken together, is such as in their judgment
will, if unexplained or uncontradicted, warrant a conviction by the trial
jury.”
The evidence taken before me in this case,
would not, in my judgment, warrant a conviction of the defendants by trial jury
of any offense whatever. I do not believe that any trial jury that could be got
together in this territory, would, on all the evidence taken before me, with the
rule of law applicable thereto given them by the court, find the defendants
guilty of any offense.
It may be that my judgment is erroneous, and my
view of the law incorrect, yet it is my own judgment and my own understanding of
the law as I find it laid down, and upon this I must act and decide, and not
upon those of any other persons. I have given over four weeks of patient
attention to the hearing of evidence in this case, and at least four-fifths of
my waking hours have been devoted, at this time, to an earnest study of the
evidence before me, and such is the conclusion to which I am forced to arrive.
I have the less reluctance in announcing this
conclusion because the Grand Jury of this county is now in session, and it is
quite within the power of that body, if dissatisfied with my decision, to call
witnesses before them or use the depositions taken before me, and which I shall
return to the district court, as by law required, and to thereupon disregard my
findings, and find an indictment against the defendants, if they think the
evidence sufficient to warrant a conviction.
I conclude the performance of this duty imposed
upon me by saying in the language of the Statute: "There being no sufficient
cause to believe the within named Wyatt S. Earp and John H. Holliday guilty of
the offense mentioned within. I order them to be released."
[Signed] Wells Spicer, Magistrate
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