4 N.W.2d 500 | Mich. | 1942
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *146 Defendant appeals her conviction for the murder of her husband, Romold Franszkiewicz, whose death occurred July 21, 1940. She married him in 1935. Both were advanced in years and both had been married before. They lived on a farm in Nadeau township, Menominee county.
At the time of deceased's death there seems to have been no suspicion of foul play. No inquest was ordered; and the official certificate gave heart trouble as the cause of death. However, on January 18, 1941, a petition was filed before a justice of the peace in Menominee for an order providing for the disinterment of the remains of deceased. The justice entered such an order on the same day. There was disinterment and an autopsy was performed. Dr. K.C. Kerwell removed the heart, part of the liver, spleen, kidneys, stomach and part of the intestines. These were delivered by a deputy sheriff to Drs. Weller and Emerson at University Hospital at Ann Arbor for analysis. Testimony was given by Dr. Emerson that enough arsenic was found in the body of deceased to be fatal, "about four times the average lethal or killing dose."
It appears deceased suffered from diarrhea as early as May, 1940, and that this condition may be caused by arsenic. He consulted a doctor on July 10, 1940. But he seemed to undergo his most intense suffering shortly prior to his death. The day before his death he was taken to another doctor; and to still another doctor on the day of his death.
There was evidence as to motive. There was testimony that defendant in certain instances exhibited intense dislike for deceased; and that she *148 wanted her son by her first husband to live with her but that deceased objected. The prosecution also charged that she might have been motivated by a desire to acquire deceased's farm and that she endeavored, though unsuccessfully, to get some insurance on deceased's life. Also, it was shown that defendant had bought some rat poison about a year and a half before deceased's death; and similar poison showed arsenic on analysis. A jury found defendant guilty of murder in the first degree and she was sentenced to solitary confinement at hard labor for life.
Defendant charges the trial court committed some eight errors, on which she bases this appeal. First, it is contended that no corpus delicti was proved. The objection here is based chiefly on two grounds. The first is that it was not shown the arsenic did not come into decedent's system through some innocent means, as by the embalming fluid. The second is that the examining toxicologist, Dr. Emerson, only examined parts of some of the vital organs and then proceeded by multiplication to compute the amount of arsenic in the entire organ; that he thus got his final total of arsenic by assuming it was evenly distributed. As to the first argument, People v. Gerndt,
"The mere possibility that the deceased may have come to her death otherwise than in the manner charged in the information, especially since such suggested possibility is not supported by any proof in the case, is not sufficient to justify setting aside the verdict of the jury, notwithstanding the same was based in part on circumstantial evidence."
Also, in this case, the fact there was enough arsenic found to be fatal to four persons negatives the idea the disorder was chronic rather than acute. The pathologist and toxicologist both testified to indications *149 of breakdowns of some of the vital organs and discounted the contention that the effect in the present case might have arisen from chronic, cumulative poisoning. Dr. Weller also testified his examination showed heart disease did not cause the death. If defendant wished to have more testimony in regard to the content of the embalming fluid, she should have procured it in her own behalf. Dr. Emerson testified that the arsenic he found could not have come from embalming fluid.
As to the charge that the computation of the total amount of arsenic was based on assumption and inference, People v.Kuhn,
The second charge of error relied on by defendant is that the autopsy and disinterment of deceased failed to follow statutory direction and so the evidence gained thereby was inadmissible. Statutes provide for coroners holding inquests and provide for disinterment of bodies (3 Comp. Laws 1929, §§ 17414, 17417 [Stat. Ann. §§ 28.1180, 28.1183]) and for justices of the peace doing so in some instances (3 Comp. Laws 1929, § 17403 [Stat. Ann. § 28.1169]). *150 In the present case there was a complaint filed with a justice of the peace of Menominee, Michigan. The latter ordered the sheriff to disinter the body so an inquest might be held. No such inquest appears to have been held. Instead, the prosecuting attorney ordered the sexton of the cemetery to disinter the body and deliver it to the parlors of the funeral director who had embalmed the body. An autopsy was then conducted by a physician who removed certain organs and put them in sealed jars. These were taken to University Hospital at Ann Arbor for analysis. The question is whether the results of analysis of the organs so obtained are admissible.
There seem to be no Michigan cases on this point. However, the question has come up in other jurisdictions. In Commonwealth v.Grether,
"The third, fourth, and fifth (assignments of error) * * * relate to the exhumation and examination of the body of the deceased, alleged to have been unlawful because not conducted by the coroner, or under his direction. The rights and duties of the coroner were not involved in the examination of the body, which was made at the instance and under the direction of the district attorney for the purpose of being able to submit to the jury conclusive evidence that a bullet from the pistol of the prisoner had caused the death charged to him. Such evidence it was the right, as well as the duty, of that officer to procure, if it existed, without regard to anything the coroner may have done or omitted to do."
This theory is found in Commonwealth v. Taylor,
The next error charged by the defendant has to do with admission of certain testimony by the trial court. Witness Haas testified for the prosecution that he visited deceased the second day before he died; that deceased told him he was in terrible pain, his insides were burning up, that he felt he was "leaving," and that he did not "know what she is giving" him. This was offered as a dying declaration. Defendant objected. It was admissible since it shows a sense of impending death and it shows his condition and symptoms; the "she" is clearly identifiable from the context as defendant though deceased did not then say so. Nor was it error to admit testimony of statements by deceased on his *152
trip to the doctor the day he died to show how he was suffering. It was on this occasion deceased said: "I think I am going six feet under the ground." People v. Arnett,
The fact that the embalming fluid and the rat poison analyzed were of then obtainable samples and not conclusively proven to be the same as that used or purchased was a circumstance for the jury to weigh. There was testimony by the embalmer who took charge of the remains of deceased that the embalming fluid examined was "out of the same case" as that he used; and the druggist from whom defendant purchased testified that "Rough on Rats" is a "patent medicine" and "It is presumed that it is arsenic trioxide;" and further the sample of which the analysis was offered in evidence was purchased from this same source and was a brand with which the druggist was familiar. Testimony in these respects was not immaterial or incompetent. Nor is there a lack of testimony preceding the hypothetical question asked Dr. Weller as to the cause of death of deceased on which to base such a query; Dr. Sawbridge had testified earlier as to the symptoms. We find no errors in other rulings on admissibility of testimony as claimed by defendant.
It is charged that the prosecuting attorney's conduct and remarks during the trial and argument were prejudicial. The prosecutor did press his case vigorously. However, as the trial judge said in his opinion denying a motion for a new trial, much of that argument was in reply to what had been said by the attorney for defendant, which the trial judge said was one of the most forceful arguments ever heard in his court room. It does not appear to us that the prosecutor went outside of the record to defendant's *153
prejudice. Argument of the prosecutor in reply to defendant's attorney and justified by the testimony of defendant was not prejudicial error. People v. Powers,
Defendant's other claims of error have been considered and found to be without merit. The trial court was not in error in instructing the jury that the element of motive was not indispensable in a charge of murder (People v. Cipriano,
CHANDLER, C.J., and BOYLES, STARR, BUTZEL, BUSHNELL, and SHARPE, JJ., concurred. WIEST, J., took no part in this decision.