59 Ind. 105 | Ind. | 1877
— Indictment for murder in the first degree; conviction; motion for a new trial overruled, and final judgment against the defendant.
The statutory definition of murder in the first degree’ is as follows:
“Sec. 2. If any person of sound mind shall purposely and with premeditated malice, or in the perpetration* or attempt to perpetrate. any rape, arson, robbery or burglary, or by administering poison, or causing the same tO‘ be done, kill any human being, such person shall be deemed guilty of murder in the first degree, and upon conviction thereof shall suffer death.” 2 R. S. 1876, p. 423..
The common-law definition of murder is this: “ When a person of sound memory and discretion unlawfully killeth any reasonable creature in being, and under the king’s peace, with malice aforethought, either express or-implied.” 4 Blaekstone Com. 195.
The first count in the indictment is as follows:
“ The State of Indiana
vs.
“Daniel C. Snyder.
Indictment for murder in the first degree
“ The grand jurors of Tipton county, in the State of Indiana, good and lawful men, duly and legally empanelled, sworn and charged in the Tipton Circuit Court* of said State, at the November term for the year 1876, to' enquire into felonies and certain misdemeanors in and for the body of said county of Tipton, in the name and by the authority of the State of Indiana, on their oaths, do present, that one Daniel C. Snyder, late of said county, on the 12th'day of September, A. D. 1876, at said county and State, did then and there unlawfully, feloniously, purposely and with premeditated malice, kill and murder one Hannah E. Snyder, hv then and there feloniously, purposely and with premeditated malice, unlawfully administering to the said Hannah E. Snyder a certain deadly poison, commonly called strychnine, which the said Hannah E. Snyder then and there received at the hands of the*107 said Daniel C. Snyder, and which she, the said Hannah E. Snyder, then and there swallowed, and hy reason of which she then and there died: he, the said Daniel C. Snyder, then and there well knowing said strychnine to be a deadly poison, and wickedly intending then and there and thereby feloniously, purposely and with premeditated malice to kill and murder the said Hannah E. Snyder, contrary to the form of the statute in such cases made and provided, aud against the peace and dignity of the State of Indiana.”
The second count was similar to the first, but more full and certain in its averments. It is conceded, that, if the first count is good, no objection can be sustained to the second. A motion to quash was overruled, the court holding each count good.
The ground of the motion was, that neither count averred, with sufficient directness, the intent to kill; and Fouts v. The State, 8 Ohio State, 98, was cited. That case decides, that “Intent or pjurpose to kill, although not essential to constitute murder at common law, is made one of the ingredients of the crime of murder by the statute of Ohio;” and that “it is essential to the sufficiency of an indictment for murder in the first degree in this State, that it contain a direct and specific averment of the purpose or intention to kill, or intention to inflict a mortal wound, in the description of the crime.”
Our statute is similar to that of Ohio, and an indictment must aver that the killing ivas purposely done. Both counts in the indictment in this case make that averment, and are sufficient. Dillon v. The State, 9 Ind. 408; Bechtelheimer v. The State, 54 Ind. 128.
The next objection made is, that the court refused to compel the prosecutor to elect on which count in the indictment he would put the defendant on trial. This was a matter in the discretion of the court. Mershon v. The State, 51 Ind. 14.
The causes assigned in the motion were:
1. The verdict was contrary to law, and not sustained by the evidence.
2. The court erred in permitting the State to introduce and read to the jury as evidence, over the defendant’s objection, the writing or statement signed by the defendant and purporting to be his statement or evidence given by him as a witness before the coroner’s inquest, held over the body of the deceased, Hannah E. Snyder.
3. The court erred in permitting the State to introduce and read as evidence to the jury, over the defendant’s objection, the report of the commissioners entered in Order Book 8 of the Tipton Common Pleas Court, in the case of Hannah E. King, John S. Mount, Guardian of Cassius M., Marshall W., Ulissus S. G., and Mary W. King v. John King.
4. The court erred in permitting the State to propound to Dr. M. V. B. Vickrey, a witness for the State, over the defendant’s objection, the following question: •“ State -what Lee Mote said, when he came after you to go down to Snyder’s, as to how Mrs. Snyder was ? ” And in permitting the witness to answer the same, over defendant’s objection, as follows: “ That Mote told me that Snyder’s wife was dying.”
5. The court erred in not allowing and permitting the ■defendant, over the State’s objection, to prove by "William B. Young, a witness for the defendant, “ that Hannah E. Snyder, the deceased, told him, William B. Young, ■on the day her daughter Mollie died, that she wanted her buried the same day she died.”
6. Thp court erred in not allowing and permitting the defendant to propound to the witness, William B. Young, the following question: “You may now state what reasons Mrs. Snyder assigned, if any, in her own language, why she did not want her relations present at the burial.”
7. The court erred in not allowing and permitting the defendant to prove by Mrs. George Bowlin, a witness introduced and sworn on behalf of the defendant, that Dr. Newcomer inquired of Hannah E Snyder, the wife of the defendant, in her presence and hearing, whether the little girl had taken her medicine, and how many of the powders he had left had been given her ? — he being the attending physician; and that she made no answer or reply whatever to the inquiry or question of Dr. Newcomer, but stood “ mute.”
8. The court erred in permitting the State, over the objections of the defendant, to introduce as evidence in support of her ease the circumstances surrounding the sickness and death, and cause of death, of Mollie King.
9. The court erred in giving instructions numbered 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8 and 10, and in refusing to give special instructions asked to be given by the defendant, numbered 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9,10,11 and 12, to the giving of each of which instructions, and the refusal to give each of which instructions, the defendant at the time excepted.
10. That the court erred in not giving instructions covering the whole case.
Ve will notice such as may be necessary of these causes assigned in the motion for a new trial, commencing with the second.
Admissions made by the defendant were admissible in evidence against him, if they were not made “ under the influence of fear produced by threats.” See. 93, 2 R. S. 1876, p. 396, and notes. There was no pretence that the written statement of admissions in this case was thus made.
It is said that the coroner’s inquest was not legally organized; but we do not see how that fact, if it existed, would render admissions freely made, as those in question
Touching the eighth cause assigned for a new trial, we shall here express no opinion as to the correctness of the ¡admission of the evidence therein mentioned on the trial had, since the cause must be reversed and go back for •another trial. Such circumstances, or some of them, may be admissible for certain purposes in certain stages and •aspects of the cause that may appear during the future trial.
The following authorities will give all needed information on the points: Shaffner v. The Commonwealth, 72 Pa. State, 60; The People v. Doyle, 21 Mich. 221; Farrer v. The State, 2 Ohio State, 54; Regina v. Garner, 4 Fost. & F. 346; Regina v. Bailey, 2 Cox C. C. 311; Regina v. Dossett, 2 Car. & K. 306; Regina v. Geering, 18 L. J. n. s M. C. 215; 1 Whart. Crim. Law, sec. 635 c.
In Farrer v. The State, supra, it was decided, that, “ on an indictment charging the prisoner with poisoning A., in December, 1851, it is error to permit evidence in chief, to show that she poisoned B., in the month of August previous.”
The third cause for a new trial was not a valid one. For the better understanding of the decision in this cause, we state the following facts: King, the former husband of Hannah E. Snyder, at his death, left real estate. He left surviving him a wife, the deceased,Hannah E. Snyder, then a widow, and four children, to whom his real estate descended, one-third to the widow and two-thirds to the said four children. Three of the children died after the death of their father and before the death of their mother. Said Hannah E. Snyder inherited one-half of the shares they had inherited from their father. This portion of her
The ninth cause assigned for a new trial was error of the court in giving and refusing certain specified instructions.
Before noticing these instructions it may be observed, that it was essential to the conviction of the defendant that four facts should be proved beyond a reasonable doubt, and that the court should have so instructed the jury;
1. The death of Mrs. Snyder.
2. That she came to her death by poison.
3. That that poison was feloniously administered by the defendant, or that he participated in such administration.
4. That the offence was committed within the jurisdiction of the court.
In the second instruction the court says: “ The defendant, having denied the charge made in the indictment, is by the law presumed innocent until proved guilty beyond a'reasonable doubt.’’
The court was asked to instruct the jury, that they should carefully weigh all the material evidence on each and every material fact necessary to convict the defendant, and that, if there was a reasonable doubt in their
Waiving the general character of the second instruction, above copied, this more particular instruction ought to have been given. Howard v. The State, 50 Ind. 190.
In the fifth instruction, the court states to the jury: “We will call your attention to the material facts in the indictment which must be proven. Eirst, the body of the offence, that is, that the death of Hannah E. Snyder was caused by poison.” The court fails in this instruction, or any other, to continue the enumeration of the material facts necessary to be proved.
The court commences the sixth instruction thus: “We will now direct your attention to the question whether the defendant gave Hannah E. Snyder strychnine with a criminal intent.” The jury might well have understood this instruction to assume that he gave her strychnine — a disputed point upon the trial — and left to them the question of intent alone, and is erroneous for that reason.
The eighth instruction given is this: “ In connection with the evidence offered by the State to prove the guilt of the defendant, you should consider the evidence offered by the defendant to overcome the evidence of the State; not that he must prove innocence, but that you may have the whole case before you by the evidence. And, if by his evidence, or evidence produced by him, a reasonable doubt is raised, you should acquit. You should give it such weight and importance as you think it entitled to, for of these questions you are the exclusive judges.” This instruction was calculated to leave the impression upon the minds of the jury, that the State had made out her case, and that, unless the evidence of the defendant raised in their minds a reasonable doubt, they- should convict. Other instructions are open to criticism. But it is unnecessary that we should extend this opinion.
We may add a brief remark upon the first ground
The evidence showed that Hannah E. Snyder was dead; that she died in Tipton county, Indiana; that a few weeks afterward an analysis of her stomach disclosed the presence in it of forty-seven hundredths (¶^¶) of a grain of strychnine, and that an analysis of the stomach of her daughter, a child of eleven years of age, who died' five days before the death of Hannah, exhibiting like symptoms to those attending the sickness and death of her mother, showed the presence in her stomach of nineteen hundredths (tto) of a grain of strychnine; but through whose agency the poison found its way into those stom-, aclis, and whether death resulted therefrom, are questions for the jury to solve, if the evidence will enable them to do it, on a future trial of this cause.
The judgment is reversed, cause remanded, and prisoner remanded to county, etc.