81 Iowa 99 | Iowa | 1890
It may here be stated that the testimony as to the killing is entirely circumstantial. No living Iver-son, barring the defendant, has positive knowledge of the facts. For some time just prior to the killing the defendant was in the office of Kingsley, and Dr. C. P. Byers, who was in the adjoining office, heard loud words, and, stepping to his door, overheard some parts of an altercation, and his is the only testimony of a third person of what occurred at that time between defendant and Kingsley. The following is a part of his testimony: “The first words I heard of the conversation was an order to ‘Gfet out of my office.’ That order was made by Kingsley. These are the words I heard: ‘I want you to get out of my office.’ Don’t think I heard any reply to that order. I went to the door and opened it partially, and stood there. Then I heard that order repeated. Heard it repeated a good many times. Heard Billings reply in answer like this : ‘That he wasn’t going out.’ I think he said: ‘I am not going out.’ Then I heard a movement in Kingsley’s office. Think Billings said he came to have a talk. Think Kingsley repeated the order to ‘Go out,’ but Billings said he would not go out; that he had come to have a talk. Heard Kingsley say next: ‘You darned old stinker, you have been trying to work up a scheme on me, and I want you to get out.’ Don’t think I heard any reply to that. I think Kingsley repeated that order. I think after that the door opened suddenly, and closed with a bang. Think it was Kingsley’s door to front office. I then heard Billings open the conversation with something about his wife. That was all I understood of that. Then he said something about some ‘beastly act.’ In reply to that I think Kingsley said: ‘Do you mean to accuse me of that, or say that I did that % ’ And Billings said: ‘ I said nothing of that kind.’ I understood no more of the conversation. I heard the sound of voices going on in a conversation,
The defendant had contemplated, or at least prepared, some papers, looking to a criminal prosecution of Kingsley for the seduction of one Emily Shane, and he either believed, or professed to believe, that there had been criminal intimacy between his wife and Kingsley; and defendant’s mission to the office of Kingsley on the night in question was with reference to one or both of these matters.
On the person of defendant, when he came from the office of Kingsley, was an envelope containing papers, which we need only briefly describe. Exhibit 13 is in the handwriting of the defendant, and is as follows:
“Wavekly, Iowa, 1887.
“M. E. Billings, Attorney:
“I herewith deliver to you my notes as follows: Three hundred and sixty dollars due in equal monthly installments in 1888; two hundred and forty dollars due in equal monthly installments in 1889. Fourteen notes, for twenty dollars each, due in equal monthly installments or one each year from 1890 to 1903, inclusive. Also á chattel and real-estate mortgage to secure the same. Also an assignment of same amounts per month, as in notes of my salary as county attorney, to further secure the samé. Said notes being for damages occasioned by my seducing and debauching the lady who was of irreproachable character.”
This paper was without signature, and there were also notes, a real-estate and a chattel mortgage, unsigned, with dates for payments, and amounts to correspond with the assignment (Exhibit 13)■; also an information charging Kingsley with the crime of adultery with defendant’s wife, with the name of Delia E. Billings as informant, and sworn to before M. E. Billings as notary public. This was in the handwriting of defendant, and
A principal purpose on the part of the state by these papers, and of much other testimony, as to a claimed intimacy of Kingsley with Emily Shane and defendant’s wife, was to show a motive for the commission of the crime charged, it being the theory of the prosecution that the charge of criminal intimacy is
“ Bremer County, Iowa. i
“Office of W. S. Kingsley, County Attorney, j
“Waverly, December 21, 1887.
“Samuel M. Sprague, Msg., Mes Moines, Iowa.
“Dear Sprague: — -You will excuse this letter at this time, but I am now in a very swearing mood, and I am going to tell you what the reason thereof is. You will remember, I think, what I told you about the trouble I was having with that old cuss of an attorney that moved out of my office the day you was here. You remember, do you, what I said about how I locked the door on him, and also that when I went to dinner that Hocked the south door of my office from the inside, and went out of the noi'th door, so that he could not get in while I was at dinner? Now, Sam, if you do, I want you to help me out by a statement to that effect. That old son of a b-h has got up a most damnable blackmail on me, and has given publicity to it, and I am getting the better of him, and it’s causing quite a stir here in social and business circles. He became offended at my turning him out of my office, and has now claimed that he came to my office several times, and found the door locked, and that I was having fast
In Kingsley’s pocket was found a letter in pencil, in the handwriting of defendant, dated December 21, 1887, signed “ D.” It is addressed to W. S. Kingsley, and speaks of the writer as an expectant mother, and of Kingsley as the father. It asks for twenty-five dollars. Says she is going to her mother, and will “get rid” of the child; that she has written a long confession which she will leave for “N.” (defendant), and will kill herself if she does not get away that day. It is not claimed that Mrs. Billings knew of this letter. It is what defendant calls a “decoy,” designed to obtain a confession from Kingsley. The letter contains other statements which we do not recite. In his pocket was also an affidavit of Emily Shane, dated December 15, 1887, containing an explicit denial of any improper conduct or intercourse between herself and Kingsley, and also statements that any affidavit in the possession of M. E. Billings or others, to the contrary, is false, and that her signature thereto was obtained without her knowing the contents.
There is a large amount of evidence on both sides designed and tending to influence, modify or change the natural or reasonable inference to be drawn from the possession of these papers by both defendant and Kingsley, which cannot be made to appear; and, with reference to the question of motives, we have no difficulty in concluding, in the light of investigations, both judicial and otherwise, that murders and suicides have often been induced by motives less powerful. In argument to us, orally, counsel for the state dwelt mainly on the evidence and facts showing motives, and the depravity of the defendant, as a ground for belief in his guilt, while the other side contended that
The defendant was not a witness on the last trial. At the coroner’s inquest he was present, and made an elaborate statement of what transpired in Kingsley’s office, and with regard to the papers found on his person ; and the state, on the last trial, put his statements in evidence. We are not disposed, in our consideration of the case, where not corroborated, to attach to those statements importance, except as against the defendant, for several reasons, and among them, first, that his admissions in the case, and the undisputed facts, so involved his character for veracity as to make his statements, uncorroborated, of little worth; and, second, that the facts to serve as a basis for our conclusions must, in the main, be unquestioned. These facts, in brief, are that Kingsley was found in his office fatally wounded by a pistol shot; that beside him lay the revolver from which the shot was fired, and in the position that it might naturally have been if discharged by himself; that the pistol, when discharged, must have been placed with the muzzle against the face, and under the eyebrow, as evidenced by the eyelashes being burned, and the nose burned and powder-stained below the wound, and the eyebrow and face above the wound being unaffected; that he was a man of good physique, in the vigor of his physical manhood, and, if observing, capable of, and prompted by the law of self-preservation, would have prevented a deadly assault with a pistol placed against his face ; that such a position for a revolver is a natural one for a person committing suicide, and unnatural for one taking the life of another, even in the absence of anticipated resistance ; that but two shots were fired, and but two balls have ever been discovered — one in the head of Kingsley, and one against
With these undisputed facts, uninfluenced by others, the verdict of all men would be that the shots were fired by Kingsley. They would not sustain a verdict against the defendant, even on the basis of a probability. We must then look to the theory and claims of the prosecution to so change the force of such facts that the verdict against the defendant may have support in the evidence beyond a reasonable doubt. The prosecution says, as to the ball against defendant’s back, that it was a simulated affair, adjusted by the defendant as part of his plan to obtain Kingsley’s signature to the papers in his possession, or take his life. As to the shots, its theory is that the first shot was a blank cartridge, — that is, a cartridge with powder and no ball, to harmonize with the plan of adjusting the ball on the suspenders, and that, after firing the second and fatal shot, he placed the revolver beside Kingsley, and made his escape from the office to the sidewalk. If we concede that degradation on the part of the defendant, which is a necessary accompaniment of a purpose to murder for personal gain only, there still remains to his credit an adroitness and cunning both for conception and execution very difficult to believe. The adroitness is not so much in discovering the salient features of the plan as in perceiving, in advance, the situation necessary to execution. It is less difficult after execution, with the facts known, to theorize upon the designs and purposes of another, than to, in advance, plan for the execution, to obtain which certain conditions must be ; and the particular facts of this case afford a fitting illustration. We have said, and it will
The theory of simulation for the wound on defendant’s back, and the ball on the suspenders, standing alone, is not conclusively contradicted by reason and the probabilities of the case, but it is to a great extent; and associated, as it must be, with the entire transaction, it really has nothing for its support. It is especially urged in this connection that the holes through the clothing are out of the necessary positions to support defendant’s claim that the ball was fired against him. Defendant and the clothing were before us at the trial, the clothes placed on him, and some of the members of the court placed him' in the position he claims
There are many items of evidence, both for and against the theory of the state, that we cannot in an opinion notice, nor is- it important that we should. Much attention has been given to the time between the last shot and the time defendant was on the walk below, and it is urged that it was too short for defendant to have adjusted the revolver and made the distance. If this was the only ground upon which the claim for a new trial was based, we should refuse it, because we think the accomplishment possible in point of time under the evidence, when we know the distance made by other parties between the report of the pistol and appearance of defendant on the walk. We should not overlook a fact of much significance to us, and that is the testimony of Dr. Byers. He heard but parts of the altercation in the office of Kingsley, but such parts as he did hear were, to some extent, corroborative of the statements of defendant before the coroner as to what occurred. He fixes both doors leading from Kingsley’s office to the hall as shut, but he says he heard both shots, and that the first report was the louder. There is no fact to show why the first was the louder, if both doors were shut when both shots were fired. If, on the contrary, one shot was fired at the head of the stairs in the hall, it would have been louder to him than would have been the second, which was surely fired in the office, for he was standing at his open door, looking into the hall, and from the stairway to him the way was direct and open, while from the office the way was indirect, and the sound would have been obstructed by partition walls. It is true that Mr. Byers afterwards said when recalled and his attention directed to the fact of the first shot being louder : “I will just change that a little because the door must have been open.” But in that case no different inference would follow, because
The problem to demonstrate the truth as to Willis S. Kingsley’s death will probably never be solved. He was, for a- time, an associate with, and a boarder at the home of, the defendant. The future may yet reveal the truth as to his guilt or innocence of the crime imputed to him, of invading the sanctity of the defendant’s home. Upon the face of the record we should exculpate him. The loathsome record made for themselves by his accusers excludes belief in their statements wherever not corroborated ; but this does not convict the defendant of a crime which the state must establish by proof. And here we incline to think is to some extent a secret of the adjudications of this case. Kingsley is dead ; the defendant was believed to be a bad man, and such facts were allowed to prevail where affirmative proof of facts were required.
Appellant urges that the record shows the judgment of the district court to be, that the verdict is not sustained by the evidence. Counsel for the state, on
Having then in view the authority the legislature designed the district court should exercise, we may inquire as to the effect of the record in this case. Barring the final entry by which the motion for a new trial is overruled, and the judgment of the district court — by which we now mean its convictions — is not open to question. It is not questioned to us in argument. There is not a single conclusion in the opinion of the district court favorable to the verdict. It allows it to rest only on a bare possibility. To a valid judgment the law
That the district court was thus influenced is evidenced by many expressions in its opinion, but especially when it says, speaking of the verdict: “I think, perhaps, if there was no appeal, I should set it aside.” From the record as made, we are led decidedly to. the conviction that it was the judgment of the district court, as a result of its consideration, that the evidence was not sufficient to sustain the verdict. With this fact apparent of record, is there anything in the law to prevent our overruling a judgment based thereon, and in conflict with it ? If so, it is the shadow, and not the substance that is of controlling force, and such a conclusion must be sustained at a sacrifice of the very essence of judicial inquiry, — -the truth. It is a reasonable rule, and one having general support in adjudications, that the effect of a record is to be determined from its consideration as a whole, and that dependent portions thereof must yield a conformity to those on which they depend. If a jury should return a verdict
On the former trial in this court, we did not discuss the value of the evidence, as other errors necessitated a reversal, and the arguments then were entirely, as they now are, mainly, oral; and between the submission and the determination of the case, the personnel of the court to some extent changed. Besides, if the case was to be reversed on other grounds, it seemed advisable to not embarrass another trial with our view of the facts and the evidence, as in the event of a change in the testimony, which often occurs on a second trial, our comments might be given undue weight. As after a second trial we may reasonably conclude that the facts on which the state relies for a conviction are fully presented, and that the state may properly determine the propriety of further prosecution, we have announced our views as to the sufficiency of the evidence to sustain a conviction. Our conclusion in this respect is in harmony with that of the judge who presided at the trial, and gave to the testimony long and patient attention, with many added opportunities to know its value, and because of this we are less reluctant to interfere with the verdict, because of a want of evidence, than we otherwise would be under a well-known rule as to caution in such cases.
These considerations make our duty plain, and the judgment of the district court is again -reversed.