96 Vt. 7 | Vt. | 1922
The respondent was tried under an indictment charging him with the murder in the first, degree, of Owen Hayes ait Fair Haven, on October 1, 1920, and was convicted of murder in the second degree.
Owen Hayes of Fair Haven, a man fifty-six years of age, suddenly disappeared on the evening of the day above named, and his body was found in the Gastleton River in the village of Fair Haven on the 12th day of the same month.
At common law — we have no statute on the subject — corpus delicti means the body of the crime, and as connected with homicide is made up of two elements, first, the death of a person, and second, that the death was produced through criminal agency. 7 R. C. L. 743-745; People v. Benham, 160 N. Y. 402, 425, 55 N. E. 11. As to the first element, the uncontroverted evidence showed the fact of a sudden and unexplained disappearance of Owen Hayes, in the evening of October 1, 1920, and that a dead body, identified as his, was found October 12th, floating in Castle-ton River, in the village of Fair Haven, partially decomposed and bearing indications of having been in the water from about the time of his disappearance until it was thus found. So far the respondent makes no question, his claim of failure of the State to establish the corpus delicti being asserted in argument exclusively as to the second element, which we proceed to consider.
Immediately after the body was taken from the water, an examination of it was conducted by Dr. J. H. Carty of Fair Haven, and later in the same day an autopsy was performed by Drs. Stone and Whitney of the State Laboratory, Dr. Carty
Dr. Stone testified to finding in the autopsy what was apparently'evidence of bruising of the muscle above the ear, the temporal muscle on both sides of the head, and that the condition found in this respect was sueh as might have been produced by a blow or blows; that in his judgment the body was submerged in the water while life was present; that he discovered no diseased condition of any of the organs; that in a general way, tissues that are bruised decompose much more readily than those which are not bruised, and sueh is the rule; that the marked decomposition around the head of Hayes bore the indication that it was bruised before being submerged in the water; and that in his judgment the death of Hayes was not caused by any violence, but was caused by drowning.
The testimony of Dr. Whitney agreed substantially with that of Dr. Stone in the respects above stated. In addition thereto, Dr. Whitney testified concerning the bruises about the head that the tissues had probably been bruised so the fluids had exuded somewhat from their natural channels, and that sueh bruising and the exuding of the blood in the tissues, were probably produced during life.
Dr. Carty further testified that from the examination he made of the body, and from what he had testified in court, he doubted that Hayes met his death by drowning; that he was led to his belief in this respect by discovering the swelling of the tissues about the temples, the face and the neck and the discoloration; that he would not expect such condition to exist by the
It was after the three doctors had testified as stated above, that the statements of the respondent were offered' in evidence.
The statements shown to have been made by him at different times before his arrest, varied. At first he stated in effect that on the night in question he and three accomplices (naming them), for the purpose of robbing Hayes of money which he was supposed to have on his person, watched and followed him to, or managed to meet him at, á certain place in the village of Fair Haven, in a street running parallel with Castleton River, at which place one of his accomplices (naming him), either with his fist or with a club, struck Hayes down; that they then robbed him of what money they found on his person, and put his body by the side of some bushes on the bank of the river, one of the participants in the crime to put it into the water later. After making this statement several times, the respondent changed his story by stating that the three accomplices were strangers to him, not the men at all whose names he had previously given. In other respects the two statements did not materially differ. The second story he told several times, and on different occasions. Still later he stated that he himself killed Hayes. While in the trial of the case, taking the stand and testifying in his own behalf, he said his previous statements, shown in evidence, to the effect that he had to do with the commission of the crime were all lies, that he was not in any way implicated in the crime and knew nothing about it.
The testimony of the doctors, showing the bruised and swelled condition of the temporal muscle on both sides of the head of the deceased, when the body was examined immediately after it was taken out of the water, and at the time of the autopsy, and that in their judgment such condition was produced before the body was submerged in the water, and that the condition found in this respect was such as might have been produced by a blow or blows, 'and that the body entered the water while life was present, was corroborative of the statements of the respondent to the effect that the death of the deceased was produced through criminal agency. The evidence showing such statements was therefore properly received. State v. Blay, 77 Vt. 56, 58 Atl. 794; 13 R. C. L. 739, par. 43.
Judgment that there was no error in the proceeding below and that the respondent take nothing by his exceptions.