164 Mo. 461 | Mo. | 1901
— This is an appeal by defendant from a conviction and sentence of death passed upon her on a charge by indictment of having feloniously administered to her husband, Erank Nesenhener, a large quantity of a certain deadly poison, called morphine, from the effects of which he died.
Several points are urged for a reversal of the judgment, but from the view that we take of the case it will only be necessary to pass upon one, as it goes to the very foundation of the judgment, that is, the want of substantial evidence to support it, in the absence of which it can not be permitted to stand.
In Wills on Circumstantial Evidence (3 London Ed.), 205, it is said: “Upon general principles, however, it can not be doubted that courts of law would require chemical evidence of poisoning, whenever it were attainable; and in that case it would seem but reasonable in analogy to the general rules of evidence, that it should be of the highest character which the nature of the case admits; at least a conviction can not be satisfactory if it be grounded upon evidence of an inferior nature, where evidence of a more satisfactory character is capable of being adduced.”
It can not be doubted but that in the case of morphine poisoning the most satisfactory and convincing evidence of poisoning is the discovery, by analysis of the contents of the stomach, of the existence of morphine or traces of it, and, in case of uraemic poisoning by an analysis of the urine.
In Wills’ Circumstantial Evidence (by Arthur P. Wills), 388, it is said: “Evidence of chemical tests applied to the body or its contents or excreta, whenever it is capable of being obtained, ought to be adduced, and in such circumstances the failure to adduce such evidence, unexplained by satisfactory
In the case at hand there was no examination of any kind made, either of the stomach or its contents, bowels, or urine, while there was no apparent reason why one or both should not have been done, and these matters so important to the ascertainment of the cause of the death of the deceased are entirely wanting. On the symptoms and these alone, with the exception of a few suspicious acts upon the part of the accused, the judgment of conviction rests. And these may be stated as follows:
Defendant had been married to the deceased about fifteen years. They lived as happily together as other people in the same walks of life usually do. He had for many months been employed as a boiler washer about the Burlington shops in Hannibal, working at night in and about the roundhouse for said railroad company. They had four children born to them, three of whom were dead, all having died within the same year. Deceased had been in poor health for some time next preceding his death and complained of his stomach and that his food did not agree with him, and had on several ■occasions been compelled to desist from work. It was proven by the State that the defendant purchased a bottle of morphine ■on the thirteenth of July, 1900, at Brown’s drugstore in Hannibal The testimony of the drug clerk in this store was that he sold the defendant a small phial of morphine on the thirteenth of July, 1900, and he substantially identified the bottle produced on the trial as the one that he sold the defendant. This bottle and the contents were found in the vault of the ■closet in the rear of the residence of the deceased by Constable Oreen and Dr. Banks, the attending physician, on the day of
The defense was that the deceased had been ailing for sometime, and that he had uraemic poisoning, and died of that. The testimony showed that deceased carried about seven hundred and fifty dollars life insurance, five hundred dollars of which was in the order known as the Ancient Order of the Pyramids, and two hundred and fifty of it in what is known as the Burlington Relief Association. The record also shows that on one occasion deceased became angry and tore up the fraternal insurance policy in the Ancient Order of the Pyramids, and that defendant went to the secretary of said order, and inquired if the same could be collected if tho premiums were paid, although the policy had been destroyed, and on being assured that the money would be collectible if the premiums were paid even though the policy had been destroyed, she stated that she would pay the premiums, and she did so. The evidence also shows that two of the deceased Children of the defendant were insured.
The deceased was ailing several days just prior to his death, and on the morning of the thirteenth of July, 1900, the defendant went to the office of Ur. Banks and stated that Mr. Nesenhener would like for the doctor to stop at home during the day; that deceased would pay the doctor something on the bill he owed. During the afternoon the doctor stopped at deceased’s house and deceased did pay the doctor some money, and during the conversation related certain symptoms to Dr. Banks and asked him to prescribe for him, which the doctor did. These symptoms were pain and uneasiness in the stomach and loss of appetite. The doctor gave him a prescription called “Gray’s Glycerine Tonic Compound.” At that time deceased was sitting in a chair at the door, apparently not in great agony and seemingly cheerful, and stated that he thought he would be able to resume work in a short time. This was
The deceased, according to the testimony of the State’s expert witnesses, had all the symptoms of morphine poisoning. The face very blue and discoloration of the neck and the face swollen; the pulse soft, slow and regular, and the breathing hard and labored, all of which the expert testimony showed were symptoms of morphine poisoning. The expert testimony for the defense tended to show that, with the exception of a soft pulse and tightly contracted pupil of the eye, all of the symptoms of deceased might have been caused by uraemic poisoning.
The defendant denied all knowledge of the bottle of morphine, and claimed that she would not know morphine if she should see it, and that she never purchased any of the drug clerk who testified that he sold it to her on the thirteenth of July, 1900.
The testimony of the experts tended to show that if an overdose of morphine was taken, that it was liable to cause excessive vomiting, which might result in saving the life of th© patient, but that in the ordinary poison dose, which would
There was no evidence that defendant administered to deceased any medicine of any kind or character, or food, and no such inference can be drawn from the evidence, unless it be from the mere fact that they were man and wife, and lived together as such.
It thus very clearly appears that there was no direct proof of the fact of poisoning, or substantial evidence that deceased, in fact, died of morphine poisoning. “The indirect proof considered satisfactory in such cases, that of chemical analysis and tests applied to the matter ejected through the influence of the poison from the stomach and bowels, and of all moral circumstances, is wanting. The only fact relied upon, that of symptoms admitted in cases of this nature to be unsatisfactory and unreliable, in this case is particularly defective and unsatisfactory. Where then is there ground for conviction?” [Joe v. State, 6 Florida 591.] If the deceased died of morphine poisoning it might have been demonstrated by a chemical analysis of the contents of the stomach and bowels, or of matter ejected from them, and if he died of uraemic poisoning, by an analysis of his urine, but these tests were not made, while it does not appear that there was anything to prevent it being done, and it is not too much to say, that in a case of life and death, a jury, acting upon such ^ testimony as was adduced on the trial' of this case, were not warranted, we think, in finding the defendant guilty because of the total absence of proof that she administered morphine to the deceased, or that morphine poisoning was the cause of his death.
We, therefore, reverse the judgment, and discharge the prisoner.