Bell v. State

1921 OK CR 238, 202 P. 325, 20 Okla. Crim. 289, 1921 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 165
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma
DecidedDecember 13, 1921
DocketNo. A-3686.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 1921 OK CR 238 (Bell v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bell v. State, 1921 OK CR 238, 202 P. 325, 20 Okla. Crim. 289, 1921 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 165 (Okla. Ct. App. 1921).

Opinion

DOYLE, P. J.

Plaintiff in error, Green Bell, was convicted of the murder of his wife, and his punishment assessed at imprisonment for life. He appeals from the judgment rendered on such conviction.

The information charged the defendant with having fel-oniously administered to his wife, Annie E. Bell, one-half grain, more or less, of strychnine, a deadly poison, from'the effects of which she died.

The state introduced testimony tending to prove the following facts:

The defendant, 44 years of age, resided in Atoka county, one-half mile west of Farris. On October 15, 1916, he married the deceased, whose age was 24 years; at the time of her death, August 11, 1917, she was pregnant; about 10 o’clock that night the defendant came to Mr. Story’s place, a quarter of a mile east of his home, and asked him to eome quickly, that he believed his wife was dying; Mr. Story and his wife went to the defendant’s place, and found the deceased in intense agony; Mrs. Story testified:
“We. heard a woman screaming when we were about 100 yards of the defendant’s house; Mrs. Bell was on the bed; she was choking, and had a convulsion which lasted about a minute ; then she seemed quiet for a few minutes, then screamed, and had another convulsion; in about five minutes she had another convulsion, and died. I called the defendant; he came into the room and went to the dresser and felt in a drawer for something, then left the room; when he returned, I asked him if she had taken poison, and he said she had taken a dose of quinine before going to bed; that there was no poison on the place*”

Dr. H. F. Hill testified:

*291 “I live at Farris; I was called to Green Bell’s place and found him and Mrs. Story there; Mrs. Bell was dead, but she had not been dead but a few minutes; the defendant said,. ‘Doctor, you are too late.’ I asked him if she had taken anything ; he said she had taken a dose of quinine just before going to bed. About a month, maybe more, before her death, I let the defendant have some strychnine tablets; he told me-he wanted to poison a dog; I poured them out in my hand, and said, ‘There is enough here to kill a dozen dogs,’ about a week after he got the strychnine he asked me what effect it would have on a person, and I told him as near as I could. I asked him that night if I had better notify the insurance company, he said, ‘No.’ The next day I went over to his home and told him that I had decided to notify the insurance company about his wife’s death; it would look bad not to. He said, ‘What will they do?’ I said, ‘I don’t know; they might not do anything; then they might send a detective here, and! maybe take up the body and take out the stomach and analyze it.’ He said, ‘They will never cut on my wife; Í will die and go to hell before I Will let them. ’ The next day he called me up to sign the death certificate, and I signed it. He had a sixshooter on, and said, ‘Have you heard anybody insinuating that I poisoned my wife?’ I said, ‘Nothing, Green.’ He said, ‘If I hear of anybody insinuating I poisoned my wife, I will kill them before Saturday night.’ ”

J. R. Story testified:

“My wife and I found the defendant standing on his back porch; she went in, and the defendant said, ‘Rube, what on earth will I do? They will hang me.’ I said, ‘What on earth is the matter, Green?’ and I passed in. Mrs. Bell was lying on the bed screaming; her head was drawn back, and her arms, were jerking; she said to my wife, ‘Pray for me,’ and ‘What makes me do this way?’ My wife said, ‘I don’t know.’ I said, ‘I am going after Stanley and his wife.’ ”

S. J. Barnett testified:

“About a week before his wife’s death the defendant told him that he had his wife’s life insured for $10,000 and his own for $500, and he said, ‘If she died that he would not be a poor man in his old days.’ ”

*292 Arthur Neeley testified :

“I was carrying the mail from Antlers to Farris; about the middle of July I brought some oil and strychnine from Antlers for Mr. Bailey; when I delivered it, Bailey, the defendant, and others were present; the defendant said he would settle for it in a few days; about the 27th or 28th of July there was a picnic at Darwin, and the defendant met me there at the post office, and told me he would settle with me; I said, ‘Does that include the strychnine for Mr. Bailey?’ He said, ‘Yes, I will settle-for all of it;’ and he paid me for it.”

Mrs. Lillie Gist testified:

“Deceased was my sister; just a week before her death I visited her; at the supper table the defendant put'down his knife and fork and said, ‘Lillie, I am just nearly worried to death'about this old policy; if Annie should die suddenly everybody would think I poisoned her. ’ His wife said, ‘Green, you are hot thinking about poisoning me?’ He said, ‘Oh, no; I would not do that for anything in the world; there is not any poison on the place.’ He turned to me and said, ‘Lillie, did you ever see any strychnine?’ I said, ‘I imagine it is like quinine.’ The day after the funeral he told me if the insurance men came around asking questions just tell them that she was six or seven months gone. I told him I was going to tell the truth. He said, ‘Tell them the truth if they break my neck.’ Then he asked me, ‘Do you think she was poisoned?’ and before I could reply he said he would shoot the heart out of the first one that told him he poisoned her. I did not say anything. He said, ‘Do you want her taken up?’ I told him I didn’t know. He said he was not' going to have her taken up; that he would lose the policy first, and he would shed the last drop of blood in his body before he would have her taken up. I saw my sister the afternoon before she died that night, and she was apparently in good spirits and in good health.”

The deceased, according to the testimony of the state’s expert witnesses, had all the symptoms of strychnine poisoning. A chemical analysis of the contents of the stomach disclosed one and three-quarter grains of strychnine, and a portion of the *293 liver was found to' contain three-sixteenths of a grain of strychnine. The defendant had taken out two insurance policies of $5,000 each upon the life of the deceased.

For the defense, Dr. D. D. Henderson, a physician and surgeon, located at Caney, in answer to a hypothetical question stated that—

“The deceased’s symptoms indicated puerperal eclampsia, which is a condition brought about in a woman carrying a foetus due to pressure on the circulatory system as well as the nerves.” ■

As a witness in his own behalf defendant stated that—

“In the month of February, I got 8 or 10 strychnine tablets from Dr'. Hill; I told him I wanted them to kill a dog; I put these tablets in a biscuit and put it out by the back door; it was gone in the morning; I told Cecil Bailey to write an order for the mail man to get some cup grease at Antlers, and I would pay for it; Cecil Bailey, Rube, Jim, and Bose Story and myself were working on a bridge when the mail man delivered the order.

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Related

Suggs v. State
1930 OK CR 51 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma, 1930)
Wilmoth v. State
1922 OK CR 27 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma, 1922)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1921 OK CR 238, 202 P. 325, 20 Okla. Crim. 289, 1921 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 165, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bell-v-state-oklacrimapp-1921.