Hoover v. State

91 Ohio St. (N.S.) 41
CourtOhio Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 15, 1914
DocketNo. 14505
StatusPublished

This text of 91 Ohio St. (N.S.) 41 (Hoover v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hoover v. State, 91 Ohio St. (N.S.) 41 (Ohio 1914).

Opinion

By the Court.

The plaintiff in error was indicted by the grand jury of Van Wert county for the murder of his wife, Helen Hoover. On the trial in the court of common pleas of Van Wert in April, 1913, by the verdict of a jury the. plaintiff in error was found guilty of murder in the second degree. From the judgment entered on this verdict error was prosecuted to the court of appeals of Van Wert and the judgment was by that court affirmed. Error is prosecuted here to reverse the judgment below.

The deceased died from the effects of wounds inflicted by bullets fired from a revolver into her head a number of days before she died. The tragedy occurred at her home in the country, where she lived with her husband.

There was no direct testimony in the case as to who fired the shots.

The defendant below and his wife were a young couple, who had been schoolmates and close associates for a long time prior to their marriage.

In April, 1912, the father of decedent called on the defendant, and in the presence of his father accused him. of having disgraced his daughter. The result of the conference then held was that the parties were married on the following day and went to live with defendant’s father.

At the time of the marriage he was about 18 years old and she was a year younger. They remained at his father’s about three months when, at the request of his parents, she went to live at her parents’ home, he remaining with his parents. In the following October they went to live in their [43]*43own home on his father’s farm. They lived together there until the tragedy, which occurred about nine months after their marriage.

The defendant in his testimony gave an account of his movements and whereabouts on the day of the shooting. He stated that he was engaged in work on the farm; that he took dinner at his father’s house; that he was in and out of his own house during the day; that he was there about two o’clock in the afternoon and had a short talk with his wife, who was complaining of a headache; that he then went to his father’s barn; about one-half mile away, with a team to haul fodder; that about half-past four he went back home; that when he arrived he found his wife lying on the floor in the sitting room with the bullet wounds in her head; that he telephoned to his mother, told her “there has been a man in here some time this afternoon and shot Helen” and asked her to come quick; that the reason he said there had been a man there and shot his wife was because she had told him so. He denied that there had been any trouble between him and his wife between their marriage and her death, and stated that they had never had a fuss. He testified that the mother of his wife arrived at the house in the afternoon of the following day and that her treatment of him was not friendly.

The plaintiff in error urges that the evidence against him was all circumstantial and more consistent with the theory of suicide than of murder, and that there was prejudicial error in the admission of testimony. As to the latter, it is insisted in the first place that the court erred in admitting [44]*44the testimony of certain physicians in rebuttal. The state, in order to maintain its case in chief, had offered the testimony of experts, several physicians, to show that either one of the two principal wounds, which they discovered had been inflicted upon the deceased, would have caused immediate unconsciousness. The defendant called his mother as a witness, who testified that she had found the decedent soon after she had been called to the home, lying on the floor; had gotten down on the floor and put her hand over her head; had washed her face and bathed her head and asked her if a man had come into the house and shot her. She testified that the deceased shook her head “yes,” and in answer to the question whether she knew the man she shook her head “no.” The mother testified to other acts of consciousness of the deceased at that interview of a similar character. Two physicians were called on behalf of the defendant who testified that they saw the deceased about five o’clock in the afternoon. They gave it as their opinion that the deceased might have spoken within an hour preceding that time, and these physicians testified that neither of the wounds would necessarily have caused immediate unconsciousness.

The state in rebuttal was permitted, over the objection of the defendant, to offer evidence that these wounds would have caused immediate unconsciousness, and one of the witnesses so testifying was a physician who had already testified to the same effect in chief. We think that the admission of this evidence in rebuttal was proper. The evi[45]*45dence offered in chief was competent as showing the nature arid extent of the wounds that the deceased had received, the effect that they necessarily had upon her and that they naturally resulted in her death. This testimony contributed to the treking out of the case which the state was compelled to establish in chief. The testimony of the physicians, which was received in rebuttal, although substantially to the same effect, was competent in support of the effort to contradict the testimony of the mother of the defendant. Even if it be said that it was merely cumulative, its admission in rebuttal cannot be said to be an abuse of the discretion of the court in view of the testimony of the mother with reference to the consciousness of the deceased at the time stated.

It is also insisted that the trial court erred in admitting evidence of an impeaching nature with reference to the testimony of the attending physician. This witness described his visit to and examination of the deceased. He had fully detailed the entire situation as he found it, the location, nature and extent of the wounds, the treatment of them and the progress of the case till the death of Mrs. Hoover. He was asked as to the probability of the wounds having been self-inflicted and answered “it is very possible they could be.” He was asked on cross-examination, among other questions seeking to impeach his testimony, if he had not on another occasion, to a third person, made statements that were inconsistent with the answer referred to. The physician having denied that he remembered making any such statement, the state was permitted [46]*46in rebuttal, over the objection of defendant, to offer testimony showing that the physician had made the statements referred to.

The testimony of an expert witness, in which he gives an opinion, concerning a state of facts given in a hypothetical question, cannot be impeached by testimony that he had at another time expressed an opinion as to the actual transaction which was different from his expert opinion on the state of facts as contained in the question. A witness might have an opinion definite and conclusive with reference to a state of facts given in a question, and yet at the same time he might have received impressions which were caused by wholly extraneous circumstances or by hearsay and unreliable report which would lead him to hold and express a different belief as to the real state of facts. It would be unsafe and wholly improper to admit testimony concerning statements of that belief made at other times. On the other hand, it would be perfectly proper, where an expert had given on the witness stand an opinion concerning a state of facts contained in a hypothetical question, to show by way of impeachment that at other times he had given another opinion concerning the same state of facts.

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Bluebook (online)
91 Ohio St. (N.S.) 41, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hoover-v-state-ohio-1914.