Keifer v. State

154 N.E. 870, 199 Ind. 10, 1927 Ind. LEXIS 2
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 25, 1927
DocketNo. 24,814.
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 154 N.E. 870 (Keifer v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Keifer v. State, 154 N.E. 870, 199 Ind. 10, 1927 Ind. LEXIS 2 (Ind. 1927).

Opinion

Myers, J.

Appellant was charged by indictment in the court below with the crime of murder in the first degree. Upon a trial before a jury, he was found guilty of manslaughter. Thereafter, the court overruled his motion for a new trial and rendered judgment on the verdict. He is now, in this court, relying alone on the alleged error of the trial court in overruling his motion for a new trial.

Although appellant’s motion for a new trial embraces eighty-three alleged causes, he is here relying only on eighteen of them involving various rulings of the trial court made during the trial concerning the admissibility of evidence, and that the verdict of guilty is contrary to law.

At this point, brief recitals from the evidence seem necessary to show the relevancy of the questions here presented, and for a better understanding of our observations regarding them.

On January 14, 1924, and for about two years continuously prior thereto, the deceased, Catherine Russell, lived in a two-room apartment over a business room in the city of Kokomo. She was a divorced widow forty-six years old. Appellant was past fifty years of age and had been divorced by his wife in 1914, and since that' time, his home was with his mother. He became acquainted with the deceased in 1915, and, *12 for at least two years prior to-the tragedy, he was a frequent visitor at the deceased’s apartment at all times of the day and night, a portion of which time he carried a key to her apartment. When arrested he had no key, and said he had not had one for nearly a year. On January 15, 1924, he appeared at police headquarters at about one o’clock in the afternoon and told the captain of police, in substance, that he had been up to the Russell apartment and couldn’t get in, and he was afraid something had happened to her; that he had been to her rooms the day before when they had a few words and he left, but while on his way downstairs, he heard a shot or muffled sound and wished the officers would make some investigation. This officer, with two others, went to the apartment, which was reached by a stairway from the street and by a door from the second floor, hallway to each of the rooms. The officers forced the west door which led into the kitchen, then to the front room, where they found the deceased lying on her breast on the floor close to a chair, dead. Her head was to the west and face to the south, her feet to the east, her left arm under her and her right arm resting in a leather chair, with her hand on a 38-caliber gun in the chair. Under her breast where she lay was a dry pool of blood. Her left leg was burned by the heat of the burning gas in an open stove on the south side of the room. The gun was pointed to the northwest with four loaded shells and one empty shell in it. It had been recently discharged. A bullet for a 38-caliber gun was found on the floor on the north side of a chair which was fifteen or eighteen inches from the feet of the deceased, and in this chair, thirty-four and one-half inches from the floor, was a mark said by the witnesses to have been made by a bullet. From an autopsy on the deceased, it was learned that a bullet had entered her body between the *13 fourth and fifth ribs, to the left of the sternum, coursed downward, backward and outward to the tenth rib, where it was deflected directly upward and left the body about one and one-half to two inches from where the rib was fractured, and seven and one-half inches to the left of the middle line of the spine. The bullet came out of the body about nine inches from the ilium, or hip bone. It passed through the left ventricle of the heart and lower lobe of the left lung, causing death immediately. The deceased, when found, had on a house dress which showed powder burns where the bullet entered. She kept a pistol in her room which her daughter thought was a 32-caliber and was not able to identify the pistol found as belonging to her mother. Appellant testified that he owned a 32-caliber gun which, at the time of the tragedy was locked up in a safe in his place of business and that the gun found belonged to the deceased. The appearance of the deceased showed no evidence of a struggle with any one, nor was the furniture out of order.

A post mortem examination of the deceased was made by two practicing physicians, one the coroner. These doctors were called and gave their testimony as a part of the state’s original case. After relating the facts revealed by the autopsy, they were each asked the following question: “From your examination of this body and from your tracing the course of the bullet, and from your examination of the chair to which you have referred, and from your experience as a physician, whether or not, in your opinion, Catherine Russell was standing when she was shot?” One of these witnesses answered: “I don’t believe she was standing,” and the other answered: “It is my opinion that she was not.” These answers were given to the jury over appellant’s objection, and allowed to remain as competent evidence over his motion to strike out, which ob *14 jection and motion were for the reason, in substance, that this question called upon the witnesses to give an opinion based upon facts exhibited by a gunshot wound without first showing special qualifications of the witnesses over that of the jury to draw an opinion from the same facts.

As a general rule, the' opinion of experts is not received “if all the facts can be ascertained and made intelligible to the jury, or if it is such as men in general are capable of comprehending and understanding.” National Biscuit Co. v. Nolan (1905), 138 Fed. 6.

There was no attempt to. show that these physicians were qualified by special experience with fire arms, or had made any particular study of the subject of gunshot wounds, other than that obtained by them in the instant case. While our attention has not been called to a decision of this court, and we know of none, decisive of the precise question above submitted, yet, as a general proposition, an expert witness, except in cases of necessity, and especially in. a criminal case, is not allowed to give an opinion as . to the ultimate fact in the case, or an opinion to show a fact which the jury can determine as well as an expert. Rogers, Expert Testimony (2d ed.) §6, p. 21 and note 2. The physician witnesses in this case might and did state in detail all of the facts developed by the autopsy (Underhill, Crim. Evidence (3d ed.) §492),. but the mere fact that these witnesses were physicians and as such examined the body of the dead woman, would not qualify them to give an opinion as to the distance of the deceased from the muzzle of the gun at the time the fatal shot was fired, nor the probable position of the injured person at the time of receiving the fatal wound. Brown v. State (1892), 55 Ark. 593, 18 S. W. 1051; 5 Encyclopedia of Evidence p. 588, and cases cited, notes 31 and 32. Underhill, Criminal Evidence *15 (3d ed.) §193, p. 273, note 79, §491, , p. 696, and cases cited, note 27; Rains v. State (1899), 152 Ind. 69, 52 N. E. 450.

The admission of the questioned expert testimony has the approval of recognized authority (Commonwealth v. Festo [1924], 251 Mass. 275, 146 N. E.

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Bluebook (online)
154 N.E. 870, 199 Ind. 10, 1927 Ind. LEXIS 2, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/keifer-v-state-ind-1927.