Kinsey v. State of Arizona

65 P.2d 1141, 49 Ariz. 201, 125 A.L.R. 3, 1937 Ariz. LEXIS 230
CourtArizona Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 8, 1937
DocketCriminal No. 850.
StatusPublished
Cited by67 cases

This text of 65 P.2d 1141 (Kinsey v. State of Arizona) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Arizona Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kinsey v. State of Arizona, 65 P.2d 1141, 49 Ariz. 201, 125 A.L.R. 3, 1937 Ariz. LEXIS 230 (Ark. 1937).

Opinion

LOCKWOOD, J.

This is an appeal hy Billie Kinsey, hereinafter called defendant, from a judgment and sentence pronounced upon a verdict of a jury finding her guilty of murder in the second degree. The facts of the case, taken in the strongest manner in support of the verdict, as under our oft-repeated rule we must take them, may be stated as follows:

Odessa Ball, hereinafter called deceased, was a young woman about twenty-one years of age, residing at Coolidge, Arizona. About the 21st of April, 1936, *206 she left her home to visit a girl friend, named Martha Jones, residing in Bnckeye. She was accompanied from Coolidge to Bnckeye by three of her friends, and arrived at 'the latter place about midnight, where she remained with her friend Miss Jones, while her companions returned to Coolidge. She stayed at the Jones house from April 21st to April 27th, when she left via an eastbonnd train, saying she was returning to Coolidge. During all of the time that she was at the Jones house she slept with her friend. Both the girl and her mother observed deceased closely and she appeared to be in good health and high spirits, without any indication of ailment or other injury, Miss Jones testifying that the night previous to her departure from Buckeye she was not flowing, hemorrhaging, or suffering apparently from any inward condition. Deceased arrived in Phoenix on the early morning train, Monday, April 27th, and was seen at the depot by a relative, and shortly after leaving the depot she met a friend at First Avenue and Washington Street, and then went on west on Washington Street. Both parties she met testified that at that time she appeared to be healthy and in good spirits. About 10:30 the same morning, Fay Plummer, a friend of defendant, went to the latter’s house for some purpose, and was then informed by defendant that she had a patient. Miss Plummer did not at that time see the patient, but in the afternoon of the same day returned to defendant’s house. On this second visit, the defendant told her that she (defendant) was going to the store, and if her patient wanted anything, she would like Miss Plummer to attend to it. While the defendant was gone, a girl whom Miss Plummer did not know at that time came into the room, walked around a little, and then went back and lay down on a bed on the sleeping porch. The girl seemed to be nervous and restless and acted *207 as if she was in considerable pain. Abont this time Miss Plnmmer had a conversation with the defendant, and the latter remarked that ‘ ‘ she thought the girl was about ready to do business and that she was a hard case.” Miss Plummer then left and did not see the girl again until Thursday, when she identified the body of deceased, which was at the time in a mortuary, as being the girl whom she saw at defendant’s house on the 27th of April. It further appeared that between 11 and 12 o’clock P. M. on Tuesday, April 28th, Jap Kinsey, defendant’s ex-husband, together with two other men, went to defendant’s house and found a girl there apparently in great pain and unconscious, with the defendant working with her. These men took the girl to the Good Samaritan Hospital and placed her in the care of a nurse, where she died about thirty minutes later. They gave no information to the staff at the hospital, except that some of the girl’s relatives would call later, and shortly after her death, a friend of deceased by name of Lois Bowden did arrive at the hospital and identified her. .She testified she was one of the party who went to Buckeye with her on the 21st; that about 10 o’clock the evening of the 28th she received a call from some unknown party in Phoenix, who requested that she come to the hospital immediately to see deceased. The authorities were immediately notified and commenced a search for defendant and her former husband, Jap Kinsey. They went to her house on Wednesday, the 29th, but did not find her, but finally located her and her ex-husband in a cabin at an auto court some eight or ten blocks away. When they knocked at the door, Kinsey opened it after a little delay and informed the officers that he was alone, but on searching the premises they found defendant hid in the bathroom, and immediately placed her and Kinsey under arrest. The cabin was searched and, *208 among other things, the officers fonnd a bread box containing a number of surgical instruments, which defendant admitted belonged to her, several of them having upon them stains of fresh blood. They also searched defendant’s own house, and found therein a number of towels and sheets, which indicated they had been freshly laundered, and also fonnd in a garage on defendant’s premises a pad and some cotton upon which were some fresh blood stains. Defendant was brought to the county attorney’s office shortly after her arrest and was questioned by the county attorney, and her statement taken down by a court reporter. During this examination she denied that she knew deceased, or that the latter had ever been to her house, and also denied that Kinsey and the other two men had taken deceased from her house to the hospital. Some time after she was again taken to the county attorney’s office, and made a second statement in which she admitted her first one was untrue in many particulars. She then claimed that deceased came to her house Tuesday, the 28th, about 9 o’clock in the morning, and asked if she was a nurse, telling her that she (deceased) had used a curling iron and a hatpin to produce an abortion, and that she needed assistance. Defendant stated at that time that the girl was hemorrhaging profusely, with blood all over her stockings, and shoes. She said she took the girl in to her room and made an examination, and removed a small piece of placenta, which seemed to relieve her for a time, but that about 5 or 6 o’clock she had a severe hemorrhage, and from that time gradually sank until she was taken to the hospital, where she shortly afterwards died. An autopsy, which was performed about noon April 29th, showed conclusively that the cause of the death of Odessa Ball was a hemorrhage brought about by an abortion. It also showed that on the posterior wall *209 of the uterus there were numerous abrasions, cuts,' and lacerations, which, in the opinion of the examining physician, were caused by some sharp cutting instrument, probably a curette. Among the surgical instruments found in the defendant’s possession, as aforesaid, were a curette and several speculums, which had fresh blood on them at the time they were seized. He further testified that there was nothing to indicate that an abortion was necessary to save the life of deceased, and that, in his opinion, it had been performed anywhere from a minimum of twelve to a maximum of thirty-six hours before the time of her death.

There are some eleven assignments of error, which we shall consider in the order that seems most advisable. The first is “for error of the court in permitting questions to be asked of the prospective jurors over the objections of defendant.” This assignment is obviously insufficient, under rule 12 of this court, in that it does not point out distinctly the particular ruling complained of. We might well, therefore, decline to consider it. Midkiff v. State, 29 Ariz. 523, 243 Pac. 601; DeMille v. State, 43 Ariz. 551, 33 Pac. (2d) 280.

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Bluebook (online)
65 P.2d 1141, 49 Ariz. 201, 125 A.L.R. 3, 1937 Ariz. LEXIS 230, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kinsey-v-state-of-arizona-ariz-1937.