McCormick v. State

194 N.W. 347, 181 Wis. 261, 1923 Wisc. LEXIS 209
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedJune 18, 1923
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 194 N.W. 347 (McCormick v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McCormick v. State, 194 N.W. 347, 181 Wis. 261, 1923 Wisc. LEXIS 209 (Wis. 1923).

Opinion

Doerfler, J.

Plaintiff in error, hereafter called the defendant, and the deceased, on June 4, 1914, were married; The deceased prior to such marriage was a widow residing at White Cloud, Michigan, and it appears that she was the owner of property inherited from her deceased husband variously estimated at' a value of between $40,000 and $50,000. There is considerable evidence in the record introduced for' the purpose of showing that defendant's object in contracting this marriage was to obtain possession of her property. After the marriage the parties resided for a short period at Grand Rapids, Michigan, and on September 2, 1914, the defendant commenced an action for a divorce and immediately left Grand Rapids and proceeded to Seattle, Washington. The deceased, claiming that the defendant had embezzled a large amount of her money, engaged an attorney named Shaw, residing at Grand Rapids, and the two proceeded to Seattle, where criminal proceedings had been instituted against the defendant, and, a reconciliation having been effected, such proceedings were discontinued and the parties then returned to Grand Rapids, and shortly thereafter removed to Ladysmith, Wisconsin, where they resided until the. death of the deceased on August 5, 1915.

Considerable evidence was also introduced on the trial to [263]*263show that during a large part of the period covered by the marriage the deceased suffered from illness, it being the claim of the' State that such illness was caused by the defendant by periodically introducing into her food small doses of, arsenic. The illness became so serious that on July 25, 1915, her .attending physician recommended the employment of a nurse; and it also appears that the nurse when so employed was directed by the physician to carefully guard her. because of suicidal tendencies on her part. Such alleged suicidal tendencies were denied by the State, and it was claimed by the latter that the thought of suicide was artfully injected into the physician’s mind, designedly, by the defendant, for his own protection and to mislead the authorities and thus prevent prosecution.

At about noon of August 5th the nurse accompanied the deceased to an outdoor toilet and there left her unattended for a very brief period, and upon returning assisted the deceased to the residence, where she and the defendant and the deceased sat down and ate dinner. Upon the recommendation of the physician pepsin capsules had been prescribed for the deceased, to be taken before meals, and what was thought to be one of these alleged tablets was taken according to directions on this occasion. About ten or fifteen minutes after the close of the meal the deceased became violently ill and suffered from spasms and intense pain, and shortly thereafter died. There was also evidence to show that the defendant, shortly after the deceased’s death, went to this outdoor toilet. The physician found in the pool under the toilet a small vial which contained strychnine tablets, which had the form, color, and appearance of the pepsin tablets. A post-mortem examination disclosed the presence of strychnine in the deceased’s stomach, and it is not disputed in this case that her death was caused by strychnine poisoning.

The foregoing facts represent but a few of the outstanding incidents disclosed on the trial, and we are of the opinion [264]*264that for the purposes of this review no further comment should be made upon the evidence, in view of our holding herein, and because it is desired that nothing herein stated of the evidence shall in any manner prejudice the parties on a retrial of the case.

The State contended that the deceased died from strychnine poisoning as a result of her partaking of a tablet placed in the vial by the defendant with homicidal intentions; while it was the contention of the defendant that the deceased’s death resulted from suicide. There was no evidence in the record showing that the defendant had either purchased strychnine tablets, or that he had in his possession such tablets, or that he placed a tablet containing strychnine into the vial which contained the pepsin capsules prescribed by the physician. The evidence in the case was largely circumstantial and formed a proper basis for a jury to arrive at a conclusion in harmony with either of the theories presented by the parties. The question comes before this court solely upon an assignment of error on the part of the defendant’s counsel that the introduction of certain letters hereinafter referred to was highly prejudicial to the defendant, and that by reason of the reception and introduction of such letters prejudicial error was committed against the defendant, on account of which he is entitled to a new trial. One Shaw, an attorney at law of Grand Rapids, Michigan, was called as a witness in behalf of the State, and among other things testified that he acted as attorney for the deceased in the divorce case begun by the defendant against her on September 2, 1914, and that he accompanied the deceased to Seattle, where the defendant was located and where the criminal proceedings heretofore referred to were pending. His testimony also shows that he had acted for the deceased in a professional capacity on other occasions and that he had also been employed by the defendant to transact business for him.

On the 29th of October, 1915, while contest proceedings [265]*265were pending in the circuit court over the will of the deceased, the witness received a telegram from the defendant informing him that the defendant would arrive from Chicago that evening and requesting an interview upon important business. The letters hereinafter referred to' had, prior to such interview, been sent by the witness to one Kirwan, district attorney of Rusk county, at Ladysmith, and before reading any of these letters to the defendant at said interview the witness stated that he could not act as attorney for the defendant if criminal proceedings were to be prosecuted against him on account of the death of his wife. Thereupon the witness, in order, to inform the defendant of the nature of the letters sent by him to the district attorney, read such letters to him, the witness stating that the defendant ought to understand his position before he made any statement. He further testified that the defendant replied generally to all of the statements contained in the letters by saying that the criminal matters had all been settled; that there would be no criminal proceedings, and that none of those letters need interfere with the work he, the defendant, wanted the witness to do for him. The letters were thereupon offered by the State in evidence, and received, over proper objections made by defendant’s counsel.

Exhibit No. 27 reads as follows:

“Prosecuting Attorney, ' September 23, 1915.
“Rusk County,
“Ladysmith, Wisconsin.
“Dear Sir: We have heard indirectly of the death of Ida J. McCormick, formerly Ida J. Matheson of White Cloud, Michigan, and the wife of Astor H. McCormick, whom we understand was living with Mrs. McCormick at Ladysmith at the time of her death.
“Mrs. McCormick not long ago, in our office, requested us to promise her that in case of her death to make a thorough investigation, as at that time she feared that her husband would cause her death for the purpose of securing [266]

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Bluebook (online)
194 N.W. 347, 181 Wis. 261, 1923 Wisc. LEXIS 209, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mccormick-v-state-wis-1923.