Morgan v. State

71 N.W. 788, 51 Neb. 672, 1897 Neb. LEXIS 393
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedJune 3, 1897
DocketNo. 8413
StatusPublished
Cited by59 cases

This text of 71 N.W. 788 (Morgan v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Morgan v. State, 71 N.W. 788, 51 Neb. 672, 1897 Neb. LEXIS 393 (Neb. 1897).

Opinion

Post, C. J.

The plaintiff in error was, at the September, 1895, term of the district court for Douglas county, convicted of murder in the first degree, and from the judgment imposing the extreme penalty therefor be prosecutes error to this court. The information which was the basis of the prosecution below contained two counts, in the first of which the accused was in substance charged with fatally assaulting the deceased, Ida Gaskill, with intent her, the said deceased, feloniously and of his deliberate and premeditated malice, to kill and murder; and by the second count thereof it was charged that the accused feloniously killed and murdered the said Ida Gaskill in the perpetration of a rape then and there committed upon her, the said Ida Gaskill, a female child under eighteen years of age, to-wit, of the age of eleven years. A verdict was returned finding the accused not guilty as charged in the first count of the information and guilty in manner and form as charged in the second count thereof. A motion for a new trial was interposed, in which were alleged numerous grounds for the settingl aside of the verdict, and which are made the basis of separate assignments of the petition in error.

The questions to be determined in this proceeding may, it is believed, be greatly simplified by the preliminary observation that there exists no controversy respecting the. corpus delicti. Indeed, the fact was conceded by. counsel for the accused on the argument of the cause, and cannot, upon the record, be disputed, that the body of the [678]*678deceased, a girl eleven years of age, who was last seen alive about 7 o’clock P. M. of Sunday, November 3, 1895, was, about the hour of 1:30 in the morning following, found in an uninhabited building in the city of Omaha, with unmistakable evidence of violence before death, including well-defined finger marks on the neck and larynx; also below the ear and under the chin. The face was blue and swollen, the eyes and tongue were swollen and protruding, while contusions were apparent upon the head and lower limbs. Blood was oozing from the vagina, and the vaginal passage was torn and lacerated from the opening so far as explored. The underclothing of the deceased had been torn from the person, and there was blood on her thighs and private parts. There was also found in the vaginal passage a considerable quantity of fluid, which Dr. Detwiller, an experienced and apparently capable chemist, from a careful analysis, pronounced semen of a male person; and medical witnesses, of whom a number were examined, concurred in the opinion that death resulted from strangulation subsequent to the violation of the person of deceased in manner as charged. It is thus apparent that the important inquiry relates to the connection, if any, of the accused with the homicide proved, and to that subject our attention will now be directed.

For a month or six weeks previous to the tragedy above noted Mrs. Gaskill, mother of the deceased, with her family, consisting of the said Ida and her son Willie, aged nine years, had occupied rooms on the third floor of a building described in the record as No. 1814 Half-Howard street, in the city of Omaha, on the first floor of which was a suite of two rooms occupied by the accused and one Sanford, to whom further reference will hereafter be made. Among the acquaintances of the Gaskill family was Martin Booker, a single man, engaged on his own account as a teamster, and who resided at No. 1806 St. Mary’s avenue, in the neighborhood of a half block distant. On the fatal Sunday, Ida and her brother, with [679]*679tb.ei.r mother’s permission, dined with Booker, going to his rooms a little before noon, and returning home between 3 and 4 o’clock P. M< Ida, after the dinner with Booker, washed and put away the dishes of their host, and scrubbed the floor of his room, receiving therefor some trifling compensation tendered her. From the time of her return home .until about 5:30 P. M. she was engaged alternately in assisting with the household duties and in play with companions of her own age in the neighborhood. Mrs. Gaskill, about the hour last named, in return of the hospitality shown her children, permitted Ida to go out for the purpose of inviting Booker to supper with her. After delaying the meal for an hour or more, and becoming alarmed on account of the prolonged absence of the child, search was instituted by the mother, which, with the assistance of officers Hudson and Mc-Grath of the police force, Anally resulted in the finding of her lifeless body as already narrated. The first meeting of Ida and the accused on that day, of which the record furnishes any positive evidence, was at Booker’s rooms between 1 and 3 o’clock P. M., on which occasion there was, as testified to by Booker, some conversation between them which the latter did not overhear. Some time during the afternoon she visited the accused at his rooms, remaining for a few minutes only, at which time, as admitted by him to witnesses for the state, she sat upon his lap. She was, during the afternoon or evening, observed by Mrs. Yan Horn to meet and speak to the accused while passing through an alley in the rear of the uninhabited building in which her body was subsequently found (by witnesses referred to as the “old red house”), to-wit, No. 1807 Half-Howard street. She was seen by Fanny Donovitch, a girl of her own age, a few minutes before 6 o’clock, returning from St. Mary’s avenue by way of Booker’s, and a little boy, Claude Mc-Crum, testified to having seen her about the same time talking with Booker near the latter’s house. She was also seen by Mr. Penny, who testified for the defense, at [680]*6806:30, when too dark for recognition except by her voice, coming from the direction of Booker’s, and within a few feet of the door of the accused, where, in response to a question by soxxxe person, unseen by the witness, she answered, “Wait; I will be back in a minute,” or in words of like import. Accused was seen in the vacant building and in the immediate vicinity thereof at different times during the afternoon and evening. John Flannigan, a teamster, while passing through the alley, spoke to hixxx, at which time he was in one of the back rooms of said building; and later in the afternoon he attempted, according to the witnesses for the state, by beckoning and by means of other signs, to attract to said building two little girls of the age of deceased. He was seen by Mrs. Agnew to come fx*om his room about twenty minutes before 6 o’clock and pass between the vacant building and the barn, and was by Mrs. Koch seen to return from the direction of St. Mary’s avenue to the vicinity of said building about 5:30 or 6 o’clock.

But the witness, of all others, best qualified to speak from a personal knowledge of the movements of deceased that afternoon and evening was her brother. Willie, who testified that subsequent to Ms return from Booker’s he was the bearer to her of a message from the accused which amoxxnted to a request for her to meet him, the accused, at the vacant building. In view of the important bearing of this testimony of the last named witness upon the question at issue, we here set out the material part thereof:

He [accused'] was over there and told me. He said, “I have got something to tell you,” and I said, “Tell it out.” He said: “I will give you a nickel if you won’t tell anybody. Don’t tell it to your mother.

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Bluebook (online)
71 N.W. 788, 51 Neb. 672, 1897 Neb. LEXIS 393, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/morgan-v-state-neb-1897.