Munday v. State

5 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 656, 1904 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 286
CourtOhio Circuit Courts
DecidedDecember 2, 1904
StatusPublished

This text of 5 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 656 (Munday v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Circuit Courts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Munday v. State, 5 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 656, 1904 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 286 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1904).

Opinion

The plaintiff in error was indicted for the crime of murder in the second degree, and was convicted of that offense by the jury. A motion for a new trial being overruled, he was sen[657]*657teneed to imprisonment in the penitentiary for life. A petition in error was filed in this court to reverse that judgment.

John Munday, in the fall of 1889, was married to Lillie Mun-day, the person he was charged with killing. They were married at the city of Detroit. The killing is alleged to have occurred on January 13, 1893, in the city of Toledo.

It is claimed that the court erred in its charge to the- jury; that the verdict was against the weight of the evidence; and that therefore the court erred in overruling the motion for a new trial.

As I have said, Munday was married to Lillie Munday in Detroit in 1889. After their marriage, they moved to Toledo and lived on Wisconsin street, he having two or three children by a former wife and one by Lillie Munday. A day or so after January 15, 1893, now over eleven years ago, it was noticed by the neighbors and the relatives of Mrs. Munday that she had disappeared from their home on Wisconsin street. Her mother and some of the neighbors came to the house and inquired where she was, and Munday told them she had gone away — they had been separated for a short time, prior to this — he told them she had gone away, and he did not know where she was. Soon after that he with his children left the house and moved to Detroit, and went to other places, and finally to St. Louis.

In June, 1895, nearly two years and á half after Mrs. Mun-day had disappeared, her body was found under the house where they had lived on Wisconsin street, in Toledo. It had decomposed so that only a portion of the skin on the face and neck remained; it was identified fully by those who knew her and was examined by physicians. The only mark of violence that could be discovered by the physicians at that time, if this was a mark of violence, was a small hole on one side of her neck through the skin which still remained about the size of an ordinary lead pencil, or a man’s little finger, or a thirty-eight caliber bullet, as one physician testified; but no one could tell how the hole had been made or whether the skin had simply decomposed; the flesh inside was all gone. The body had been [658]*658put under-the house through the floor, the boards being lifted in a closet.

A warrant was issued for Munday and soon after that he was arrested in St. Louis and brought back to Toledo, in the same month, June, 1895. In the following August, he escaped from the jail of Lucas county and fled, and lived at various places, and married another woman; and, finally in. the year 1903, he was found in the city of St. Louis, working on the exposition buildings, was arrested and brought back to Toledo. He had been indicted for murder in the second degree. The-case was tried in the court of common pleas at the April Term, 1903 — ten years after Mrs. Munday disappeared. At the trial of the case the evidence offered by the state showed the finding of the body under the house, the marks upon it — it had the mark upon it which I have referred to — and there was some testimony as to the statements of Munday, that is, his statement that she had gone away and that he did not know where sh'e was, and the evidence of an officer, by the name of Durian, that Munday had said to him that he had had a quarrel with his wife and a struggle and that in the struggle he had struck her with the handle of a carving knife; and that she had died; that he had tried to resuscitate her, but could not; that he had come near' to the police station two or three times with the intention of giving himself up, but his courage failed and he ran away. That statement, it was claimed, was made at the time he was first arrested, ten years before. This is a brief statement of the state’s case; some elements I have probably left out.

The only witness who claims to have been present at the time of Mrs. Munday’s death was the defendant himself. He went on the witness-stand and his claim was that whatever he did was done for the purpose' of defending himself. He claimed that they had various quarrels; that she was a woman of violent temper; and he was corroborated in this to some extent. On this occasion Munday claimed she was about to leave and take with her their little girl, who was then a small child; that [659]*659he undertook to prevent her taking the girl; that he began taking a coat off the child; that thereupon she attacked him first with the broom; that he took it away from her and threw it out of the room, and at the same time- put out the two small children who were in the room with them — they were in the dining-room — and closed the door; that thereupon she picked up a carving knife which was on the dining-room table and threatened to kill him, “to fix him,” “to run the knife through him,” and used other language of that kind. Munday claimed that he ran around the dining-room table, she pursuing him; that she finally gained on him, with the carving knife in her hand, which he says was a long knife, a knife with a long blade and a long, pointed handle. When she came near him he claims that he whirled, and, for the purpose of protecting himself, struck her on the breast with his hand or fist and knocked her down. He says she was still raving, as he put in, in a raging, angry, threatening manner, with the knife still in her hand. In order to get the knife away from her, to make her let go of the knife, he said he took hold of her hand; that the knife which she held in her right hand was transferred to the other hand; she was still threatening to kill him; that in the struggle with her he got the knife away from her by rubbing his knuckles against her fingers — the fingers of the hand which held the knife. He said also that in the struggle he took hold of her throat and choked her some.

He says that he finally succeeded in getting the knife away from her. Soon after that, he says, she became unconscious. Why she became unconscious he claims he does not know. He laid her upon the couch in the room; the only blood that he says he saw was at the back of her head. He says he tried to resuscitate her with camphor, and put his hands on the back of her head to staunch the blood; but he was unable to resuscitate her. In the course of an hour he found she was dead, and he says that he took the body and laid it on the bed in the front room of the house; that he went down town intending to report it to the police, but he said his courage failed and he did not.

[660]*660The door of the front room where the body lay was locked. He told the small children that Mrs. Munday had gone away. The body remained there, according to his statement, until the next night at midnight, when he concluded to flee; and he took up the boards in the floor of a closet and put the body under the house — the house stood on stone piers, and was surrounded with boards; there was no cellar under the house. Soon after that, a day or two after, Munday went to Detroit, and after that came his experiences and wanderings, as I have already stated, until he -was finally arrested and put on trial.

As stated, his claim is that whatever he did was done in self-defense. He does not admit that he intended to kill his wife, and if what he says is true, he probably did not; at least, he does not admit that he did. He denies having used any weapon upon her or any kind of violence except as before stated. He claims that in the struggle she cut him on one of his arms near the wrist.

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Bluebook (online)
5 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 656, 1904 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 286, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/munday-v-state-ohiocirct-1904.