People v. . Buchanan

39 N.E. 846, 145 N.Y. 1, 9 N.Y. Crim. 428, 64 St. Rep. 427, 64 N.Y. St. Rep. 427, 100 Sickels 1, 1895 N.Y. LEXIS 783
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 26, 1895
StatusPublished
Cited by78 cases

This text of 39 N.E. 846 (People v. . Buchanan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People v. . Buchanan, 39 N.E. 846, 145 N.Y. 1, 9 N.Y. Crim. 428, 64 St. Rep. 427, 64 N.Y. St. Rep. 427, 100 Sickels 1, 1895 N.Y. LEXIS 783 (N.Y. 1895).

Opinion

GRAY, J.

The defendant was indicted by a grand jury of the city and county of New York for the crime of murder in the first degree, in killing Anna Buchanan, his wTife, with poison administered to her on the 22d day of April, 1892. The indictment charged the commission of the crime in two counts; the first of which stated that the defendant had administered to the deceased “five grains weight of a certain deadly poison called morphine,” and the second of which stated that he had administered ,to her “a certain deadly poison to the grand jury unknown,” etc. Being tried upon the indictment, the defendant was found guilty, by the verdict of a jury, of murder in the first degree. From the judgment entered upon that verdict, the defendant has appealed to this court and it is our duty, under the statute, to review the facts, in order that we may become satisfied that the verdict was neither against the weight of evidence, nor against law and that justice does not require a new trial of the issue. In the language of the statute, we are to “give judgment without regard to technical errors, or defects, or to exceptions which do not affect the substantial rights of the parties.” The responsibility and labor thus devolved upon the court are very great. It devolves upon us to pronounce upon the sufficiency of the proofs and the substantial correctness of all the proceedings upon the trial, which preceded the rendition of the judgment of death. This responsibility is only sensibly lessened, when we can see that the verdict of the jury was based upon sufficient evidence and that the defendant had a, fair and impartial hearing.

The examination of this very large record has been carefully made and a patient and conscientious consideration given to the facts elicited upon the trial and to the points made by the skill *431 ful counsel for the defendant, in his effort to procure a new trial. It is our judgment that nothing appears upon the record, which would justify us in reversing the conviction. The evidence upon which the defendant was found guilty is wholly circumstantial in its nature; but all the circumstances were pregnant with his guilt and combined to denounce him as the sole author of a crime by which his wife was deprived of her life. The evidence was abundant and satisfactory to establish the fact of her death having been caused by poison and not to have been the result of some natural disease. The endeavor to demonstrate the contrary was by no means convincing. While the proof of a death from unnatural causes must rest upon the investigations and the opinions of experts and confusion may often result from the irreconcilable character of their testimony, it is not so difficult in this case for us to disregard that given by the medical experts for the defense. The detection and punishment of a crime committed secretly and with precautions against a knowledge of it becoming possible thereafter, of necessity, justify, if not compel, the submission to the jury of every fact and circumstance, which may reasonably bear upon the act, or the motive for it. The justification, of course, does not exist, if neither connection, nor illustration, can be seen in the facts offered to be proved. In People v. Harris, 136 N. Y. 423; 49 St. Rep. 751, we had occasion to consider the reasons which make the acceptance of a verdict, based on circumstantial evidence, satisfactory and the discussion need not be resumed here. In the present case, the judicial investigation is aided in a surer degree, than in the Harris case. In both cases the husband was •charged with killing his wife with poison; but in the former the marriage relation was secret and the opportunity of the defendant less evident, while here the intimate marital life existed and there was the conspicuous fact in the case that the defendant was seen to administer to his wife at her bedside something, which the circumstances satisfied the jury, and which satisfy us, could not have been the medicine prescribed for her by the physician, but which was some part of the poison which caused her death.

In order to demonstrate that which is the primary fact to be established; namely, that the deceased came to her death'by *432 poisoning, it will be of use to detail certain general and known facts. In April, 1892, the deceased was living with her husband, a practicing physician, at 267 West 11th stret, in the city of New York, and was of the age of forty-nine or fifty years. Her habits were and had been temperate and her health was testified to, by those who had known her, as having been good for the previous fourteen years. On Friday morning, April 21, 1892, after eating a hearty breakfast, she was taken ill; feeling severe pains in her head and unable to stand up. She was placed upon a bed and Dr. McIntyre, a physician, was called in at about eight o’clock; who found her complaining of excruciating pains in the head and of a tightness about the throat, which made it difficult to breathe. She was nervous and apprehensive. Her temperature was normal, but her pulse was accelerated. His examination led him to believe the case to be one of hysteria and he prescribed, as a nervine, a small dose of bromide mixed with ginger syrup and water, to be given in doses of one teaspoonful every two hours. At two o’clock of the afternoon he called again and, finding the symptoms aggravated, changed the prescription, by adding two drachms of chloral hydrate to the bromide; the doses to be the same as before. An hour later, at about three o’clock, the defendant was seen to give his wife a dose of two teaspoonfuls of medicine. After taking it she reached for an orange and bit into it, or sucked from it, as though there was a bitterness of taste. She spoke rationally; but in ten or fifteen minutes she fell into a deep sleep. At seven o’clock she was found by Dr. McIntyre and" another physician in a state of profound coma; with the breathing stertorious, the respiration -slow, the pulse very rapid, the face flushed, the skin hot and dry and the eyeball irresponsive to the finger touch. They treated her for possible idiosyncrasy to chloral; without restoring her to consciousness. Later in the evening the physicians returned and found the same condition. They concluded the deceased was suiferig from cerebral apoplexy; a conclusion reached by the exclusion of either uraemia, embolism, or narcotism from chloral; in part, because of statements by the defendant and, in part, as the result of diagnosis. The next morning she was found in the same condition of coma, with a high temperature, a flushed countenance, a *433 warm skin and with the pupils of the eye normal, save a slight dilation in the right one. The case was treated as one of cerebral apoplexy. She died in the afternoon and was buried on Tuesday. Her body was exhumed forty-two days later, at the instance of the district attorney, and subjected to a medical examination was then had at the hands of experienced chemists, served. The autopsy was performed by two skilled pathologists and revealed no cause for death in any lesion of the brain, or in any disease of the spinal cord, or of the various organs of the body. The examination of all the organs and of other matters taken from the body was made in gross and microscopically and no evidence was found of cerebral hemhorrage, or of any disease having existed which would account for the death.

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Bluebook (online)
39 N.E. 846, 145 N.Y. 1, 9 N.Y. Crim. 428, 64 St. Rep. 427, 64 N.Y. St. Rep. 427, 100 Sickels 1, 1895 N.Y. LEXIS 783, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-buchanan-ny-1895.