People v. McMahon

98 N.E. 239, 254 Ill. 62
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedApril 18, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 98 N.E. 239 (People v. McMahon) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People v. McMahon, 98 N.E. 239, 254 Ill. 62 (Ill. 1912).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Dunn

delivered the opinion of the court:

The plaintiff in error was convicted a second time of murder and sentenced to imprisonment in the penitentiary for fifteen years. The former conviction was reversed for error occurring on the trial. (People v. McMahon, 244 Ill. 45.) The second trial was had before Judge Richard M. Skinner, who died after the verdict was rendered, and the motion for a new trial was heard and decided by Judge Samuel C. Stough, who signed the bill of exceptions. The errors complained of on the record now before us are the denial of a motion for a continuance, a ruling on the admissibility of evidence, improper conduct of the assistant State’s attorney, and the denial of a motion for a new trial on the grounds of bias of a juror and insufficiency of the evidence. If the first three errors exist, they are shown by the record not to have been of a character so prejudicial to the defendant as to require a reversal of the judgment. The juror was not shown to have been prejudiced. The question of the sufficiency of the evidence remains.

The circumstances immediately attending the death of Mary Hetrick, the alleged victim of the homicide, are set forth in the report of the case when it was here before and need not be repeated. The evidence is wholly circumstantial, and the important criminating circumstances now, as on the former trial, are found in the testimony of James Currens and Herbert L. Whiting. The remote events testilled to by Macy Hamrick and Alice Okey are of little weight. Mary Hetrick died at about seven o’clock Saturday morning, December 5, 1908, from the effects of strychnine taken by her a few minutes earlier. Being about eight months gone in pregnancy, her condition was bound soon to become known though then suspected by no one. In such a situation a motive may be found for suicide on the part of the girl and murder on the part of the man responsible for her condition. Was the death suicide or murder ? The record fails to answer the question. The immediate circumstances indicate suicide rather than murder. The defendant and his wife had been at a party the night before, which they did not leave until after midnight. In the morning Mary got up first, and soon after the defendant got up and went out to the barn to work, taking his six-year-old boy with him. He stopped in the kitchen to put on his cap and shoes. Within a half hour his wife came to call him. He returned to the kitchen to find Mary lying on the floor in convulsions and in ten or fifteen minutes more she was dead. There was strychnine in the pantry. It had been there for years. Mary had access to it. If she had resolved to end her ills at once the means were at hand. No vessel or paper was found in which strychnine had been, except the bottle on the pantry shelf, but she might easily have taken some from the bottle on a paper and dropped the paper in the kitchen fire after taking the strychnine. Her apparent cheerfulness and good spirits when the defendant’s wife saw her a few minutes before she fell tend to indicate that she was not then contemplating death, yet she may have been. They also tend to indicate that she was not then in a condition which would inevitably expose her in a few weeks to public shame and disgrace, and yet she was.

The theory of the prosecution is that the defendant was the father of the unborn child and that he murdered the mother to avoid the discovery of her condition and a prosecution for rape to which he would be liable on account of her being less than sixteen years of age. Macy Hamrick, a girl a year or two older than Mary, testified that early in February, 1908, while the defendant’s wife and children were away from home at his father’s, she spent the night with Mary. The defendant was going out with a sleighing party, and he took a drink of whisky out of a bottle and invited the two girls to drink, saying there was rock candy in it. He went away, taking the bottle with him, and told the girls to sleep in the family bed-room down-stairs, which was near the fire. There were two beds in the room. The two girls went to bed together in the large bed, and'the next morning, about daylight, Macy was awakened by some one in the room and got out of bed and asked who it was. The defendant answered, and she asked for Mary. Mary answered from the other bed that slie was over there and that the defendant put her over there. Mary wanted her to get in bed with her and the defendant told her to go back to bed, but she refused, saying that she was going home. Both girls then got their clothes and went out in the other room and dressed. They got breakfast, and the defendant stayed in the bed-room until called to breakfast. The two girls started to school at half after eight, but Mary went back with the dog, which had followed them, leaving Macy to go on alone. .Mary came into school about eleven o’clock. Miss Hamrick regarded the occurrence of no importance, never told anyone about it, continued to associate with Mary, and was at the defendant’s house and spent the night with Mary in November, two weeks before her death.

Miss Alice Olcey testified that she saw Mary and Macy Hamrick going to school on the morning told about by Macy when Mary went back with the dog, and that Mar)’ came back in a couple of hours with flushed face, trembling-lips and tears in her eyes. At another time in this same month of February, when Miss Olcey was at the defendant’s house, Mary came home from school sick, threw herself on the couch and complained of her head. In a few minutes the defendant coming in, said, “Hello! what is the matter with you?” His wife looked at him darkly and said, “¡Yes, you, I guess! You! You!” and he eyed his wife with a very dark look but said nothing.

In June the defendant called at Dr. Landis’ office and told the doctor that Mary had missed her period and he guessed he would have to get a little medicine for her. He wanted to know if the doctor could do her any good, and the latter replied that it was not unusual for a girl of her age,—a few doses of some medicine would straighten her out. He then started to get the medicine, but the defendant suggested that he had better send the girl and his wife down. The same day, or the next day, Mrs. McMahon and Mary came down and the doctor gave her a little medicine to regulate menstruation. She afterward came to the office to pay for the medicine, but the bill had been paid by the defendant.

The testimony of James Currens and Herbert L. Whiting is substantially set out in the report of the case when formerly here. In addition-Whiting testified on the second trial to a conversation with the defendant in the latter part of December, in which the latter said: “If I am prosecuted for this crime I will never do another honest day’s work as long as I live; there are others as deep in this as I am; you will have to tell why you gave Mary so much money and why you put your brother-in-law on the jury.” The reference to the brother-in-law was to W. C. Bloom, who was on the coroner’s jury, and the reference to the money was to two small sums, of fifty cents and two dollars, which Whiting had given to Mary the preceding summer. The time of this conversation was during the adjournment of the coroner’s investigation to await the result of the chemical examination, and was after the defendant was being accused in the newspapers and suspected by his neighbors of being guilty of murdering Mary. Whiting did not testify to this conversation on the former trial and was not asked about it.

The evidence at the second trial did not differ materially from that at the first.

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Bluebook (online)
98 N.E. 239, 254 Ill. 62, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-mcmahon-ill-1912.