People v. Pfanschmidt

262 Ill. 411
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 21, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by80 cases

This text of 262 Ill. 411 (People v. Pfanschmidt) 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. Pfanschmidt, 262 Ill. 411 (Ill. 1914).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Carter

delivered the opinion of the court:

/Kt the January term, 1913, of the circuit court the grand jury of Adams county returned four indictments against plaintiff in error, Ray Pfanschmidt, one charging him with the murder of his sister, Blanch Pfanschmidt; another with the murder of his father, Charles A. Pfanschmidt; a third with the murder of his mother, Matilda Pfanschmidtand a fourth with the murder of Emma Kaempen, a school teacher who boarded at his father’s home. On a trial' before a jury under the indictment for the murder of his sister, a verdict of guilty was returned and his punishment fixed at death- After motions for new trial"and in arrest of judgment had been overruled he was sentenced to be hanged on October 18, 1913. The record has been brought to this court for review.

In September, 1912, Charles A. Pfanschmidt, the father, was a farmer living about ten miles south-east of Quincy, Illinois, and from four to five miles north-west of Payson, on the northerly side, of a road running south-easterly from Quincy to Payson. His family consisted of himself, his wife, Matilda, the son, plaintiff in error, who was then twenty years of age, and the daughter, Blanch, fourteen years of age. Emma Kaempen, a young lady from Quincy, had entered the home as a boarder early in September, being a teacher .in .a country school in the neighborhood. During September, ^and for some weeks before, Ray, who prior to that time made his home with his parents, had been engaged upon a contract for excavating for a railroad switch and coal sheds upon the property of J. L. Frese, just north of the city of Quincy and about fourteen miles from the Pfanschmidt home. On the Frese premises he had established a camp of two tents in an open field about three hundred feet east of Twelfth street and a short distance north of the main line of the Burlington railroad. One tent was used for sleeping purposes by him and one of his men, the other being used for supplies. The Pfanschmidt farmhouse was a frame building two stories high, containing five rooms, and faced south. A narrow north and south hallway was in the center. A room opened into it on each side, both on the first and second floors, and the kitchen opened off the east room on the first floor. A one-room cellar was under the east room but did not extend beneath the hall or west room. The upper chambers were used as bed-rooms, the east room usually occupied by the parents and the west room by the daughter or guests of the family. The nearest neighbors were the Kaufmans, father and sons, about a quarter of a mile distant, on the opposite side of the Quincy and Payson road. Somewhat further away, to the north-west, were the Lehr brothers. Other neighbors lived at still greater distances. On the south side of the Quincy and Payson road, opposite the Pfanschmidt home, another highway led directly south. A lane, forming almost a direct continuation of this latter highway, ran north, passing several feet west of the house and continuing beyond it, there being no gate where it left the main highway and a fence on the west side only until the house was passed. The house "stood some, three hundred feet north of the highway, with an orchard between it and the road, and the barns, granaries and other outbuildings stood a short distance further to the north.

On Friday evening, September 27, 1912, Charles Pfanschmidt, his wife and daughter and Miss Kaempen were in Payson at a political gathering, going in a two-seated surrey drawn by two horses. At about ten o’clock the two young women were in the store of Flarvey Groce, where", they bought some candy, and all four left for home some time before eleven o’clock. All of them were apparently in good health and spirits and none of them were after-wards seen alive. The following day none of them were seen about the Pfanschmidt premises, although Henry Kaufman and his sons were working in a neighboring field, from whence they commanded a view of the house and its

approaches and for two or three hours were cutting weeds along the highway just west of the lane. Several persons driving along the road past the house on Saturday were attracted by a strong odor, which some of them said they thought came from burning flesh. In the opinion of all these witnesses the smell came from the Pfanschmidt place. This odor was noticed in the morning and became more pronounced later in the day. About eleven o’clock on Saturday evening one of the Kaufman boys (Gus) returning in a buggy from a call approached the Pfanschmidt prem- ' ises on the highway leading north to them, and opposite the lane he turned to the north-west on the Quincy and Payson road and thence to his home but saw no one about the Pfanschmidt place. E. M. Miller testified that shortly after, half-past eleven o’clock the same night, while driving a team of mules to Quincy, being at that time about eight or nine miles south-east of the Pfanschmidt place, he saw a fire in the direction of that -farm. Driving on through Payson and along the Quincy and Payson road he- found the residence, when he reached it, practically destroyed by the fire, only one corner post standing, the metal roof having fallen upon the burning debris. Several neighbors were already there, and one, whom he overtook, rode with him to the fire. The earliest arrival was Henry Schreclce, who saw the fire ten minutes after two o’clock from his farm wést of the Kaufman farm. Following him came the Lehr brothers and other neighbors. The horses and surrey used by the family Friday night were found in one of the barns, the horses in their usual places, unharnessed, and the surrey in the runway in the barn.’ No- attempt was made to extinguish the fire until the arrival of Henry Geisel, a brother-in-law of Charles A. Pfanschmidt, who had been telephoned to at his home about seven miles to the north-west, near the Quincy and Payson road, and who arrived with his son shortly before five o’clock. They then commenced pouring water upon the hot metal roof and burning debris covered by it. When it was sufficiently cooled the roof was removed and below were found four bodies, which were taken out and placed in a canvas and later in the day were taken to an undertaking parlor in Quincy, where a post-mortem examination was held by several physicians. The bodies of the three women were found in the west half of the house, the two younger women being side by side on a mattress. The fourth body was found in the cellar. -All of the bodies were badly burned and disfigured. The hands of Blanch Pfanschmidt were burned off and the arms were burned to the'elbow. Her feet were burned off and limbs burned almost to the knees. One side of the head was completely destroyed. Her hair, in two braids, was under the body. The remains of Emma Kaempen, found by her side, showed a fracture of .the bone over the left eye and another on top of the head. There was much-blood on the mattress upon which these two bodies were found. So little remained of the body found in the cellar that the physicians could not determine its sex. The flesh and bones of the head, arms, shoulders, upper trunk, legs and half of the lower trunk were all gone, but a part of one thigh and- one side of the lower trunk being unconsumed. The doctors testified this body had been dismembered before being burned, the flesh cut off with a knife and the thigh bone severed with a saw. The remains of the two young women were identified by several neighbors, and also by the plaintiff in error, before they were removed to Quincy.

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262 Ill. 411, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-pfanschmidt-ill-1914.