Perkins v. United States

228 F. 408, 142 C.C.A. 638, 1915 U.S. App. LEXIS 2029
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedDecember 21, 1915
DocketNo. 1365
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 228 F. 408 (Perkins v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Perkins v. United States, 228 F. 408, 142 C.C.A. 638, 1915 U.S. App. LEXIS 2029 (4th Cir. 1915).

Opinion

WOODS, Circuit Judge.

The indictment in this case charged the defendant with the murder of F. W. R. Hinman, on the Clyde Dine Steamer Mohawk, on a voyage from New York to Charleston, in November, 1914. The trial resulted in a verdict of manslaughter and a sentence of three years’ imprisonment. Error is assigned in the exclusion of evidence and in the instructions to the jury.

The case made by the government was this:

About 8 o’clock on November 11, 1914, while Mr. Hinman and his-wife were sitting in the saloon of the Mohawk, conversing with the master and other passengers, the defendant appeared, in his bare feet .and clothed only in pajamas and a raincoat. He inquired about a wireless message, and made other remarks, either irrelevant or incoherent. Upon being told by the master that he should return to his room and put on other apparel, without notice and without provocation, he fired a pistol through his raincoat pocket at the master and passengers until every chamber was empty. • The first shot wounded the master, and two of the later shots killed Hinman. Mrs. Hin-man testified that while firing she heard the defendant say “there was others on the boat that he wanted besides.” After the shooting the defendant was seized by the order of the master, and carried to-Charleston in irons.

The defense was insanity, caused by the use of alcohol and drugs. In support of this plea it was proved that the defendant was an accomplished artist in interior decoration and furnishing, a man of high-character, thoughtful and considerate of others. All of the circumstances, as well as the direct evidence, showed plainly not only an absence of motive for the killing, but a lack of acquaintance with the persons present at the tragedy, which tended to- disprove actual malice toward any of them. According to the testimony of Horton, defend[413]*413ant’s brother-in-law, with whom he lived in Boston, on hts return from Europe after the beginning of the war he was without occupation, drank more than usual, and was nervous and restless; and it was in consequence of this condition that he started on a water trip to the South. Dr. Roberts, a physician in New York, to whom the defendant went for advice on his arrival in New York, just before sailing on the Mohawk, testified that he complained of severe headache, great mental strain, nervousness, and insomnia, accompanied by hallucinations; that from these complaints he feared the defendant might be on the verge of delirium tremens, although he did not regard the delirium imminent, nor did he regard the condition serious. He prescribed for the headache phenacetine and caffeine citrate, with the direction that if one powder failed to relieve, it was to be repeated in four hours, and as a sedative for the nervousness, two ounces of chloral hydrate in solution, one teaspoonful, containing 15 grains, to be taken every six hours, to be stopped after three doses. This physician testified that he had never known ill effects from the quantity of chloral prescribed; that the usual effect is a quiet sleep, though on some patients the effect was a period of mental excitement, sometimes going on to delirium, but that such an unfavorable effect was a mere possibility.

Dr. Wilson, a physician of high standing in Charleston, testified as an expert that the effect of 15 grains of chloral might be sleep or an excitement indistinguishable from alcoholic intoxication, with possible hallucinations. As to the effect of the 15 grains followed by 465 grains, he said the patient-might be very rapidly plunged into profound coma from which he would never awaken; he might be plunged into a coma from which he might awaken; or that preceding the coma he might be plunged into a state of violent excitement and then fall into a coma. Dr. Wilson further testified that the tendency among medical men and alienists is to regard chloral as a very dangerous drug, and that some even condemn it unqualifiedly on account of the occasional danger. In some cases he said it has developed suicidal tendencies. He expressed the opinion that, given in large doses, it might produce delirium.

The defendant’s story was this: For nine years before 1909 he had been a total abstainer, but in that year was a moderate drinker of wines and beer. For some time before leaving Boston he had been depressed on account of the loss of his position, and had begun to drink somewhat more. When he got to New York he was suffering from violent indigestion produced by his dinner. Before leaving Boston he spent a sleepless night, haunted by uncanny visions. Finding himself very nervous on the following, morning, he consulted Dr. Roberts, who was a personal friend, and discussed with him his nervous condition and the propriety of going to a sanitarium. The result was an agreement between the defendant and the doctor that a sea trip would be more advisable. The doctor then gave the prescription above mentioned. He had the prescription filled, and began taking the caffeine powders at the drug store, repeating the dose every four hours. When he embarked on the ship he was still feeling nervous [414]*414and unwell, and ate little luncheon or dinner; but his testimony shows that he was quite sane. On going to bed the first night he heard demoniacal voices and threats from imaginary persons of turning electricity on him. He reasoned about the matter, supposing his condition to be due to malarial fever, and was conscious of feeling relief when his roommate-came in. He was greatly frightened, and attempted to call a physician, but there was none on the ship. He went to the toilet several times in his pajamas and raincoat. He took none of the chloral that night. There was nothing unusual in his conduct the next day, and he was not troubled much with the imaginary voices, but real voices seemed unnaturally loud. He drank nothing during the day but two bottles of beer. Finding himself very nervous on the evening of the second day, he went to bed, putting his pistol under his pillow, as was his habit in traveling, though he had left it in his trunk' the night before. He poured into a glass what he supposed to be a teaspoonful of the liquid containing chloral to produce sleep. The defendant thus testifies as to his condition just after taking the medicine, immediately before tire homicide.

“Q. When you took that teaspoonful what happened then after that? A. Well, after that I began to be very much more nervous, and very quickly I became nervous, and then came the worst period that I have ever known since I was born. I don’t think that I ever felt such agony in my life as X did after that medicine. I don’t know whether the medicine had anything to do with it, but I know that immediately I heard the most demoniacal noises, voices of demons that were'cursing me. They were laughing the worst laughter that X ever .heard in my life, and the only voice that said anything intelligent was one that said, ‘Get the battery ready now,’ and then I thought I was in for the same accursed experience of last night. Q. What was the condition of your head? A. My head was spinning. I was so frightened that I could hardly stand. My hand was shaking. . I don’t know whether it was more the sensation of a man in deadly terror, or one who was drunk, but I never felt so badly in my life before. Q. Had you ever taken chloral before?A. No; never in my life, not to my knowledge. In fact I did not know that this was chloral. The doctor asked me if I had taken chloral. I got the impression it was a derivative of chloral, but did not know what it was; I knew it was something strong! Q.

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Bluebook (online)
228 F. 408, 142 C.C.A. 638, 1915 U.S. App. LEXIS 2029, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/perkins-v-united-states-ca4-1915.