Polk v. State

36 Ark. 117
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedNovember 15, 1880
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 36 Ark. 117 (Polk v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Polk v. State, 36 Ark. 117 (Ark. 1880).

Opinion

STATEMENT.

Eakin, J.

Appellant was convicted of murder in the first degree and sentenced to death, upon an indictment for poisoning his wife.

The evidence is, substantially, as follows:

Some time in the fall of 1878, appellant’s wife died with symptoms which are described by the witnesses, many of whom were in attendance. She had been unwell the day before, but was doing better in the morning. Her husband and child were with her; and he had, himself, sent for a doctor, who left medicines to be taken. One dose had been administered, and she was left by her neighbors at noon, sitting up, and apparently doing well. Luring the afternoon the neighbors were called in again, and found her much worse. She had spasms and convulsions, attended with cramps, frothing at the mouth, and throwing back of the head. She died about night-fall. One of the women present testified that she died with symptons like those of the witness’s little granddaughter, who, the physicians said, had meningitis.

No suspicion seems to have attached to defendant at the time. He remained in the neighborhood for near eighteen months. About that time it seems a letter came from a woman at Arkadelphia, who had formerly lived in the neighborhood, named Mary Kidd; out of which there grew up a rumor that he had caused his wife’s death by poison. Hpon this he left the country and went to Tennessee, stopping one night with Mary Kidd, at Arkadelphia. It was well known that she had been having illicit intercourse with him, both before and after his marriage with his wife Adah.

Hpon the trial, Mary Kidd testified that before his wife’s death she had had a secret conversation with the defendant, in which he asked if strychnine would kill. She said it would, and arsenic, too. He said he had given Adah a dose, and it did not kill her. He then pulled some strychnine out of his pocket, in a paper, took some on the point of his knife, put it in whisky, and said he was going to give it to Adah; she testified also that defendant got some ■cakes from Mary Vaughan and put strychnine in them for Adah to eat, and, he said, she knocked it off. He said Adah was the “God damnedst hardest nigger to kill he ever saw;” and told her of another occasion in which he had put poison in buttermilk for Adah, which she was prevented from taking. After Adah’s death witness and defendant were talking together on the subject of his wife’s poisoning, when she told him he would not have done that devilment if he had taken her advice. She then started to tell Spencer Polk of it, who was in the field close by. Defendant knocked her down with a hoe, saying, “ It is the way with a d — d long-tongued woman, she could never keep anything.” Witness visited the defendant in jail and told him again that if he had taken her advice he would not be in that trouble, and he assented.

Harrison Counts had a conversation with defendant in the spring of 1880 about poisoniug his wife, and about the letter of Mary Kidd from Arkadelphia. Defendant said Mary Kidd was as deep in it as he was.

There was proof also that Mary Vaughan had sent cakes to Adah, by defendant, shortly before her death; and that about six weeks or two months before that, defendant had obtained from Spencer Polk, strychnine to kill coons.

The bill of exceptions proceeds as follows:

“Dr. Jacob Curtis was then introduced, as an expert, who testified:

“ The state here asked Dr. Curtis to tell the symptoms, in case of poisoning by strychnine. The defendant objected to him stating anything, only upon a hypothetical case; but the court permitted him to testify as to symptoms of poisoning by strychnine — to which ruling of the court the defendant excepted, at the time. ”

“Dr. Curtis testified: The symptons indicated show evidence of strychnine. Tetanic influence might produce similar symptoms — bitter taste; burning thirst; general languor; tonic rigidity of the muscles, which increase in severity until it amounts to spasms. Strong cramping of the superior part of the. larynx; breathings suspended after paroxysms; mind clear, confined to spinal system of nerves; mind generally undisturbed; spasms continue until death. Tetanic, with a throwing back of the neck ; general rigidity, which continues until some time after death; dilating influence on animals; can’t say as to human beings.”

CROSS-EXAMINED.

“ Difficulty with throat and breathing, only during spasms, described as of the order of tetanus, which generally represents the symptoms in strychnine. Premonitory symptoms in tetanus, very difficult to describe, as diflering from poison. In tetanus the convulsions are longer. The symptoms, as far as I heard them, and I heard all of them, are very meager, and make it difficult to distinguish between poison, in this case, and tetanus. The symptoms, as indicated, showed effects of poison, but may arise from other gauses. The symptoms spoken of, on night before, militate against poison by strychnine. ”

The defendant moved to exclude so much of this testimony as tended to establish symptoms of poison, on the ground that the state had failed to show that said symptoms might not have resulted from disease instead of poison by strychnine. The motion was overruled.

There was nothing important' developed by the testimony on the part of the defendant, except that the character of Mary Kidd, for veracity, was impeached by many witnesses, who swore that from her general reputation they would not believe her upon oath.

Amongst other instructions given for the state, the following was given against the defendant’s objections, as the third:

“ In arriving at a verdict in this case, the jury may take into consideration all the facts and circumstances proven ; and, in ascertaining whether or not the deceased came to her death by poisoning, they may take into consideration the circumstances of the death of the deceased, the symptoms attending her sickness, the declarations of the defendant made, before the decease, ancl his confessions, if any, made after the death; his efforts to suppress testimony; his possession of the poison shortly before the death; his motives, if any, and his flight; and if, after a careful consideration of all the facts and circumstances of the case, the jury are satisfied, beyond a reasonable doubt, of the guilt of the defendant, it is their duty to convict. ”

Amongst instructions asked for defendant, the following were refused, and he excepted :

“ 7. All the importance of the evidence, derived from the symptoms, depends upon the possibility of showing a distinction between them and a disease suddenly developed. This distinction should be sufficient, not merely to satisfy the mind of the physician, but to afford convincing proof to the jury. It can rarely, with perfect conscientiousness, be asserted that the symptoms might not be explained upon the supposition of disease. Hence, this portion of the medical evidence can not stand alone, but must be supported either by the positive correspondence with it, of the post mortem appearances and chemical analysis, or by the absence of any evidence, autopsy, or viewing the corpse of the deceased, confirming that notion of disease.

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Bluebook (online)
36 Ark. 117, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/polk-v-state-ark-1880.