Roe v. State

1920 OK CR 153, 191 P. 1048, 17 Okla. Crim. 587, 1920 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 142
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma
DecidedAugust 28, 1920
DocketNo. A-3242.
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 1920 OK CR 153 (Roe v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Roe v. State, 1920 OK CR 153, 191 P. 1048, 17 Okla. Crim. 587, 1920 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 142 (Okla. Ct. App. 1920).

Opinion

MATSON, J.

This is an appeal from the district court of Pawnee county, wherein the defendant, Mary F. Roe, was informed against and charged with the murder of her husband, Jesse Roe, on the night of April 25, 1917. The trial resulted in a verdict of guilty of murder, and punishment fixed at confinement in the state penitentiary for life. From the judgment rendered in accordance with the verdict, defendant has appealed to this court, and seeks a reversal upon several grounds, which will be hereinafter considered. A short statement of the facts connected with the killing follows:

Mary F. Roe at the time of the killing was in the neighborhood of 35 years of age, and was keeping a rooming house at Drumright, Okla. She had been previously married, when about 19 years of age, to one Vernon Osborne, an oil well driller, and to this union one son was born, Bernard Osborne, who was about 16 years of age at the time of the trial. Vernon Osborne was addicted to hard drinking, and some 5 or 6 years after the marriage the defendant procured a divorce from him and the custody of her son. Some 6 months thereafter Vernon Osborne died of typhoid fever. Defendant never married again, un *589 til her marriage to Jesse Roe at Pawnee, Okla., on April 23, 1917. After defendant’s marriage to Osborne, she lived in Ohio, West Virginia, Indiana, and Illinois, and in 1912 came to Drumright, Okla. She lived almost exclusively in localities where oil development was active. Two of her brothers were drilling contractors, and after her divorce from Osborne assisted her materially in a financial way. So far as the record shows, the defendant lived, prior to commission of this alleged homicide, a clean and moral life in a rather rough environment. She was considered industrious, but not a successful business woman. She had worked as a domestic, and at times had kept boarding house camps in and around the oil fields.

It was while engaged in the latter business that she first met the deceased, Jesse Roe, about the year 1914. Roe was considerably older than the defendant, and was not a man of education. During his frequent visits to the defendant, he often got her to transact his business for him. He had furnished her money, and ,she said that she married him for money. Before their marriage, and just after, she went to various banks inquiring as to Roe’s financial condition, his deposits, his checks, and his lands, and made special inquiry about cashing checks, and of her. own authority to sign checks for Roe. Defendant appeared to be ashamed of her marriage with Roe, but executed it for the reason that she had a sick boy that had to be provided for. It was the request of both parties that the marriage be kept a secret. Deceased told that he had procured a farm and was going to move out onto it when married. About the time they moved onto the farm, and 2 or three days before the commission of the homicide, the defendant obtained a new pistol and cartridges for the same, and also got a new trunk and rope for the same. She told a person *590 residing close by that there were rats at their new place, and that she was afraid of rats, and that if he heard a shot fired he need not be alarmed or come to her. .She also told neighbors, before she was married, that she was going away and would be gone about 10 days. Jesse Roe was shot in the head, and by a bullet of the samq size as that of defendant’s pistol. Her pistol had one chamber that had been fired. The killing took place at the farm home, to which they had moved about 2 days previous. The body of the deceased was found in the trunk that defendant had taken out there, and the trunk was tied up with the cord.

After the killing, defendant telephoned for an auto, and after the automobile came blood was seen dripping from the trunk, and, on being asked about it, defendant told the chauffeur that she was carrying some fresh pork to Drumright. On being pressed further, she admitted to the chauffeur that Jesse Roe’s body was in the trunk. She endeavored to persuade the chauffeur, not to disclose that fact, and wanted the chauffeur to tell her where she could find a stream deep enough to cover the trunk, and also said that, if she could have gotten the trunk to Drum-right, she would have had no trouble. She denied killing her husband, but said that he was killed by a man who came to their house after night. She claimed that she had not been well, and was sleeping in the bed in the northwest corner of the west room, and that Roe was sleeping on a cot or pallet in front- of the bed; that she awoke about midnight, hearing Roe and some man quarreling, and that the man was shaking his fist at Roe and saying, “Damn you, you will implicate me, will you?” and that Roe replied, “Ed, damn you,” or “God damn you, I will shoot *591 you,” and reached toward the foot of the bed for a shotgun; that she called out to Roe, “Oh! don’t shoot him;” that the man drew a revolver and fired, hitting Roe in the head. Some bloody bed clothing and partly wiped-up blood spots on the floor in the west room were discovered; also a shotgun, two "revolvers, the tray of the trunk (in which the body of deceased had been pláced), with some female wearing apparel piled on top of it, were found in the west room.

The defendant pleaded insanity, and there was evidence introduced from a number of lay and expert witnesses to the effect that they believed the defendant in-_ sane, the expert witnesses testifying that the defendant is of the type of insane known as dementia praecox of the paranoid type; that she is an hypochondriac, with delusions or hallucinations of pulmonary tuberculosis and cancer; that she also has delusions of persecutions; also delusions that one of her brothers, who had been kind to her, was very unkind to her; and that she had at times theatened to kill this brother. There were no manifestations of violence on the part of the defendant, testified to by any witness, prior to the alleged commission of this homicide by her. On the part of the state, there was some evidence to the effect that the defendant, shortly prior to and shortly after the commission of the homicide, appeared to be rational and in a composed state of mind.

On the question of insanity, the court gave the following instructions, to which proper exceptions were taken:

“In addition to her plea of not guilty, the defendant claims that, if she killed the said deceased, Jesse Roe, said act was not criminal, for the reason that her. mental condition was such, at that time, that she was not responsible for said act, and therefore was excusable.
*592 “Under her plea, of not guilty, she has a right to offer as many defenses as she sees fit, whether such defenses are consistent or inconsistent, and the fact that she may interpose inconsistent defenses raises no presumption against her by reason of any apparent inconsistency.
“You are instructed that the defendant has interposed as one of her defenses in this case the defense of insanity. When that defense is interposed, the burden of proof is upon the defendant, unless the evidence on the part of the state be sufficient for that purpose, to introduce sufficient evidence to raise in your minds a reasonable doubt of her, sanity.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1920 OK CR 153, 191 P. 1048, 17 Okla. Crim. 587, 1920 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 142, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/roe-v-state-oklacrimapp-1920.