Rutledge v. State

15 P.2d 255, 41 Ariz. 48, 1932 Ariz. LEXIS 147
CourtArizona Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 18, 1932
DocketCriminal No. 768.
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 15 P.2d 255 (Rutledge v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Arizona Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rutledge v. State, 15 P.2d 255, 41 Ariz. 48, 1932 Ariz. LEXIS 147 (Ark. 1932).

Opinion

LOCKWOOD, J.

Jennie Rutledge, hereinafter called defendant, was informed against for the crime of murder. She was duly tried before a jury, which found her guilty of manslaughter, and she was sentenced to serve from seven to ten years in the state penitentiary. From the verdict and judgment thereon she has appealed.

There are some five assignments of error which we will consider in the light of the legal questions raised thereby.

The first is in effect whether or not the evidence sustains the verdict. In considering this question, we must necessarily state briefly the facts. The evidence, taken in the strongest light in favor of the state, as under our oft-repeated rule we must take it in an appeal of this nature, shows the following facts: Defendant resided in Phoenix, Arizona, together with her son and daughter-in-law and her mother, Alice Pyle, a woman about 85 years old. On the night of April 17th, 1931, defendant was observed by several witnesses cursing and beating her mother and threatening to kill her. The matter was reported to the sheriff’s office, and early on the mom *50 ing of the 18th an investigator from the office went to the Rutledge house, where he found Mrs. Pyle lying on a bed, alone in the house and unconscious. She was immediately taken to St. Joseph’s Hospital and there examined by two physicians. Her body appeared almost completely covered with bruises, new and old, and many scratches, and she showed some signs of a concussion of the brain. She died on April 19th without having recovered consciousness. It is urged by defendant that the evidence fails to show the beating which the witnesses testified she gave her mother was the cause of the death, but that she died of pneumonia. The testimony of Dr. Maul-din, the county physician, as to the cause of death was as follows:

“Q. Doctor, from your examinations there what would you say caused the condition that you found there on the head and body of Alice Pyle? A. Well, the only thing I could say, that it was caused by some external violence, just what that was I am unable to say.
“Q. Now Doctor, from the examination that you conducted there in company with Dr. Craig, as you say, and from the disclosures that that examination afforded you, what would you say was the cause of the death of Mrs. Pyle? A. The condition that we found, I am of the opinion that her death was immediately caused by the accumulation of fluid in the bronchial tubes, that shut off her breathing, and that was the immediate cause of death. I would say that the contributory, or the cause of this condition, was from the woman being very old and delicate, that the violent blows, if it was blows, that caused the mild concussion of the brain and the various injuries that she had to her body, brought about a condition of shock, and in this condition of shock, a woman with a very weakened circulation caused from that, would soon begin what we call hypostatic pneumonia, which is what we found in the lungs, I think was caused from that.
*51 “Q. From your examination and your investigation of the abrasions and bruises that you saw on the head, face and body of this old lady, what is your opinion as to how those were caused? A. The only answer I can give to that is that it was caused by some external force or violence; those long lacerations in the skin would indicate that something had been brought in contact with the skin with a violent force, in a dragging force, as though it started and was brought down in a dragging condition, and the bruise on the head and under the left eye was caused by some different external force or violence that came in contact, as a blow or something of that description.”

Dr. Craig, the resident physician at St. Joseph’s Hospital, who also examined her, testified as follows:

“Q. Doctor, basing your answer on the disclosures made to you there by virtue of your examination of Alice Pyle, what would you say caused her death? A. Will you repeat the question? (The question was read by the reporter.) A. Her death was caused primarily, the primary cause of death was bilateral bronchial pneumonia, senility, concussion of the brain.
“Q. And having in mind those conditions which directly resulted in her death, what in your opinion caused those conditions? A. In the first place her age was against her, being in bed, which would predispose to her catching pneumonia, and the concussion would lower any resistance she might have towards catching pneumonia.
“Q. Now calling your attention to the various conditions on her head and face and body that you have described to the jury, what in your opinion caused those conditions? A. Some external violence. It would be hard to say whether anything — just exactly what did cause it.”

It is the general rule that in a homicide case, if deceased was in feeble health and died from the combined effects of the injury and his disease, or if the injury accelerated the death from the disease, he who *52 inflicted the injury is liable, although the injury alone would not have been fatal. The same rule applies, although the disease itself would probably have been fatal, if the injury accelerated death. We think the Supreme Court of Iowa in State v. Smith, 73 Iowa 32, 34 N. W. 597, correctly states the law as follows:

“It surely ought not to be the law that because a person is afflicted with a mortal malady, from which he must soon die, whether his ailment be caused by natural or artificial causes, another may be excused for acts of violence which hasten or contribute to or cause death sooner than it would otherwise occur. Life at best is but of short duration, and one who causes death oug’ht not to be excused for his act because his victim was soon to die from other causes, whatever they may be.”

See, also, State v. O’Brien, 81 Iowa 88, 46 N. W. 752; Hollywood v. State, 19 Wyo. 493, 120 Pac. 471, 122 Pac. 588, Ann. Cas. 1913E 218; People v. Moan, 65 Cal. 532, 4 Pac. 545; Gardner v. State, 44 Tex. Cr. R. 572, 73 S. W. 13; Regina v. Plummer, 1 C. & K. 600, 47 E. C. L. 600.

We are of the opinion that the foregoing medical testimony was sufficient to justify the jury in finding that the death of Mrs. Pyle, if not immediately caused by the beating inflicted upon her by her daughter, was at least accelerated thereby.

The next question is as to the admission in evidence of a certain plat of the Eutledge premises and the vicinity. It is alleged that the witness who prepared the plat testified that it was not drawn correctly to present the object it purported to represent. It appears from the reporter’s transcript that the plat in question was first used by the witness for. the purpose of explaining and illustrating his testimony, and that he stated that it was a rough sketch not drawn to scale, but that the distances indicated thereon were correct. The court then admitted the *53 sketch, in evidence.

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Bluebook (online)
15 P.2d 255, 41 Ariz. 48, 1932 Ariz. LEXIS 147, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rutledge-v-state-ariz-1932.