Shepard v. United States

290 U.S. 96, 54 S. Ct. 22, 78 L. Ed. 196, 1933 U.S. LEXIS 449
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedNovember 6, 1933
Docket50
StatusPublished
Cited by474 cases

This text of 290 U.S. 96 (Shepard v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Shepard v. United States, 290 U.S. 96, 54 S. Ct. 22, 78 L. Ed. 196, 1933 U.S. LEXIS 449 (1933).

Opinion

*97 Mr. Justice Cardozo

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The petitioner, Charles A. Shepard, a major in the medical corps of the United States army, has been, convicted of the murder of his wife, Zenana Shepard, at Fort Riley, Kansas, a United States military reservation. The jury having qualified their verdict by adding thereto the words “without capital punishment” (18 U.S.C. §567), the defendant was sentenced to imprisonment for life. The judgment of the United States District Court has been affirmed by the Circuit Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit, One of the judges of that court dissenting. 62 F. (2d) 683; 64 F. (2d) 641, A writ of certiorari brings the case here.

The crime is charged to have been committed by poisoning the victim with bichloride of mercury. The defendant was in love with another woman, and wished to make her his wife. There is circumstantial evidence *98 to sustain a finding by the jury that to win himself his freedom he turned to poison and murder. Even so, guilt was contested and conflicting inferences are possible. The defendant asks us to hold that by the acceptance of incompetent evidence the scales were weighted to his prejudice and in the end to his undoing.

The evidence complained of was offered by the Government in rebuttal when the trial was nearly over. On May'2-2, 1929, there was a conversation in the absence of the defendant between Mrs. Shepard, then ill in bed, and Clara Brown, her nurse. The patient asked the nurse to go to the closet in the defendant’s room and bring a bottle of whisky that would be found upon a shelf. When the bottle was produced, she said that this was the liquor she had taken just before collapsing. She asked whether enough was left to make a test for the presence of poison, insisting that, the smell and taste were strange. And then she added the words “ Dr. Shepard has poisoned me.”

' The conversation was proved twice. After the first proof of it, the Government asked to strike it out, being doubtful of its competence, and this request was granted. A little later, however, the offer was renewed, the nurse having then testified to statements by Mrs. Shepard as to the prospect of recovery. “ She said she was not going to get well; she was going to die.” With the aid of this new evidence, the conversation already summarized was proved, a second time. There was a timely challenge of the ruling.

She said, “ Dr. Shepard has poisoned me.” The admission of this declaration, if erroneous, was more than unsubstantial error. As to that the parties are agreed. The voice of the dead wife was heard in accusation of her husband, and the accusation was accepted as evidence of guilt. If the evidence was incompetent, the verdict may not stand.

*99 1. Upon the hearing in this court the Government finds its main prop in the position that what was said by Mrs. Shepard was admissible as a dying declaration. This is manifestly the theory upon which it was offered and re-; ceived. The prop, however, is a broken reed. To make out a dying declaration the declarant must have, spoken without hope of recovery and in the shadow of impending death. The record furnishes no proof of that indispensable condition. So, indeed, it was ruled by all the judges of the court below, though the majority held the view that the testimony was competent for quite another purpose, which will be considered later on.

We havé said that the declarant was not shown to have spoken without hope of recovery and in the shadow of-impending death. Her illness began on May 20. She w^s found in a state of collapse, delirious, in pain, the pupils of her eyes dilated, and the retina suffused with blood. The conversation with the nurse occurred two days later. At that time her mind had cleared up, and her speech was rational and orderly: There was as yet no thought by any of her physicians that she was dangerously ill, still less that her case was hopeless. To all seeming she had greatly improved, and was moving forward to recovery. There had been no diagnosis of poison as the cause of her distress. Not till about a week afterwards was there a relapse, accompanied by an infection of the mouth, renewed' congestion of the eyes, and later hemorrhages. of the bowels. Death followed on June 15.

Nothing in the condition of the patient on May 22 gives fair support to the conclusion that hope had then been lost. She may have thought she was going to die and have said so to her nurse, but this was consistent' with hope, which could not have been put aside without more to quench it. Indeed, a fortnight later, she said to one of her physicians, though her condition was then grave, *100 “ You will get me well, won’t you? ” Fear or even belief that, illness will end in death will not avail of itself to make a dying declaration. There must be “ a settled hopeless expectation ” (Willes, J. in Reg. v. Peel, 2 F. & F. 21, 22) that death is near at hand, and what is said must have been spoken in the hush of its impending presence. Mattox v. United States, 146 U.S. 140, 151; Carver v. United States, 160 U.S. 553; 164 U.S. 694; Rex v. Perry, [1909] 2 KB. 697; People v. Sarzano, 212 N.Y. 231, 235; 106 N.E. 87; 3 Wigmore on Evidence, §§ 1440, 1441, 1442, collating the decisions. Despair of recovery may indeed be gathered from the circumstances if the facts support the inference. Carver v. United States, supra; Wigmore, Evidence, § 1442. There is no unyielding ritual of words to be spoken by the dying. Despair may even be gathered though the period of survival outruns the bounds of expectation. Wigmore, § 1441. What is decisive is the state of mind. Even so, the state of mind must be exhibited in the evidence, and not left to conjecture. The patient must have spoken with the consciousness of a swift and certain doom.

What was said by this patient was not spoken in that mood. There was no warning to her in the circumstances that her words would be repeated and accepted as those of a dying wife, charging murder to her husband, and charging it deliberately and solemnly as a fact within her knowledge. To the focus of that responsibility her mind was never brought. She spoke as one ill, giving voice to the-beliefs1 and perhaps the conjectures of the moment. The liquor was to be tested, to see whether her beliefs were sound. She did .not speak as one dying, announcing to the survivors ,a definitive conviction, a legacy of knowledge on which the world might act when she had gone.

The petitioner' insists that the form of ui. declaration exhibits other defects that call for its exclusion, apart from the objection that death was hot imminent and that *101 hope was still alive.

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Bluebook (online)
290 U.S. 96, 54 S. Ct. 22, 78 L. Ed. 196, 1933 U.S. LEXIS 449, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shepard-v-united-states-scotus-1933.