State v. Comstock

70 S.E.2d 648, 137 W. Va. 152, 1952 W. Va. LEXIS 33
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedMay 20, 1952
Docket10453
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 70 S.E.2d 648 (State v. Comstock) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Comstock, 70 S.E.2d 648, 137 W. Va. 152, 1952 W. Va. LEXIS 33 (W. Va. 1952).

Opinion

Riley, President:

In this criminal prosecution of State of West Virginia against Virginia Comstock, the defendant was indicted, tried and convicted in the Court of Common Pleas of Cabell County of involuntary manslaughter, in that, the indictment charges that she “unlawfully did kill and slay Pauline Cook, against the peace and dignity of the State”, and was sentenced to be confined in the Cabell County jail for a term of six months. Upon application for writ of error to the judgment of the Court of Common Pleas of Cabell County, addressed to the Circuit Court of Cabell County, the writ of error was refused. The instant writ of error was granted to the order of the circuit court, refusing the writ of error to the judgment of the court of common pleas.

About the middle of June, 1950, Pauline Cook (hereinafter for purposes of convenience referred to as “Pauline” or “decedent”), a mental defective committed to the Bar-boursville State Hospital, on learning for the first time that she had a brother and sister in law living in the Village of Barboursville, who planned to secure her release on> parole, became extremely upset and psychotic. On Thursday, June 15, 1950, she was given a dose of pheno-barbitol, and on Friday, the sixteenth, another dose of *155 phenobarbitol in tablet form was attempted, but she spit it out. On Sunday, June eighteenth, she appeared “dopey” to her relatives. On that occasion she appeared to be very emotional and knelt down before the defendant, Virginia Comstock, a trained nurse and the then superintendent of the Barboursville State Hospital, and said that she “was sorry for what she done”; but, when her relatives started to leave, the young woman ran out the door, and told Mrs. Comstock “she would be sorry for the way” she had done her. This was the last time Pauline’s brother and sister in law saw her alive.

. On Sunday evening, June eighteenth, the defendant directed Mrs. Mary Arbuckle, a practical nurse employed at the Barboursville State Hospital, to give Pauline a dose of paraldehyde, which dose, according to Mrs. Arbuckle’s testimony, consisted of approximately three dessert spoons of paraldehyde diluted with water. This dose was administered to Pauline about six o’clock on that evening, but within a few minutes it was vomited, and it apparently had no other effect on Pauline. That night Pauline was highly nervous and was violent for a time. She jumped out of bed, threw herself on the floor, and ran to the other patients in the ward and shook them. Her condition was such that an attendant had to remain with her through the night. On the following morning she was still highly psychotic, running through the ward and halls shouting and throwing herself to the floor. Her throat was full of strings of mucous and phlegm, which she pulled out and spit from her mouth. About ten o’clock that morning Mrs. Arbuckle reported Pauline’s mental condition to the defendant, who directed that she be given “a dose of paral-dehyde”. This dose was given about ten-thirty in the morning, some force being required to administer it, and it took effect almost immediately.

One Virgie Lewis, a former employee of the Barbours-ville State Hospital, who was present on the morning of June nineteenth, at the time the dose of paraldehyde was given, testified, without substantiation, that large purple splotches appeared on Pauline’s face; but Mrs. Arbuckle *156 testified that she did not see such splotches appear on Pauline’s face and that she would have seen them if there had been any.

There is evidence to the effect that, after the second dose of paraldehyde had been given on Monday morning, Pauline’s lips became very red and she was flushed and warm. Mrs. Arbuckle, at the suggestion of one of the attendants, summoned the defendant to examine Pauline, and the defendant ordered Pauline moved to a window and had an ice pack placed on her head. The patient was later given some coffee. The defendant then called Dr. Edwin Reaser, Superintendent of the Huntington State Hospital and the medical consultant for Barboursville State Hospital, who advised her to send Pauline to the Huntington State Hospital in an ambulance, which was done a short time later.

• On admission to the Huntington State Hospital about twelve-thirty o’clock in the afternoon of June nineteenth, Pauline was found to have a temperature of 102.8° and lobar pneumonia of the lower right lung. Her lips were very red and parched and crusted with what appeared to be fever blisters, the inside of her mouth was white, and her mouth and throat were full of mucous. As the result of her treatment at the Huntington State Hospital, the pneumonia seemed to clear up, and her lips, while still crusted, had healed to some extent. At the Huntington State Hospital she was given penicillin, duracillin, and other prescribed treatment and medications; but on June twenty-fourth in the evening her temperature rose sharply and she died shortly before midnight of that day.

The doctors and pathologists who examined Pauline agreed that she died of pneumonia of the lower right lung; and that had she died from an overdose of paraldehyde, she would have been blue and cynotic with labored breathing, and she would have died within a few hours after the administration of the alleged overdose of paraldehyde. After the paraldehyde had been given to her on Monday, June nineteenth, Pauline though flushed, became relaxed, *157 without labored breathing, and lived five days thereafter without developing any of the symptoms of an overdose of paraldehyde.

A statement by Dr. Van De Wetering, the physician who attended decedent on her entry into the Huntington State Hospital, discloses that his examination showed that decedent was suffering from bronchopneumonia within two hours after she was given the allegedly fatal dose of paraldehyde on Monday morning, June nineteenth. However, Dr. Hodges and Dr. Henry D. Hatfield testified that bronchopneumonia would require a development of twelve to twenty-four hours before it could be detected by an external medical examination.

Of the two doses of paraldehyde administered by Mrs. Arbuckle, the first had no effect on the patient because decedent almost immediately after its administration vomited the dose. The defendant gave no orders as to the amount of paraldehyde or as to dilution, but merely on each occasion directed that decedent be given “a dose of paraldehyde”. This record discloses, without substantial contradiction, that while the defendant was superintendent at the hospital, it was customary to give three dessert spoons diluted with water, in accordance with directions given by Dr. Reaser, who was deceased at the time of the trial. Mrs. Arbuckle testified for the State, and her testimony is without contradiction, that the dose given on Sunday evening, June eighteenth, was prepared by her in the ward in a tablespoon, which was used as the measuring device; that she placed three tablespoons, not full, of paraldehyde in a paper cup, so that, as far as this record discloses, the dose did not amount to more than three dessert spoonsful diluted with water. Neither the attendants who were present at the time the Sunday dose was given, nor State’s witnesses, Ruth Agnes Gibson and Virgie Lewis, knew how much paraldehyde was given to decedent on Sunday night, June eighteenth, or whether it was diluted. Mrs.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
70 S.E.2d 648, 137 W. Va. 152, 1952 W. Va. LEXIS 33, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-comstock-wva-1952.