State v. Elftman

226 P. 795, 116 Kan. 214, 1924 Kan. LEXIS 51
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedJune 7, 1924
DocketNo. 24,171
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 226 P. 795 (State v. Elftman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Elftman, 226 P. 795, 116 Kan. 214, 1924 Kan. LEXIS 51 (kan 1924).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Burch, J.:

Defendant was convicted of murder of his wife, and appeals.

About 11:30 o’clock on the night of bfovember 3, 1920, the dead body of. Mrs. Elftman was found by the stone steps at the east door of the kitchen of the Elftman home. The back of her head had been crushed, there were two wounds on the left side of the head, a bruise on the nose, a bruise on the left arm, and there was much blood about the place .where her head was lying. The family consisted of husband and wife, three sons, and a daughter. Durward was eighteen years old, Ruth and Russell, who were twins, were [216]*216fifteen, and Glenn'was about seven. The body was discovered by Ruth after she and Durward had returned from attending a picture show at Bonner Springs. When the body was, found, her father, Russell and Glenn were in bed.

The house is a farmhouse, on the south side of the Golden Belt highway, about three and a half miles west of Bonner Springs. Across the highway is the Elmer home. East of the Elftman farm is the Johnson farm. Across the road from the northeast corner of the Johnson farm is the Elmgrove school. Defendant purchased the farm of 160 acres, and moved into the house about December 12, 1919.. Before that he and his family had lived in Bourbon county, and before that in Missouri, whither they had gone from Kansas.

The main room of the house, called the dining room, had a front door in the north and a window in the south. West of the dining room were two bedrooms. In the southwest bedroom were two beds, one used by defendant and the other by Durward and Russell. In this room were a clothes closet and a dresser. In the northwest room was a bed. On the west side of the dining room, between the doors entering the bedrooms, was a staircase leading to three rooms above. Mrs. Elftman, Ruth and Glenn slept in the southwest room .upstairs. In the dining room were a heating stove, a table, which on the night of the tragedy was against the stairway casing, and a- couch.

The kitchen was east of the dining room, and the outside kitchen door, on the east side of the room, turned toward the south when opened. On the south side of the room was a window, near which stood a woodbox. North of the door was a water table. In the room was a range with a water reservoir.

The stone steps at the kitchen door consisted first of a sandstone presenting a surface sixteen or eighteen inches square, ten inches below the doorsill. It rested on a stone two and one-half or three feet square, lying on the surface of the ground. Abutting the lower stone was a large fiat stone embedded; or partially embedded, in the ground, from which, a stone walk led away from the house. Stepped on in a certain way, the top stone would tilt a little. It was regarded by the family as stable, had never caused inconvenience and defendant repudiated the idea it was dangerous. Two or three- persons who were not accustomed to it had been surprised by its tilting when they stepped on it.

■ When the body was discovered it was lying on its back, the head [217]*217on the south edge of the large flat stone and close to the steps, the feet straight toward the north, the right arm extended toward the east, and the left hand on the heart. Stockings were on the feet, ■but no shoes, and the skirts were rolled up so the lower part of the lower limbs was exposed.

On the day of the fatal occurrence defendant hauled two loads of coal from Bonner Springs to the schoolhouse, one in the fore,noon and one in the afternoon. He was late to supper in the evening. Durward and Ruth, desiring to go to the picture show, had not waited for supper, and as they were on their way to catch an interurban car to Bonner Springs they met their father going home. Water for cooking and drinking purposes was obtained at Elmer’s house. After eating supper with Mrs. Elftman, Russell and Glenn, defendant brought two buckets of water and filled the range reservoir. Returning for more water, he took with him some apples. The school board, composed of Elmer, Grimes and Clamm, were holding a meeting at Elmer’s house. Defendant presented , the apples, talked with the school board, received pay for hauling the coal, and returned home with two buckets of water, which he placed on the water table. Glenn had been put to bed, and Mrs. Elftman and Russell were reading by the lamp on the table in the dining room. Defendant read a paper for a little while, and, being tired, said good-night and went to bed. Soon afterward, and about nine o’clock, Russell went to bed.

When Durward and Ruth reached home, between 11 and 11:30 o’clock, they entered the house by the dining-room door. The lamp on the table wás burning. Ruth passed on into the kitchen for a drink of water. She observed the kitchen door and screen door were both wide open. She closed them, and in doing so caught a glimpse of something on the steps, but gave it no attention. She returned to the dining room and passed into the southwest bedroom, where her clothes were kept, changed her dress, and came into the dining room, where Durward was sitting by the table, reading. She then went upstairs to go to bed. The lamp in her mother’s room was burning. Glenn was asleep, but her mother was not there, and her side of the bed had not been disturbed. Ruth returned to the dining room and told Durward their mother was not upstairs. They looked for her, called for her, and Ruth went into the kitchen and opened the outside door. The object she had seen arrested her attention, and, lighting a match, she saw [218]*218what it was. She called to Durward, who went to the kitchen door and saw his mother lying at the foot of the stone steps. Durward and Ruth then went to the bedroom door, called Russell and their father, and they all ran back to the kitchen door, Ruth carrying the dining-room lamp. Durward and his father went outside, examined the body, and brought it inside. Russell was sent to call the Elmers. The Elmers came within a few minutes, and Mrs. Elmer telephoned for Doctor Beasley at Bonner Springs. He was delayed by an accident to his car, and was brought to the house by Elmer, arriving about one o’clock. Doctor Beasley examined the body and pronounced the woman dead. He examined the kitchen steps, and notified the undertaker at Bonner Springs, who removed the body to his undertaking rooms before daybreak. The next morning Doctor Beasley and Doctor Candler held an autopsy at the undertaking rooms. Later- in the day a coroner’s jury was impaneled, which examined the body and the Elftman house and premises. In the afternoon defendant was arrested.

It was impossible that the wounds should have been self-inflicted, and there were just two theories respecting cause of death — accident and felonious homicide. While the Golden Belt road is a much-traveled thoroughfare westward from Kansas City, and two men supposed to be tramps were seen that evening at the south side of the farm a half mile from the house, there was no foundation for rational belief that the killing was done by a stranger, and the theories reduced to accident, or murder by defendant.

While living in Bourbon county Mrs. Elftman had pneumonia following measles, and afterwards complained of pleurisy pains in the region of her heart. Her heart was somewhat affected and she was left in a weak and nervous condition. She was treated by Doctor Sheeler, who referred to her as a frail and delicate woman. He recommended use of a hot-water bottle to counter-irritate the skin and so relieve pain.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
226 P. 795, 116 Kan. 214, 1924 Kan. LEXIS 51, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-elftman-kan-1924.