State v. Gummer

200 N.W. 20, 51 N.D. 445, 1924 N.D. LEXIS 187
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 16, 1924
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 200 N.W. 20 (State v. Gummer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Dakota 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. Gummer, 200 N.W. 20, 51 N.D. 445, 1924 N.D. LEXIS 187 (N.D. 1924).

Opinions

*453 Statement of facts.

Pjbr Curiam.

The defendant was convicted of murder in the first degree. He has appealed from the judgment of conviction and an order denying a new trial. The record is voluminous. The facts necessary to be stated are as follows: In June, 1921, Marie Wick was a strong, healthy, good-looking, unmarried, and virtuous girl of eighteen years, living at Grygla, Minn., a small inland town about 100 miles north of Fargo, N. L>.; she was steady and industrious; she possessed an ordinary education, supplemented by a business course had in a college at Warren, a :mall town not far distant from Grygla, Minn. She had never been in any town larger than Warren, Minn. Her parents were farmers living near Grygla. For some eight months prior to-June 4th, 1921, she had been working for a co-operative company at Grygla. She desired and intended to visit her aunt at Pettibone, N. 1).. another small town some 150 miles west of Farso. on a branch of *454 ‘tlie Northern Pacific Railway. Thus, for her visit, she with her father went from Grygla to Thief River Falls on June 5th, 1921. She had ■•then $20.00 in currency and a cashier’s check for $20.00. The next morning she proceeded alone on the train (Soo Line) to Warren; thence, she proceeded, again alone, on another train (G. N. Ry.) to Orookston; thence, on a train (G. N. Ry.) from Orookston to Fargo, ■riding with some women and children whom she had met at Orookston. ■She neither talked nor paid any attention to other passengers on this train. Previously, she had written to one Rasmussen, a boy whom she had known since her childhood clays at home, requesting him to meet her at Fargo, because never had she been in a town as large as Fargo. At Moorhead, a town across the river from Fargo, Rasmussen met her and rode with her on the train to Fargo. Together they walked from the G. N. depot in Fargo to the N. P. depot to ascertain when the M P. train left the next morning for the trip to Pettibone. The parties with whom she rode on the train to Fargo, talked about going to the Prescott Hotel in Fargo. In fact, they did stop at this hotel. 'Mrs. Lawrence was the proprietress of this hotel. So, from the N. P. ■■depot, they wont to the Prescott Hotel. There they arrived about 10:15 or 10:20 i>. m. There she was registered by the landlady, Mrs. Lawrence, assigned room 30, given a key to the room, and dated on the call sheet for a call at 6:30 a. m. Defendant Gummer was the night clerk at this hotel. He had shown to their rooms the parties with whom Miss Wick had ridden on the train from Orookston to Fargo. As he came downstairs, the landlady requested him to conduct Miss Wick to her room. This he did. She remained in her room for a few minutes, came downstairs, left her key at the desk, and, with Rasmussen, went to an ice cream parlor. In a short time she returned. Rasmussen-left her and went to Moorhead. She procured her key at the.desk, requested the landlady to change her call to 6 a. m. and proceeded to her room for the second time at about 11 i\ m. Mrs. Lawrence and her •son Fred retired about 11:40 p. m. All of the guests at the .hotel had retired at or about midnight with the exceptions hereinafter noted. One Hagen arrived in Fargo on the N. P. train, No. 4, due there at 12:55 a. ai. He went to another hotel, found it filled, then came to the Prescott; defendant, assigned to him room 31, adjoining the room of Miss Wick. One Smith and wife came to this hotel after Hagen and *455 "before 2 a. m.' One McKenzie registered as a guest about 3 a. m. One Van Yorst, a guest, left at 11 n. m. and did not return until about 5 a. m. Another guest Myers, left the hotel about 11:30 p. m. and returned about 2 a. m. Pursuant to defendant’s statements, a man, having the appearance of a laboring man, came to the hotel about 2 a. m., registered as James Farrell and was assigned room 40. About- midnight Andy Brown, defendant’s room mate, called at the hotel and visited with defendant. Pursuant to defendant’s testimony, at 6 a. m. he called her room by phone; no response was given; again he called two or three times; then he rapped on the door; then he swept out the office; then he called on the phone again; then he got the keys, unlocked the door, walked in a few steps, hacked out, went down into the lobby) stayed there a few minutes and then called Fred Lawrence, the son of the landlady. This was about 6 :45 a. m. Lawrence went to the room; the door was locked; he looked over the transom; he directed a maid to open the door; a call was sent for the police and a doctor. The first officer to arrive was a police officer in Fargo. At the hotel he found Lawrence and defendant standing behind the desk. Defendant stated to the officer that a girl in room 30 was covered with 'blood and he thought it was suicide. Defendant then took the officer to room -30 and unlocked the door with a key having a brass slab attached to it. There they found Marie Wick in the room on the bed, stretched out, tied, gagged and hound, raped and murdered. Her arms were tied to the bed post above ber bead; pillow slips had been removed from the pillows; sbe had been gagged by inserting the major portion of a pillow slip in her mouth, slipping the balance over her face and bandaging it. In tying tbe girl, strips of a sheet had been used, torn from a sheet on the west side of the bed. The portion of the pillow slip in her mouth was not bloody; the portion outside, was soaked in blood. The bandages did not cover ber eyes; they were wide open. There were four distinct finger marks on tbe left side of her throat and one on the right side, black and blue marks which had not broken the skin. Her head had been badly battered; at least four cuts appeared outside the hair line; and on top of the head, she had been struck seven or eight times by some heavy instrumentality; it required about 161 to 110 stitches to close these wounds; her skull had been fractured; her face showed signs of suffocation; the right am had been securely tied with *456 seven or eight- knots between the arm and the bed; the left' arm had not been so tightly tied; the right arm and bandages thereon were free from blood excepting a few smears; the left hand and wrist were entirely covered with blood; the bandages around the left hand wrist were free from blood; an examination of her genital organs revealed that the hymen was partially ruptured and the vagina full of blood; it was apparent that previous to that time she had been a virgin; otherwise, there were no marks or bruises on her below the throat excepting a slight abrasion on the right elbow. Between the bed and west Avail of the room there was a space of about 18 inches; there were smears of blood on the wall paper of this west AA'-all; certain finger prints appeared on this west wall but they could not be read excepting that throe fingerprints appeared to be similar to those of the girl’s left hand. There was an indentation in this west Avail and also in a round at the head of the bed (as if made by a heavy bludgeon). On.the carpet between this west wall and the bed there Avas a heavy deposit of blood; also, of white hair-like substance, AAdneh likeAvise appeared on the left hand and some of the bandages. .Tlie bed clothes Avere neatly pulled over her body; at the head of the bed, alongside the body, and underneath the bed clothes, toAvels Avere found; these toAvels showed traces of blood and verdigris, also mucous such as would come from the genitourinary tract.

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Bluebook (online)
200 N.W. 20, 51 N.D. 445, 1924 N.D. LEXIS 187, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-gummer-nd-1924.