State v. Healy

105 Iowa 162
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedApril 8, 1898
StatusPublished

This text of 105 Iowa 162 (State v. Healy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Healy, 105 Iowa 162 (iowa 1898).

Opinion

Ladd, J.

1 — On Friday morning, April 14, 1893, at about 2 o’clock a. m. Theodore Frith and Henry Tal-cott, special policemen of the Chicago-, Milwaukee & St. Paul Railroad Company, were shot and killed in its yards at Dubuque. When found, Talcott was lying -dead on the platform at th-e north end of the passenger coach No. 117, and the .bullet, which had passed into his eye and through the brain, was found in the car. Frith was shot in the mouth, and was about two hundred feet from this coach. He was unable to talk, and made himself understood by signs only. He motioned to the passenger coach, pointed to the body of Talcott, and indicated by signs that both had been shot by two men within, and that these men had gone out of the south end towards the street. Immediately .after doing-this he expired. The bullet entering him was broken in two pieces, and undoubtedly caused his death. A ball also passed along his back without serious injury. Three shots were heard. William Luther saw two men, immediately after the shooting, run around the corner of a stock car near by and over a cinder dump. The headlights of two engines, about three hundred feet away, were turned somewhat in that direction. He was eight and one-half feet from the men when passing, but able to identify Robbard, who stopped and looked at him, as -one of them, and describes the other as of size and dress similar to that of Healey. The window in the south end of the car was broken out, and this was heard done by one of the witnesses immediately after the shooting, and'there were blood stains on the door post, and also on the steps of the platform. The door rvas fastened and Cushions piled against it as though made for a bed. Near the other end of the car the seats had been turned and the cushions laid lengthwise. These cushions were bloody, and the bull’s eye of [165]*165a lantern and a chisel were lying near by. The half of a cigar was also found. A fire had been built in the stove, and the kindlings were not all consumed. The tracks of two men were traced from the south end of the passenger coach around the corner of the stock car, where seen by Luther, and over the cinder dump. The bullets were 38 caliber, and a 38-caliber revolver was found the next day in a pile of flues near the boiler house, not far from the coach referred to. This revolver was of blue steel and bloody. The bullets therein were battered at the ends. The accused were at Shea’s Hotel ■Wednesday night, and Humble, the clerk, took from Eobbard three revolvers. One of these was of blue steel and in removing the bullet® therefrom Humble battered the ends. When he returned them, with the bullets replaced, on the following morning, Eobbard kept a 38-calibre, and turned this one over to Healey, wlm had already claimed it as his own property. In that found the bullets were also battered, and Humble identifies it as that of Healey as positively as such articles may be. Between ten and eleven o’clock Thursday night these three men are proven to have held up Jones, a call boy-in the employ of the Illinois Central Eailroad Company, David McDonald, and Henry Geiger, and of attempting to hold up M. S. Hardie. In these transactions Healey drew his revolver and compelled his victims to hold up their hands, while the others went through their pockets. The occurrences were promptly reported to the police and search immediately begun. Frith and Talcott were notified of the facts, given a description of the men and asked to keep watch for them, by the marshal. They immediately began searching the yards of the Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul Eailroad Company. Two strangers were seen going towards coach No. 117 about five minutes before Frith and Talcott went in that direction and only a few minute® before the [166]*166shooting. Three were seen in that vicinity, the one separated from the others. Eobbard and Healey were seen together’ .at Peosta, about eight miles from Dubuque, early on the morning, and at Epworth about noon, of the day after the shooting. The marshal at Epworth pursued them, and they refused to obey his orders to surrender, .although fired upon. They are shown to have been together at different times and places until finally arrested, on Sunday, near Greeley, by the city marshal of that place. The defendant Healey was told by Baxter, a detective, for the first time on Monday, that the two answered the descriptions of the persons who had hilled the policemen at Dubuque, and for this reason they were arrested. Healy instantly inquired with anxiety whether both were dead, wanted the description, and then refused to talk further, for fear of criminating himself. He mentioned, however, that he had been at Shea’s Hotel on Wednesday night, and of having trouble there, in which his revolver was taken from him while asleep, and also said he had sold it in Dubuque Friday morning for one dollar and twenty-five cents, though he was unable to say where or to whom. The accused had been in Dubuque since Monday before the killing without any known business, and guarded against making acquaintances. These are substantially the facts upon which conviction was had. The defendant did not speak in his own behalf. When the evidence had been introduced, by motion, and also an instruction, the court was asked to direct the acquittal of the defendant because of the alleged insufficiency of the evidence. The facts shown, unexplained, might well lead to the conclusion that Healey was associated with Eobbard in the commission of the crime. There was no- question but that he was with him until eleven o’clock that evening, had been engaged with him in the pona mission of the crimes of robbery, and had the same [167]*167motive for concealing Ms whereabouts and in resisting arrest when pursued. Luther, though not identifying him, correctly describes him when passing the car with Robbard. The finding of the bloody revolver near the scene, with the battered bullets corresponding with Healey’s is a remarkable coincidence, even though there is no positive identification. The evidence shows that these men were together fleeing from Dubuque from early Friday morning till arrested. The anxious inquiry of Healey whether both were dead, indicated personal knowledge of the transaction on his part, for had he learned elsewhere, the death' of both would have been known. The evidence was such that the jury might conclude that the defendant either killed or aided and abetted Robbard in the murder of not onty Frith, but Talcott as well.

2 II. We have only the record of the conviction and the bill of exceptions before us and are unaided by argument. A careful examination of the record, however, convinces us the defendant’s rights were fully guarded. The attorney appointed by the court to defend Healey presented all proper objections and carefully protected the record. M. F. Kelly when on the stand was asked this question: “At the time that Frith asked you if you had seen any parties, what, if anything further did lie say as to who the parties were or what he wanted with them?” And over the objection of the defendant answered: “Why, he told me that he was looking for some parties that were holding-up people around there, and he stated that they were holding up people around the city, and that he said that he thought they couldn’t be far away, and he said he understood they were in the yard, and he said they couldn’t be far away.” This occurred about ten minutes before the shooting. Similar questions were asked Smith [168]*168and Williams, and like answers permitted.

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105 Iowa 162, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-healy-iowa-1898.