State v. Hepperman

162 S.W.2d 878, 349 Mo. 681, 1942 Mo. LEXIS 525
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJune 17, 1942
StatusPublished
Cited by82 cases

This text of 162 S.W.2d 878 (State v. Hepperman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Hepperman, 162 S.W.2d 878, 349 Mo. 681, 1942 Mo. LEXIS 525 (Mo. 1942).

Opinions

Emma Lee Snyder Hepperman was convicted of poisoning her husband and sentenced to life imprisonment.

The State's evidence was that on March 3, 1940, Anthony (Tony) Hepperman was a widowed farmer, fifty-one years of age, living about two and one-half miles from Wentzville in St. Charles County. His family consisted of a daughter, Ethel, eleven years of age, and a son, Herbert, twenty-three, who left home shortly after his marriage to Emma. A daughter, Isabel Eagan, lived on a farm a short distance away. Except for a sore toe resulting from frost bite many years before Tony Hepperman was in good health and spirits, interested in operating his ninety-one-acre farm which was valued at approximately $6,000.00.

On Sunday, March 3, 1940, Tony showed his son Herbert the following item from the "Situations Wanted" column of the St.Louis Globe-Democrat: "Woman housekeeper for a motherless home. Neat. Pleasant. Age forty-six. Emma Lee, 1419 South Vandeventer." The son says that on the following Monday morning his father wrote a letter (the inference being that it was in answer to the advertisement) and mailed it in the mail box. The following Wednesday the defendant appeared at the farm and asked for Mr. Hepperman. The daughter, Isabel, was at the farm on March 13th and her father introduced the defendant as Mrs. Snyder. Isabel asked *Page 688 her whether she was the lady dad answered the advertisement for and she replied she was and explained she had inserted her name as "Emma Lee" so everyone would not know she was advertising for a position as a housekeeper.

Later Emma told Isabel she was going to keep house for her father for two more weeks and if he did not marry her in that time she was going to leave. On April 6 Tony, Emma, Ethel, Isabel and her husband attended the funeral of a former friend and each of them testified that the defendant in talking to the father about the funeral said: "If you can go out and put your shoe on to go to a funeral as a pallbearer you can also put on your shoe to go and get married." The defendant and Tony were married April 13, 1940. All of his children and his neighbor brother, [881] Steve, were very much opposed to the wedding.

Ethel became ill in April, her throat hurt, her back and stomach ached, she was nauseated and vomited continuously. She said Emma told her if she would stop vomiting she would be all right. Emma took her to a doctor and told him she ate too many sweets and that she had eaten some bologna and had ptomaine. Emma said her swollen jaws were due to the mumps. The doctor thought she had an ulcerated stomach. She went to her sister Isabel's for six days and when she got back home her father was very sick. Ethel finally got so she couldn't walk straight and was placed in a hospital at St. Charles, where her condition was diagnosed as being due to arsenical poisoning.

By May 18th Tony's physical condition was critical and on May 27th he was admitted to St. Mary's Hospital where he died on May 28, 1940. Without enumerating the symptoms the doctors described a typical arsenical poisoning case. Before he died his stomach was lavaged and the contents, as well as a urine specimen, were preserved and examined. An autopsy was performed and segments of various organs were retained and examined by Mr. Koch of the Highway Patrol. The autopsy corroborated the previous diagnosis of poisoning by arsenic. An analysis of the organs revealed arsenic in the kidney, the liver, brain, intestines, spleen and skin. The total quantity of arsenic found in the parts examined was .5677 grains and it was estimated that Tony had been administered as much as 15 grains — 3 to 4 grains being a lethal dose normally.

Specimens of Ethel's hair and nails revealed arsenic.

Two employees of the Wentzville Mercantile Company testified that on April 13, 1940, the defendant purchased a package of Seibert's Fly Paper and about May 9 returned and purchased three more packages. The fly paper was in the wareroom at the time as it was early for flies. Emma stated she wanted it for water bugs. Once she asked for arsenate of lead but the store did not have it and she purchased a package of London purple. Seibert's manufacturing chemist testified *Page 689 that each sheet of fly paper contained 2 to 4 per cent or eight-tenths of a grain of metallic arsenic and that it was soluble in water. The London purple was 26 per cent metallic arsenic.

Ethel saw the London purple and reported the comments on it as follows: "She said it was poison, and I asked her what it was for, for the potato bugs, or flies or what and she said, `Well, it is for potato bugs. Do you think I would use it on you?'"

After the defendant came to the Hepperman home she did all the cooking. She also made beer (home brew) which Ethel described as being bitter and as tasting differently from the beer her sister made. Once she employed a neighbor to do the laundry and this lady said the defendant told her she could have some beer but to get it from under the steps as the beer in the back of the basement belonged to Tony's daughter. She also said to this woman, "Yes, Hep's got a thousand dollars and I am going to get it."

F.D. Hagen, a Sergeant in the Missouri State Highway Patrol, testified that on May 22, the Heppermans came to his home and Emma reported a robbery of $43.70 in cash and her watch. She stated she saw a man around the house and identified a neighbor as the prowler. She told Patrolman Barr about the robbery and said Steve Hepperman had accused her of doing something and she wanted to sell the farm and take Tony away with her. She told Steve they had been robbed and indicated the woman who did the washing as being guilty and said they were going to sell the place and leave. Subsequently she admitted the robbery was a fake.

Steve Hepperman testified that on May 24, when he was at Tony's and saw his condition he was insisting on taking him to a doctor and the defendant was of the opinion it wouldn't do any good. During the course of the discussion Tony told Steve he had been poisoned.

Ethel had inherited $1,000.00 from her grandfather, which had been invested in a postal savings bond. The day after Ethel went to her sister's the defendant and her father came to get her to endorse her name on the bond so it could be cashed. They did not have any ink and Emma suggested that she write her name in pencil on a piece of paper and she (Emma) would trace the signature off on the bond and write over it with ink when she got home.

On May 25 the defendant took Tony to Dr. Keller, a dentist in Wentzville, and asked the dentist to remove his teeth. The dentist extracted eight teeth and stated that Tony was so weak and his physical [882] condition so bad he refused to remove more of them, although she was insisting that he take all of them out at that time.

The defendant did not testify. Eight witnesses testified in her behalf. Two doctors testified that Tony declined their services and protested going to the hospital. The attorney for Herbert Hepperman as the administrator of his father's estate testified that Emma *Page 690 had waived her right to administer on the estate. A drug clerk testified he sold Tony some milk emulsions for calves and colts three years prior to the trial. Another lawyer stated that Steve talked to him the day before Tony died and that Steve was afraid Emma was going to get him to St. Louis and persuade him to transfer his property and Steve wanted to prevent it. Another doctor testified that 2 to 2½ grains of arsenic was a lethal dose and that 8 to 10 grains was an absolute maximum and a man could not take 15 grains of arsenic and live forty-eight hours.

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Bluebook (online)
162 S.W.2d 878, 349 Mo. 681, 1942 Mo. LEXIS 525, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-hepperman-mo-1942.