State v. King

147 So. 1, 176 La. 812, 1933 La. LEXIS 1608
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedFebruary 27, 1933
DocketNo. 32106.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 147 So. 1 (State v. King) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. King, 147 So. 1, 176 La. 812, 1933 La. LEXIS 1608 (La. 1933).

Opinion

*815 ODOM, Justice.

Defendant was indicted for murdering his wife, Mary King. On the trial he was convicted of manslaughter and sentenced to hard labor for not less than 12 nor more than 20 years. He appealed.

We find, in the record more than thirty bills of exception, some of which have been abandoned and others are not pressed for consideration. We find no merit in some of them which are stressed and shall not mention them. Others do present merit and disclose such manifest errors and prejudice to defendant that we find it necessary to set the conviction and sentence aside. The bills referred to are Nos. 3, 16, 21, 22, and 23. These are interrelated and we shall dispose of them all under one general heading.

A general résumé of the facts, surroundings, and vital issues involved is necessary in order to bring out the points stressed by counsel for the defendant and to show the errors which are fatal to the conviction.

Oscar King, the defendant, and Mary King, whom he is alleged to have murdered, were husband and wife. During the afternoon of June 19,1932, the two went to the lake shore at Lewisburg, where, as we understand, there is a bathing beach. Mary IJing was never seen alive again. On the following day, her body was found in the lake, having drifted against some piling. Pier hair was entangled in the piling and the action of the wind and waves caused her head to beat against them in such manner as could and may have caused bruises and lacerations of the skin on the face and head.

Admittedly the defendant was the last person to see his wife alive. They were at the lake, alone. He gave a statement to the effect that he and his wife had gone to the lake to bathe and both went into the water; that he later went ashore to get a cigarette; and that on his return, his wife was missing, but that he found her bathing cap near the place where he left her, whereupon he left the lake, went to his home some ten miles away to notify his children and the neighbors and to procure aid in the search for her body.

The district attorney in his opening statement informed the jury that he intended to prove that defendant had made the statement as indicated above, that the body had been found floating on the lake the following morning, that the body had on it at the time it was found certain severe bruises and contusions about the head and face, which wounds had been received by her before death; that deceased had not met death by drowning; that to show motive, he expected to prove that defendant’s married life with deceased had been unhappj due to his relations with another woman; and that “the foregoing proof would be sufficient to exclude any other theory than that defendant had killed his wife, either on the shore or in the water and left her body in the lake.”

His statement made it perfectly clear that he intended to rest his case upon circumstantial evidence alone. The defendant therefore offered no affirmative defense and threw the entire burden upon the state to show circumstances consistent with the hypothesis that the accused was guilty and at the same time inconsistent with the hypothesis that he was innocent.

*817 As already stated, there were bruises and lacerations about the face and head of the deceased. Admittedly these could have been inflicted after death, caused by coming in contact with the piling against which the body had been carried by wind and wave.

The state proposed to prove by medical experts that these wounds were inflicted before and not after death. Such proof would be consistent with the state’s theory that defendant had murdered his wife and then thrown her body into the water.

This question, then, whether the wounds were inflicted before or after death, became a vital issue in the state’s chain of circumstantial evidence, and as we see it, the most vital issue. The state itself raised that issue. The defense did not. The burden then was upon the state to make good its affirmative allegation or theory that these wounds were inflicted before death, because if inflicted after death, the strongest' link in its chain was broken.

The physicians who testified said that there is but one method by which it can be definitely determined whether wounds or lacerations found on the body of a dead person were inflicted before or after death and that is by taking specimens of tissues from the wounds, putting these on “slides,” and examining them microscopically. It was further stated that none but experts could do this and they must have the' benefit of a laboratory and microscopes. Medical men of ordinary training and skill cannot make these tests and cannot, even by the most careful and minute examination, determine this question.

An autopsy, was conducted by the coroner and another physician on the morning the body was found. They opened the skull and lungs and examined the tissues^ but not microscopically. Just what conclusion they reached on the vital issue involved, from this particular examination, we are not informed. We must assume, however, that the district attorney had the benefit of their conclusions, whatever they were.

Apparently he was not satisfied that he could produce satisfactory proof on the trial that the wounds on the body of deceased were inflicted before death, because sixteen days later the body was exhumed, at his request, for another autopsy. It is alleged by counsel for. the defense, and not denied by the district attorney, that he (the district attorney) requested that the second autopsy be conducted by Dr. Róeling, coroner of Orleans Parish, and his assistant, Dr. Ifauser, who is a pathologist.

These physicians went from New Orleans to Covington and'there conducted the autopsy. Dr. Hauser, the pathologist, removed specimens of tissue from the wounded parts of the body to be prepared on slides for a microscopic examination. They returned New Orleans, where the slides were made and the tissue microscopically examined. All this was done at the instance and on behalf of the state. These physicians, Dr. Roeling and Dr. Hauser, are experts and at their laboratory in New Orleans had all' the equipment necessary to enable them to make the only test by which it could be definitely determined whether the wounds were post or ante mortem. They made the test and knew. No one else did. All that these experts did was done at the instance of the state. They were *819 the state’s witnesses. What they knew was, the state’s evidence, and they were the only witnesses who could testify definitely touching the most vital point whether the wounds were inflicted before or after death.

On the trial, the state did not call these witnesses to make out its case in chief, but was permitted by the court to use their testimony, one in rebuttal, and the court refused to permit counsel for the defense to impeach or contradict them. Counsel for defendant objected on the ground that where witnesses to essential facts for the state’s case in chief are available at all times during the trial, it is improper for it to withhold them for rebuttal and improper for the court to refuse to permit defendant to impeach or contradict .them. State v. Bellard, 132 La. 491, 61 So. 537; State v. Smith, 120 La. 530, 45 So. 415. To the overruling of counsel’s objections, they reserved bills of exception. ■

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Bluebook (online)
147 So. 1, 176 La. 812, 1933 La. LEXIS 1608, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-king-la-1933.