State v. Koontz

183 S.E. 680, 117 W. Va. 35, 1936 W. Va. LEXIS 11
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 4, 1936
Docket8351
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 183 S.E. 680 (State v. Koontz) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia 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. Koontz, 183 S.E. 680, 117 W. Va. 35, 1936 W. Va. LEXIS 11 (W. Va. 1936).

Opinion

Maxwell, Judge:

The defendant, Connie Koontz, alias Connie Beller, under sentence of life imprisonment by the circuit court of Greenbrier County upon conviction of murder in the first degree of Lloyd Beller by poison, was awarded this review on writ of error.

After the death of W. A. Beller’s wife in the early part of 1927, the defendant came to his home as “housekeeper.” She had separated from her husband but was not divorced. She brought with her to the Beller home *36 two children born to her and her husband. W. A. Beller had four children by his deceased wife. In September, 1928, a child was born to Mrs. Koontz of her relationship with Beller. The names of the children and their ages at the time of the tragedy here recited, were as follows: Goldie Beller 17, Lloyd Beller 15, Paul Beller 14, Murrell Beller 12, Howard Koontz 17, Louise Koontz 14, Fayjean Koontz 6. At the time of the fatal event involved, the family was living at East Rainelle in Greenbrier County.

Lloyd Beller died March 24, 1935. It is the theory of the state that he died of poison — arsenic—purposely administered to him by the defendant on the 12th of March, 1935. Under Code, 61-2-1, murder by poison is murder of the first degree.

By way of preface to a minute discussion of the case, it may be noted that the oxide of arsenic, or white arsenic, which is the common form in which arsenic is used, is employed extensively in preparations for destruction of insects and other vermin. There are other commercial uses. It is highly poisonous. When taste is discernible, it is faint and sweetish. II Wharton & Stille’s Med. Jurisp., Secs. 154 et seq. .Except opium and its derivatives, white arsenic has caused more destruction of life than any other poison. IV Witthaus & Becker, Med. Jurisp. (2nd Ed.) p. 410. Pronounced symptoms of arsenic poisoning are nausea soon followed by abdominal pain and diarrhea. Death may attend within a few hours, which kind of case usually occurs after taking a large amount of arsenic in an empty stomach. But in the majority of instances of arsenical poisoning, the progress of the case is less rapid, the life of the patient, in many cases being prolonged for several days after taking the poison. II Wharton & Stille’s Med. Jurisp., Sec. 160.

On the 12th of March, 1935, the seven children returned home for the midday meal, pursuant to custom. W. A. Beller was away at work. That morning, while the children were at school, the defendant had made two plates of chocolate candy. The state takes the view that arsenic was placed by her in the contents of the second *37 plate, but not of the first. Her testimony is that when she began pouring the candy from the cooking vessel, she noticed that it was too thin; therefore, she refrained from pouring all of it at the time, added sugar from the sugar bowl, recooked the remainder thus augmented by the sugar, and then poured the residue on the second plate. At the noon hour, the children were given the candy, which had been divided by the defendant into sections — that on the first plate into four and the other into three.

Admittedly, she handed with her fingers a piece each to Paul and Murrell, but the record is. a little confusing as to just the manner in which Lloyd received his piece, whether she handed to him the plate with the candy on it or whether she put the candy in his pocket while he was drying dishes. Paul and Murrell ate their candy before the meal, Lloyd thereafter. Desperate illness soon developed with the three boys. None of the other children became ill. The testimony warranted the jury in believing that the candy given to the three boys was from the second plate, and that the other children ate the candy from the first plate and did not'' taste that from the second.

Because of the sickness which overcame them, the three boys returned home from school early in the afternoon. Murrell and Paul came first, Lloyd a little later. Extreme nausea with vomiting had developed. Two other school boys, to whom Lloyd, en route to school, had given each a portion of his candy, were attacked by illness that afternoon, with symptoms similar to those manifested by the Beller boys, but were not so seriously stricken.

The Beller boys were treated at home for several days and then were taken to a hospital at-Hinton where Lloyd died. At the time of the trial, the youngest boy, Murrell, had seriously drawn legs — a sort of paralysis — as a result of his illness.

A few weeks' prior to the 12th of March, a neighbor woman gave to the defendant some garden seed and blue vitrol and arsenic powder, the two chemicals presumably being intended for extermination of worms and insects *38 destructive of garden plants. These articles were placed in a sack and for a time were kept on the first floor of the Beller home, but prior to the 12th of March, the entire package had been removed to a storage room on the upper floor, whence it was produced by one of the children after Lloyd’s death and delivered to a policeman who went to the home in search of poison. That one of the articles was an arsenic powder is confirmed by a physician who analyzed the same. Whether any of this powder was removed from the package after it was brought to the home is not disclosed by the evidence.

Several physicians testified. Dr. R. C. Cecil was called to the Beller home by the defendant early in the afternoon when the boys returned sick from school. They were vomiting, and had developed abdominal cramps and diarrhea. He did not suspect poisoning. He questioned the defendant closely about what they had eaten, but she did not say anything to him about the candy, nor, in fact, did she mention the candy to anybody until about a week after the children became ill, when, under questioning, she told the boys’ father about it. Dr. Cecil prescribed a purgative and emetic, but never came to a definite conclusion as to the cause of their illness.

In a few days, another local physician, Dr. C. I. Wall, was called. He diagnosed the illness of the children as arsenic poisoning, and advised that they be taken to a hospital. After the boys were taken to the hospital, they were treated by Dr. D. W. Ritter, who diagnosed the illness as some sort of metallic poisoning, and, in his testimony, in response to a hypothetical question, said that he thought likely Lloyd Beller was suffering from arsenic poisoning.

Dr. W. F. Work, of Charleston, performed an autopsy on the body of Lloyd Beller, removing the stomach and parts of the intestines and kidneys. He observed that the interior of the stomach was inflamed and raw, covered with mucus. Such a condition, he testified, is indicative of metallic poisoning, and that the chain of symptoms indicated arsenic poisoning.

Dr. McLeoud Gillies, of Charleston, made an examina *39 tion and chemical analysis of the organs taken from Lloyd Beller’s body. He testified: “The stomach was covered inside with a white, sticky mucus, red and irritated * * * The skin of the stomach was thick and inflamed.” This condition, he said, was indicative of an irritating substance in the stomach, and arsenic is irritating; that arsenic could have caused this condition. In response to a hypothetical question reciting the symptoms of the patient before death, Dr.

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Bluebook (online)
183 S.E. 680, 117 W. Va. 35, 1936 W. Va. LEXIS 11, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-koontz-wva-1936.