State v. Lancaster

155 N.E.2d 215, 106 Ohio App. 401, 7 Ohio Op. 2d 159, 1957 Ohio App. LEXIS 748
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedJuly 24, 1957
Docket4716
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 155 N.E.2d 215 (State v. Lancaster) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Lancaster, 155 N.E.2d 215, 106 Ohio App. 401, 7 Ohio Op. 2d 159, 1957 Ohio App. LEXIS 748 (Ohio Ct. App. 1957).

Opinion

Doyle, J.

Joseph F. Lancaster was indicted for murder in the first degree by a grand jury of Summit County, Ohio, and charged with “unlawfully, purposely and of deliberate and premeditated malice,” killing Louise E. Wallick.

He was prosecuted upon the indictment, and a jury returned a verdict of guilty of murder in the first degree. The verdict not having included a recommendation of mercy, the court, pursuant to judgment entered thereon, sentenced the accused to death in the electric chair.

In the appeal to this court, there are assigned the following claimed errors, which are asserted to be of a prejudicial character and constitute a denial of a fair trial:

“First: Said court erred in overruling the motion of appellant for a new trial.

“Second: Said court erred in its general charge to the jury on the trial of said action.

“Third: Said court erred in refusing to give to the jury the instructions seasonably requested by appellant’s counsel.

“Fourth: Said court erred in the admission of evidence offered by the state of Ohio to the prejudice of the appellant.

“Fifth: Misconduct by both the assistant prosecuting attorney and the prosecutor in the coqrse of their argument to the *403 jury by stating facts not within the record, tending to create an unjust prejudice against the defendant: (a) in calling the

attention of the jury to the failure of the appellant to offer character witnesses in his behalf; (b) in referring, over the objection of appellant’s counsel, to questions and evidence which the court had ruled objectionable; and (c) in stating to the jury that the defendant had had his chance, and that he was given mercy by the Municipal Court.

‘ ‘ Sixth: That the verdict is not supported by sufficient evidence and is contrary to law. ’ ’

The testimony of witnesses disclosed the following facts:

Mrs. Louise E. Wallick, the deceased, at the time of her death and for some time previous thereto, resided in her own home with her 13-year-old daughter, Evelyn.

The defendant resided in the same house, as a roomer and boarder, and from the direct testimony of the defendant, and inferences reasonably drawn from the witnesses for the state, the relationship between the deceased and the defendant was more than one of strictly business, having developed into an amatory and perhaps illicit connection.

Be that as it may, on October 8, 1956 (the date upon which Mrs. Wallick was shot and died), and for some time prior thereto, the deceased and the defendant quarrelled over various matters, including the objection on the part of the defendant to the association of the deceased with other men.

On the evening of the shooting, the deceased told the defendant to leave her home. He refused this request, with the suggestion that if she wanted his clothes out of the house, she should throw them out. He then telephoned a sister of Mrs. Wallick, a Mrs. Hazel Boot, and the following quotation from the testimony of Mrs. Boot reflects the conversation :

“Q. Would you tell the jury what the conversation was? A. Well, when the phone rang and I answered * * * it was Joe (the defendant) and he said that him and Louise were quarrel-ling and she had ordered him out and he said the only reason she wants me out is she wants somebody by the name of John * * *, and by that time Louise (the deceased) took the phone and she said he held a gun on me yesterday and I am afraid of him and that was all she said and all he said was ‘well I am going *404 to help her’ and that is all that was said. He said in the background when she said ‘he held a gun on me,’ in the background he said ‘I don’t even own a gun.’ ”

The evidence offered by the state tended to prove that, following this conversation with Mrs. Root, the deceased and her daughter retired to their bedroom and changed into their nightclothes. The defendant remained in the house. The daughter then proceeded to an adjoining bathroom; the mother followed and seated herself on the commode, and the two conversed while the daughter brushed her teeth.

At this time the defendant pushed the bathroom door open, and the daughter stepped sideways to a place between a washbasin and a clothes hamper, thereby cutting,off the defendant’s view of her, but leaving the mother in full view of the daughter.

The daughter’s testimony, reflecting the next event, was as follows:

“Q. All right. While you were there brushing your teeth having this conversation with your mother, I want you to tell the jury what happened. A. After she told me I couldn’t go [to a basketball game], I was brushing my teeth and standing in front of the washbasin, and he [the defendant] started to come in and he pushed the door and it hit me in the back and I moved to one side and my mother sat there and he came in where I could see his face and gun and biggest part of his arm and my mother just sat there she didn’t say * * *.

( i ^ ^ 4E1

“Q. Evelyn, will you go on from there and tell us what else happened? A. Well, she just sat there and he came in and then he said, ‘I have warned you about this for a long time,’ and I just stood there, I didn’t know what to do, and then I heard a click and then I heard the explosion, and my mother fell over on the side and hit the washbasin, and in order for me to get out of the bathroom he had to move first, and I ran down the steps and across the lawn and told the next [-door] neighbor.”

The deceased was shot in the forehead from a distance of six to eight inches; was rendered unconscious, and died within a period of four hours.

Following the shooting, the defendant walked to his bedroom, and the daughter ran from the house to the nextdoor *405 neighbor, who in turn called the police. The police arrived in a few minutes. Likewise arrived Mrs. Root, the deceased’s sister, to whom the defendant had talked on the telephone fifteen or twenty minutes before. Mrs. Root, obviously, in the light of her conversation with the defendant and her sister, accused the defendant of shooting her sister. The sister stated on the witness stand: “He did not make any replies or denials; he said nothing. ’ ’

The foregoing recitation of facts was in substance the state’s case.

The testimony of the defendant was that: he had arrived at the home from his work at about 7:30 p. m.; he had stopped enroute and drank a “double shot of whiskey”; upon his arrival he was affectionately greeted with a kiss; and he and the deceased ate supper, which she had prepared.

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Related

State v. Grant
2023 Ohio 2720 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 2023)
State, Ex Rel. Lancaster v. State
170 N.E.2d 749 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 1960)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
155 N.E.2d 215, 106 Ohio App. 401, 7 Ohio Op. 2d 159, 1957 Ohio App. LEXIS 748, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-lancaster-ohioctapp-1957.