State v. Mahoney

208 P. 37, 120 Wash. 633, 1922 Wash. LEXIS 967
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 8, 1922
DocketNo. 17240
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 208 P. 37 (State v. Mahoney) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington 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. Mahoney, 208 P. 37, 120 Wash. 633, 1922 Wash. LEXIS 967 (Wash. 1922).

Opinion

Hovey, J.

— Appellant was found guilty of murder in the first degree, the verdict fixing the penalty of death. A consideration of the assignments presented upon the appeal requires a statement of the facts which the evidence tended to establish.

Appellant was released from the penitentiary at Walla Walla in the month of January, 1921, and came to the city of Seattle, where he was introduced by his sister to Kate Mooers, who was of the age of sixty-seven or sixty-eight years and possessed of considerable property, appellant being of the age of about thirty-eight years. The parties intermarried on the 10th of February, 1921, and lived in an apartment house belonging to the wife. Early in the month of April they arranged for a trip to St. Paul, intending [635]*635to be gone for several months, and later fixed upon April 17 as the date for their departure.

On the 13th or 14th of April, appellant visited the district fronting upon the east side of Lake Union and discussed with the owner of a boathouse the renting of a portion of it. This property is known as 1415 East Northlake avenue. Appellant at that time claimed that he had a partner and wanted to get away from the heat of the city, inquired as to the depth of the lake and whether large vessels came through. On April 14, appellant visited the same district and rented a boat for one week, giving an assumed name, and at that time gave his residence as 1415 East Northlake avenue. The owner found the boat in the neighborhood a week later. At this time appellant stated that he was in the fertilizer business.

On April 16, appellant purchased in a hardware store a short distance from his residence thirty feet of rope and five pounds of lime and had it charged to his wife.

On the afternoon of April 15, Mrs. Mahoney made two visits to a safe deposit box, withdrew $1,600 in cash and purchased traveler’s checks drawn on the American Express Company to the amount of $460, and the checks which the appellant afterwards used are certain of these checks. The checks are each for the sum of $20, and each bears the admitted signature of Mrs. J. E. Mahoney at the bottom. Those in evidence each have this same name a second time, but it is not the signature of Mrs. Mahoney. On that evening the Mahoney couple were at the New Baker Hotel in the company of several acquaintances.

On Saturday, April 16, the appellant appeared at the office of E. J. Brandt, an attorney and notary public in Seattle, in company with a woman, who then executed a general power of attorney in his favor under [636]*636the name of Kate Mahoney, but who was in fact not that person. This attorney was personally acquainted with Kate Mooers, but did not know that she had married and did not know that the instrument then executed was supposed to be her act.

The couple were seen together in their apartment the early part of the evening of April 16, but according to the evidence for the state, Mrs. Mahoney was never seen alive after about nine p. m. of that day. In the early part of that evening a phone call was received by the Seattle Transfer Company, directing them to remove a trunk that evening from 409 Denny Way, where the Mahoneys resided. A driver of the transfer company called about ten p. m. and found the appellant on the sidewalk, and was directed to remove a trunk tied with a rope which was then standing in the hallway. The driver estimated the trunk to weigh one hundred and seventy-five pounds, but it could have been twenty pounds heavier. Appellant went with the driver to the neighborhood of the boathouse, informing him that he rented the one at 1415 East Northlake avenue, but said that the driver could not very well get to the place, and, at appellant’s direction, the trunk was placed in a rowboat, in which appellant stated he would convey the trunk to the boathouse.

On the morning of April 18, appellant ordered some clothes at a tailor shop and made a payment with two of the traveler’s checks above referred to. On the afternoon of that date he went to the city of Everett and there took the Great Northern train for St. Paul. On the train appellant mailed cards to his wife’s nieces telling of the fine trip she was having. Dp on his arrival there he registered as J. E. Mahoney and wife. While there he dictated to the hotel stenographer two letters, one of which was an order upon Mrs. Mahoney’s attorney in Seattle to turn over to J. E. Mahoney [637]*637all abstracts, etc., then in his possession, and the other was an order upon William D. Perkins & Company to permit J. E. Mahoney to nse her safety deposit box. Both letters purport to be signed by Kate Mahoney.

On April 25, appellant ivas in Willmar, Minnesota, in company with a man whom he had known for a long time and who had visited at the apartment in Seattle on the night of April 15. Mahoney then produced four of the traveler’s checks and, upon the identification of his friend, purchased a ticket for Seattle. On returning there he placed his power of attorney of record on April 27th and secured access to his wife’s safe deposit box. He endeavored to dispose of a mortgage loan of his wife, and secured her automobile from the garage.

Appellant, at numerous times, made statements to the effect that his wife had gone to St. Paul with him, and after remaining there a few days, had gone on to Cuba.

The testimony of handwriting experts showed that all of the signatures alleged to be those of Mrs. Mahoney which were made after April 15 were not in fact her signatures.

Appellant was arrested in May, charged with forgery. At the time of arrest, appellant had on his person jewelry of considerable value which had belonged to his wife and which he had previously claimed to his wife’s nieces Mrs. Mahoney had with her in Cuba. Prom that time until August 9, the authorities continuously sought to discover the trunk, which was supposed to be in Lake Union. On the latter date the trunk was discovered, containing the body of Kate Mahoney. The face and various other portions were badly disfigured from the application of lime. The stomach contained twenty grains of morphine, and there was a hole in the side of the skull, caused by some blunt instrument, which was testified to have [638]*638been the cause of death. Several pieces of Mrs. Mahoney’s clothing and other articles belonging to her were found in the trunk.

On August 10, an information was filed charging appellant with murder in the first degree, and he was arraigned on August 11, at which time August 16 was named as the date for his pleading. On the latter date, and before pleading, an application in appellant’s behalf was presented to the court seeking to have him declared insane, and appellant then demanded a jury to pass upon that question. Appellant was denied a jury, and the court appointed a commission to investigate his sanity. This commission found him to be sane, and the court stayed the time for pleading until an application could be made to this court for a writ of prohibition pending the appeal from the order in the insanity proceeding. The latter writ was denied, and on August 23, a plea of not guilty was entered and the case set for trial for September 20. On September 6, a motion was made for a change of venue, and this motion was renewed several times, and as often denied. On September 13, appellant moved to postpone the trial to October 10, and this motion was later denied. The trial of the cause was commenced on September 20, and a verdict rendered on October 1.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
208 P. 37, 120 Wash. 633, 1922 Wash. LEXIS 967, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-mahoney-wash-1922.