State v. McDaniel

144 N.E.2d 683, 103 Ohio App. 163, 3 Ohio Op. 2d 235, 1956 Ohio App. LEXIS 583
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 6, 1956
Docket2370
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 144 N.E.2d 683 (State v. McDaniel) 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. McDaniel, 144 N.E.2d 683, 103 Ohio App. 163, 3 Ohio Op. 2d 235, 1956 Ohio App. LEXIS 583 (Ohio Ct. App. 1956).

Opinion

Hornbeck, J.

This is an appeal from conviction and sentence of defendant for the offense of manslaughter in the first degree.

Three errors are assigned:

1. That the verdict and judgment are contrary to law.

2. That it is against the manifest weight of the evidence.

3. All other errors upon the face of the record.

*164 However, appellant, in her brief, urges only that the conviction and sentence are against the manifest weight of the evidence. We are not required to give consideration to any error assigned which is not briefed, but we may, in the interest of justice, consider the other claimed errors.

The indictment was drawn under Section 2901.06, Revised Code, and charged that defendant unlawfully killed Roy Boian.

The evidence discloses that the defendant and Roy Boian had, for some time, been keeping company with each other. They had separate apartments, but each had a key to both apartments, and for some time prior to the killing had lived together in defendant’s apartment. Boian was a bowler and a member of a bowling team. On the night that he was killed, November 1, 1955, he had bowled with his team against another team, and the defendant had accompanied him to the bowling alleys. It is her testimony that, during most of the evening, she sat in a row of chairs back of the alleys, alongside other women. She testified that some bowler had spent considerable time conversing with a woman who sat beside her, and that Boian thought this man had been talking to the defendant, which made Boian angry. She testified further that Boian drank heavily during the time he was bowling; that she saw him go to the bar five times; that each time he passed her he would make some nasty remark; and that, as they were driving from the bowling alley to defendant’s apartment, Boian quarreled with defendant and struck her as many as thirty to fifty times and threatened to run into a pole, and would have done so had she not veered the car. When they reached her apartment, Boian informed the defendant that he wanted the key to his apartment and certain of his personal effects. Defendant said that he continued to beat her, and that each time she would bring an article to him he would strike her again; that she attempted to get his key off a key ring; that she was unable to do so with her hands, and reached on a nearby kitchen table and secured a paring knife and had pried the ring loose and secured his key; that thereafter he attempted to wrest the knife from her, and in so doing cut his hand; that this made him violently angry; that, prior to his cutting his hand, she had attempted to get away from him by running down a stairway; that he overtook her, shoved her *165 upstairs and struck her as he pushed her up, and said to her that he was going to give her the beating of her life; that after he was cut on the hand he said to the defendant that he was going to fix her face so that it would be months before “anyone will have a date with you”; and that Boian had his fist drawn back to strike her when she struck him with the knife. She said that she was continually requesting him not to hit her and to quit the altercation, but that he persisted and struck her in various parts of the body many times. She said that she was greatly in fear of him; that when she struck him with the knife, she was merely trying to protect herself. At no time did she admit a purpose or intent to kill Boian. After Boian was stabbed, he picked up his effects, left the apartment, got into his automobile, drove some distance toward his apartment and into a clump of trees, where he was found dead. The medical testimony was to the effect that he died from the knife wound, which had entered the heart and caused a slow seepage of blood therefrom.

There is considerable evidence as to the good reputation of the defendant for peace and quiet. It appeared that she had not at any time been arrested, and that she was regularly employed. One witness testified that she did not sustain a good reputation for peace and quiet. There is considerable evidence that Boian, although quiet and of a very fine disposition when sober, was quarrelsome and disagreeable when intoxicated.

The defendant, after she was arrested at about 3 a. m. of the day succeeding the night of the killing, gave her version of the facts surrounding the attack and the killing. It is probable that the defendant did not know that Boian was dead until she was taken to the police station on the morning of November 2. In her first statement, although in -many particulars identical with her testimony at the trial, she denied that she had cut Boian with the knife and demonstrated how it had been held, in which position she could not have stabbed him. A few hours later, and probably after consultation with an attorney who had formerly represented her, she changed her story and admitted that she did cut Boian with the knife, and her statement in this confession was substantially the same in all material particulars as her testimony at the trial.

*166 After all the testimony of the defense had been given, it came to the attention of counsel that three young women who lived in apartments adjoining that of the defendant knew something of the occurrences of the night of the killing and were willing to testify, and they did testify. Their statements bear every evidence of the truth. They had no reason whatever to favor one party rather than the other, and they had no interest whatever in the outcome of the case. Their testimony substantially supports the evidence of the defendant that Boian was the aggressor; that he struck her many times; that she implored him to desist; and that she ran down the stairs.

It is notable that there is no evidence whatever from which an inference can he drawn that the defendant was the aggressor in the occurrences in her apartment prior to and at the time of the killing.

The testimony of defendant was corroborated, in part, as to the extent of injuries suffered by her by reason of the assault of Boian upon her. She had one black eye, her lips were discolored and there is some evidence that she suffered other injuries which could be attributed to the beating given her by Boian.

When the defendant admitted that she struck Boian with the knife, resulting in his death, the jury had the right to draw the inference from these facts alone that she intended to kill him, inasmuch as he died from the wound.

In the opening statement to the jury the assistant prosecutor, among other things, said that “where the state claims voluntary manslaughter it wasn’t done maliciously, it was done in the heat of passion, hot blood, intentional killing. * * * We don’t deny that; and we feel after you have heard all the evidence in this case, you will feel the same about it. There may have been, there was sufficient reason for her, in her own mind, to get in the condition of passion, hot blood, and therefore stabbing him.” (Emphasis ours.)

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
144 N.E.2d 683, 103 Ohio App. 163, 3 Ohio Op. 2d 235, 1956 Ohio App. LEXIS 583, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-mcdaniel-ohioctapp-1956.