State v. McDonie

122 S.E. 405, 96 W. Va. 219, 37 A.L.R. 699, 1924 W. Va. LEXIS 85
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedApril 8, 1924
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 122 S.E. 405 (State v. McDonie) 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. McDonie, 122 S.E. 405, 96 W. Va. 219, 37 A.L.R. 699, 1924 W. Va. LEXIS 85 (W. Va. 1924).

Opinion

Millee, Judge:

Defendant was indicted jointly with her husband Joe McDonie, charged with having committed a malicious and *220 felonious assault upon one James Gibson, a child of the age of six years, the indictment alleging that each of them committed the offense charged, and further alleging that the defendant Susie McDonie unlawfully, maliciously and felon-iously was present counseling, aiding, abetting and assisting the said Joe McDonie in committing the acts complained of. The husband was convicted of the offense charged, and upon writ of error to this court the judgment thereon was affirmed. State v. Joe McDonie, 89 W. Va. 185.

Prom the judgment in this case, sentencing defendant to imprisonment in the state penitentiary for a period of two years, she has prosecuted this writ of error.

The facts adduced on the trial are substantially the same as those in evidence on the trial of Joe McDonie. The child upon whom the assault was alleged to have been made, was six years of age, and the son of defendant. Joe Mc-Donie was the step-father. It is not shown that defendant actually committed any of the physical acts complained of. The evidence of the State tends to prove that she fully and freely acquiesced in the cruel punishment inflicted on her son by the step-father; that she brought the rods or switches used, and stood by, not only without any attempt •to interfere, but apparently aiding her husband in every way as testified to by a witness present at the time.

The only eye-witness to the assault, besides the McDonies, was the witness Mrs. William Cassler, who was at the time living or rooming in the home of the defendant and her husband. She did not testify on the trial of Joe McDonie.

It appears that on the evening before the particular occurrence which led to the arrest of defendant and her husband, the boy had absented himself from hom'e, and was found at the home of his grandfather, the father of Mrs. McDonie, and brought home some time just after midnight by an uncle. Mrs. Cassler says that after the uncle had gone, Joe McDonie brought in a bundle of switches and handed them to the boy, who in turn gave them to her. She says there were ten of them, and the smallest was as large as her largest finger. That then McDonie began whipping the boy in the dining room, and slung him against the wall, *221 while defendant sat there and witnessed the assault; that the child ran up stairs, followed by McDonie, and that she and defendant followed them np; that the husband ordered the boy to get into the bath tub and take his clothing off, which he did, and then turned the hot water on; and that all the time the child was pleading with his mother to take him out, and tried to turn the water off himself, but the husband threw him back several times brutally against the side of the tub; that “they” tied the child’s hands behind him, and McDonie whipped him while he was in the hot water and held his head under the water until he strangled and bubbles arose to the surface; that defendant appeared to be no more concerned than if “it was whipping a dog, and she would smile at me;” that the child continually appealed to his mother to take him out; and that the only time Mrs. McDonie was not present was when she went after more sticks. Witness says that she afterward talked to defendant about McDonie’s treatment of the child, and that defendant said she loved Joe better than she did the child. This witness had been living in the house with the McDonies about two weeks, and says that during that time Joe Mc-Donie whipped the child brutally almost daily; and that several times defendant asked him to whip it.

Soon after the occurrence related by Mrs. Cassler, the boy’s grandfather and uncle, the father and brother of the child’s own father, learned of the affair and went to the McDonie home to see about the boy. Defendant told them that he was all right and had gone to bed; that he went to bed early of evenings. ’ The uncle insisted on seeing the boy, but defendant braced herself in the stairway to prevent the two men from going up where the boy was. The uncle said that he took up the telephone, and that Mrs. McDonie jerked it out of his hand, saying: “You will get into trouble; you know Joe McDonie.” Witness then went to a neighboring house and called up the chief of police. When the policemen came, defendant locked the front door and hid herself.

Defendant testified that after the boy was brought home by his uncle after midnight, Joe McDonie whipped him a *222 little; and the next morning she and her husband decided they would keep him in all day, to punish him for running away the night before; that they told him to go up stairs, but he was stubborn and would not go; and that she told MeDonie to take him up and put him to bed. She says she did not hear any noise, but that later her husband came down and said that the water was warmer than he thought and he had burned the boy’s feet, and went to the drug store for salve, and put thei salve on the boy’s feet and bandaged them. She denies that Mrs. Cassler was present at any time when the boy was being punished, or that he was whipped severely. She says she got some small switches and asked her husband to punish the boy for running away. Joe MeDonie, then a prisoner in the state penitentiary, testified he whipped the boy the night after he ran away, and again the next morning, but that he did it in good faith, to make him mind. He says that the child was obstinate, and he did put him in the bath tub to punish him, because he saw that he was whipping him too hard. He insists that at no time did he mistreat the boy or whip him hard; and that he did not intend to burn him,, and didn’t think the water was hot enough to burn.

It is not necessary to detail here the extent of the child’s injuries. Suffice to say that Judge Ritz, in the opinion in the Joe MeDonie case, described the offense as “a very infamous crime, the like of which has not stained the criminal annals of this state.” And the evidence of the boy’s injuries and suffering adduced on this trial does not materially differ from that on the former case.

It is contended that the trial court erred in refusing to grant a continuance because of the physical condition of the defendant, she being enciente and nearing seven months! of the period of gestation and in a nervous condition. Mrs. MeDonie was examined on her application for continuance; and the trial court had opportunity to observe her condition then and throughout the trial. The trial court always has a sound discretion in the matter of continuances, and from the record we can not see that he abused such discretion in this case. The absence of two witnesses is assigned as a second ground *223 for continuance. It is said that one of these witnesses would have testified that a certain scar on the hoy’s lip and nose visible at the time of the trial was the result of an accident two years before the offense alleged in the indictment. We think this testimony would have been immaterial in view of the evidence adduced on the trial. Defendant was being tried for an assault alleged to have been made at a certain time, not for permanent injuries inflicted. The State did not present the boy for examination by the jury: he was presented by defendant.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
122 S.E. 405, 96 W. Va. 219, 37 A.L.R. 699, 1924 W. Va. LEXIS 85, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-mcdonie-wva-1924.