State v. McGregor

111 A.2d 231, 82 R.I. 437, 1955 R.I. LEXIS 92
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedJanuary 28, 1955
DocketEx. No. 9268
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 111 A.2d 231 (State v. McGregor) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. McGregor, 111 A.2d 231, 82 R.I. 437, 1955 R.I. LEXIS 92 (R.I. 1955).

Opinion

*439 Flynn, C. J.

This indictment charges the defendant with committing murder in the first degree. The case was tried in the superior court before a jury who returned a verdict of guilty as charged. Thereafter the trial justice denied the defendant’s motion for a new trial and the case is here on a bill of exceptions to that decision and to other evidentiary rulings made during the course of the trial.

Apart from the medical testimony and opinions of expert witnesses, the material and relevant facts are substantially undisputed. The defendant, who was separated but not divorced from his wife, had been living for six to eight years intimately with another woman, who operated a rooming house. The latter had informed him that she intended to break up their relationship and to accept the offer of a legitimate marriage presently proposed by another man. On Sunday, September 5,1948, defendant discussed with her certain financial and other benefits which she would derive from such a marriage and they agreed it would be better if in the circumstances he moved from the house.

There was further discussion by them that same night, which defendant spent with her in a cabin in Plainville, *440 Massachusetts. They came back Monday and that night he left her house and did not return. On Tuesday morning, September 7, 1948, he telephoned to her to inquire as to the progress of the proposed marriage, and on Wednesday morning in another telephone conversation he asked her to meet him that day to discuss a letter he had previously mailed to her concerning his personal business and financial status. Accordingly an appointment was made to meet her at 3 p. m.

Just before keeping such appointment he telephoned, between 1:30 and 1:45 p.m., to an undertaker with whom he had been well acquainted for eighteen or twenty years. He first inquired for the health of the undertaker’s wife, who had been hospitalized. He then asked for information concerning the location of a human heart, giving as the reason for such inquiry that he wanted to settle a small wager of fifty cents as to its exact location. This information was given by the undertaker to the defendant, who then inquired as to whether a woman’s heart was located in the same part of the anatomy as that of a man. Upon receipt of an answer that both were similarly located he went to his automobile and proceeded to drive it to keep the above-mentioned appointment. Prior thereto, however, at some time during that day he also had taken a large ice pick from his office and placed it in the automobile.

He met the woman shortly before 3 p.m. on Broad street in the city of Providence and, according to him, drove generally in the direction of Beach Pond in this state. They had gone there for picnics at other times and apparently he thought they might discuss their affairs with more privacy than if they stopped on the street to talk. However, when defendant’s automobile was going along Cranston street in the city of Cranston about 3 p.m. he suddenly grabbed the ice pick and stabbed the woman in the chest near the heart. The car, after traveling in an erratic course, came to a stop near a gasoline station at Pavilion avenue. The woman jumped out, screaming that she had *441 been stabbed. The ice pick was either projecting from her chest or had just been removed by her. At any rate she handed it to one of the gasoline station attendants, who helped to support her from falling.

At the time, a police officer on duty happened to be near. He had observed the erratic course of the car and saw the woman as she jumped out and handed the ice pick to the attendant. He also heard her state that she had' been stabbed by the man in the car. Immediately after she had jumped from the car the defendant was heard by one of the gasoline station attendants to say: “Officer pull me in, I just stabbed a woman.” As the officer went to defendant’s automobile to take him into custody, two other police officers were passing in a patrol car and stopped to investigate. When defendant was actually in custody, he complained to the officer: “Why don’t you let me go so I can kill myself.”

The woman was taken directly to a hospital in Providence for treatment. Later that day defendant was brought to the hospital where he was identified by her. She then asked him why he had done such a thing, and his reply was in effect that he had done it because he loved her. Thereafter, within a few hours of the assault, the woman died at the hospital from the wounds inflicted by defendant during the attack.

Subsequently that evening defendant was questioned further at police headquarters. A statement containing questions by the police and the answers thereto as given by defendant was typewritten. After reading it and making a certain correction, which he initialed, and personally writing in his answer to the last question, the statement was signed by defendant on September 8, 1948 in the presence of three police officers. The last question in the statement is whether it was true and given of his own free will, without fear or promise on the part of the police, to which he answered in his own handwriting: “Yes.” The statement, which corroborated in further detail the facts relevant to *442 defendant’s history, motive, plan and conduct just before and at the time of the fatal assault, was introduced without objection as defendant’s confession.

On September 9 defendant in due course was transferred to the Providence county jail to await trial. Thereafter, on the morning of September 17, he fell or jumped from a third tier cell in an attempt, as he later claimed, to commit suicide in accordance with part of his plan to do away with himself after killing the woman. As a result of this incident he was examined for mental disorder or illness. Thereupon a petition of the welfare department supported by the certificates of two doctors was filed and he was transferred in accordance with law to the state hospital for the criminally insane by order of a justice of the superior court September 23, 1948. There he received medical treatment for shock and fractures of a lumbar vertebra and certain bones of the leg as well as treatment for such mental condition as was found to exist at that time.

On December 14 of that year a clinic was held at which defendant was observed and studied further by many of the staff doctors at the state hospital for mental diseases. It was determined that, although defendazzt had exhibited sozne syznptozns of a possible psychopathic personality, he was not then suffering from any mental disorder or disease that would warrant his further confinement at the hospital. However, he reznained there until Juzze 25, 1949, when it was officially and formally determined that he had recovered mezitally to the extent that he was competent to stazid trial azzd that it was safe to returzi him frozn the state hospital for mental diseases to the jail. Accordingly he was then returned azzd was later tried azzd cozzvicted ozz the izzstant indictment.

The above is a brief azzd gezzeral suznmary of the saliezzt facts, zzozze of which is disputed by defendazzt. His defense was based solely ozz a special plea that he was izzsazze at the tizne of the commission of the fatal assault.

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Related

State v. Nault
314 A.2d 627 (Supreme Court of Rhode Island, 1974)
State v. Wright
253 A.2d 593 (Supreme Court of Rhode Island, 1969)

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Bluebook (online)
111 A.2d 231, 82 R.I. 437, 1955 R.I. LEXIS 92, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-mcgregor-ri-1955.