State v. Morris

283 P. 406, 41 Wyo. 128, 1929 Wyo. LEXIS 12
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 17, 1929
Docket1570
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 283 P. 406 (State v. Morris) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming 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. Morris, 283 P. 406, 41 Wyo. 128, 1929 Wyo. LEXIS 12 (Wyo. 1929).

Opinion

*133 RiNer, Justice.

Upon an information filed in the District Court of Sweetwater County by the proper officer on November 9th, 1928, Henry B. Morris, appellant herein, was tried and convicted of murder in the first degree. The jury failed to add to the verdict the words “without capital punishment” and accordingly judgment was entered sentencing Morris to suffer the penalty of death. The record is before us by direct appeal for review.

The trial was had more than four years after the commission of the alleged crime and the evidence is wholly circumstantial. The facts in the ease, as developed on the witness stand, are substantially these:

In the year 1924 there were three sisters living in Denver, Colorado. Two of them, Mae Griffiths and Maude Welsh, were residing there with their husbands. The third sister, Anna, when about seventeen years old, had married a man by the name of Rowland; from him she had separated, after they had lived together between one and two years. Subsequently she again married a man by the name of Grabe, with whom she lived for about sixteen years, and by whom she had five children, one of whom, previous to 1924, had died. The oldest child, a boy, had *134 been born in Rock Springs, Wyoming, where the Grabes lived for some time. Of these children who were living in the year 1924, one, a girl, Geneva Grabe, was born in Denver, February 14, 1921. Sometime before the month of June 1924, Anna Grabe left her second husband and went to reside a part of the time at the home of her ■sister Mrs. Griffiths. The husband and the rest of the children continued to occupy the family home in Denver. Mrs. Grabe, meanwhile, occasionally worked as housekeeper for other people. It appears that at one time she kept house on a ranch for a man by the name of George Tomlin, whose wife had left him and who wanted Mrs. Grabe to marry him. Apparently, also, Mrs. Grabe had other masculine friends who interested themselves in her behalf, among them being a Charles or George Lyman, and one George Cummings, to be hereafter mentioned.

In June 1924, by correspondence arising out of a newspaper advertisement, Mrs. Grabe, at that time thirty-sis years old, under the name Anna Rowland, wrote to one George W. Morrison, at Rock Springs, Wyoming, concerning the position of housekeeper in the latter’s home. Morrison’s wife had died sometime previously, leaving him with a family of three minor children to be cared for, the youngest an infant only three weeks old at the time of the mother’s death. Mrs. Rowland, after first advising Morrison that she would come, again wrote him that she could not come and that she was making arrangements to go elsewhere.

The latter part of June, 1924, taking with her her child Geneva, Mrs. Rowland left Denver in an auto with the Mr. Lyman already referred to, her destination being Wheatland, Wyoming. Thereafter Morrison received another letter from .her addressed from Wheatland, stating that she had had a disagreement and would not continue on with the parties with whom she went to that place, and asking if she could not come immediately to Rock *135 Springs, Wyoming. Without waiting for Morrison’s reply, she appeared at his house in that place on or about the evening of July 7, 1924. She was then employed by him as housekeeper in the home at a salary of $1 a day or $30 a month, and she undertook her duties in that capacity about two days later, after a Mr. and Mrs. Priddy, who had previously rented a room from Morrison, moved out.

Henry B. Morris, an employee of a powder company in Carthage, Missouri, at the instance of that company, moved with his family to Utah in 1915, and engaged in the operation of its powder plant in that state. The family remained there until July, 1919, when Morris left and came to Wyoming, ultimately finding work in one of the mines of the Union Pacific Coal Company at Rock Springs. In the latter part of September or the first part of October of that year, he moved his family to the last mentioned place. When Morris commenced work in Wyoming he did so under the name George W. Morrison. His reason for so doing being — as he testified — to avoid having his wages garnisheed on account of debts that he had incurred in Utah, to the extent of over $2,000, through hospital and doctor bills for his eldest daughter, who had undergone three surgical operations. By 1922, with the aid of his father in Missouri, Morrison was able to pay off these debts.

On account of a strike affecting working conditions in Rock Springs, he moved his family back to Carthage, Missouri, leaving Wyoming at that time the night of April 15, 1922. The family remained there until October of that year, when they returned to Rock Springs and he again resumed work in the mines under the name of George W. Morrison. In March, 1923, the family moved into the house known as 614 Eleventh Street or by the coal company number — as it was owned by that company — of 253. In February, 1924, Mr. and Mrs. Priddy, before mentioned, rented a room in the house. Sometime during that month *136 or the March following, Morris’ wife died, as already-stated, leaving three children in the home. The eldest daughter had meanwhile been married and was then living on Eleventh Street half a block east from her father’s house. The ages of the other children at that time were respectively fourteen years for the boy, eleven years for the girl, and the baby three weeks. Mrs. Priddy and some of the neighbors cared for the children after the mother’s death and until Mrs. Rowland arrived.

This house in which the Morris family was then living was a one story frame structure, which faced north on Eleventh Street. At the rear of the building was a single door and west of it was the entrance into the cellar of the house. There appears to have been no entrance to the cellar except from the outside. The cellar door of wood was set in its frame sloping up towards the house, so as to open and turn over to the west. A flight of six or seven wooden steps led to the cellar floor, which was of dirt. The excavation itself was about eight or ten feet square and about six feet deep from floor to ceiling. The sides of the cellar were kept in place by means of boards and props, reaching from the floor to the ceiling. These boards on the sides extended below the dirt floor of the cellar about six inches. There was a driveway or alley south of the house that was used as a road by the public as they chose. The lot could be crossed by anyone within a few feet of the door of the house, as Morris testified. He also stated that he never used the cellar for anything but kindling boxes and barrels, old clothing and occasionally canned food stuffs — such as condensed milk for the baby. He had boxes nailed up to the wall to hold these canned goods. He frequently went to the cellar day and night to get the milk.

Concerning the relations existing between Morris and Mrs. Rowland during the time she was housekeeper there, he testified that they had no trouble of any kind or char *137 acter, no disagreement, no dispute, or ill feeling whatever; that he paid her her wages for the twenty-eight or twenty-nine days she was in his home.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
283 P. 406, 41 Wyo. 128, 1929 Wyo. LEXIS 12, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-morris-wyo-1929.