State v. Nieuhaus

117 S.W. 73, 217 Mo. 332, 1909 Mo. LEXIS 280
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMarch 9, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 117 S.W. 73 (State v. Nieuhaus) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Nieuhaus, 117 S.W. 73, 217 Mo. 332, 1909 Mo. LEXIS 280 (Mo. 1909).

Opinion

GANTT, P. J.

At the April term, 1907, of the circuit court of Perry county, an indictment was returned charging that the defendant, at said county on January 11, 1907, feloniously and willfully assaulted one Maggie Shine, and with a rawhide whip, of the length of three feet and of the diameter of three-fourths of an inch at the large end thereof, and of [338]*338the diameter of one-fourth of an inch at the small end of said whip, and with a hot iron stove-lid lifter, of the length of nine inches, of the thickness of one inch and of the weight of one pound, willfully and feloniously, by the act and procurement of the said Olive Nieuhaus, did strike, wound, maim, disfigure, cut and stab her the said Maggie Shine, then and there with said rawhide whip, and with the said hot iron stove-lid lifter, in and upon the face, neck, breast, abdomen, arms, hips, legs and body of her, the said Maggie Shine, and did feloniously beat, bruise, maim, burn and wound her, the said Maggie Shine, and the said Maggie Shine then and there in manner and form aforesaid was greatly maimed, wounded and disfigured against the peace and dignity of the State.

At the same term of court, the defendant applied for and was granted a change of venue from the regular judge of said court, and it appearing that the defendant and the prosecuting attorney could not agree upon any attorney as a special judge, the cause was set down for the 8th of July, 1907, and the Honorable Joseph J. Williams, judge of the 21st Judicial Circuit, was ‘called and requested by Judge Killian to hold said court, and on the 8th of July, 1907, Judge Williams appeared in response to said request and assumed the direction of the said, cause. The defendant then made another application for a change of venue from said county on the ground that the inhabitants thereof were prejudiced against her. This application was heard and overruled and the cause was then continued until the October term, 1907. On the 21st of October, 1907, the defendant was arraigned and her plea of not guilty was entered. A jury was impaneled and the cause heard and.resulted in a verdict of guilty of wounding and disfiguring Maggie Shine both by whipping her with a whip and by burning her with a hot stove-lid lifter as charged in the indictment, and assessing her punishment at imprison[339]*339ment in the penitentiary for two years. In dne time, the defendant filed her motions for a new trial and in arrest of judgment, which were by the court overruled. Sentence was then pronounced against the defendant and from that sentence she has appealed to this court.

The evidence, on the part of the State tended to prove that on the 11th day of January, 1907, Maggie Shine was a girl not quite thirteen years old. On that date she was living with Joseph Nieuhaus and his wife, the defendant, at their home at Point Rest, in Perry county. She had lived with them two or three years. She was an orphan, her mother and father both having been dead a number of years. Mr. Nieuhaus conducted a store at Point Rest and used the second story of his store building for a residence. On the 11th of January, 1907, which was Friday, in the afternoon Mrs. Nieuhaus left her baby in Maggie’s care and directed her to put some ironed clothes away, and then went down stairs. Upon returning up stairs and finding that her clothes had not been put away, she inquired of Maggie why it had not been done. Maggie explained that the baby had been cross and required her whole attention, whereupon the defendant said, “Now, I am going to whip you and burn you, you know that work was to do.” Defendant went down stairs where she remained for a short time and until her husband left the store and went to the willows, several hundred yards distance. Returning up stairs the defendant sent her little boy, Henry, down stairs to watch the store. She then took Maggie into a room, required her to strip off her clothes and put her across the bed face downward. From her drawer she took a cowhide whip and with it beat Maggie’s bare flesh. Maggie screamed, whereupon the defendant sitting upon her head to smother the screams continued to belabor her with the whip, and threatened her with a burn for every time she screamed. Letting [340]*340Maggie up, the defendant then went to the kitchen and procured a hot stove-lid lifter with which she inflicted burns upon Maggie’s chest and abdomen. Defendant then sent Maggie to the corn crib near by to fetch some corn cobs. Mary Moranville, a little school girl friend of Maggie’s, passing at the time on her way home from school, heard Maggie crying and sobbing at the crib. She went to the crib and learned of Maggie ’s mistreatment. She went home and told her sister and her mother what she had learned. On the next Monday, it was the 14th of January, Maggie was at school, and there in the closet Emma Moranville made an examination of the burns on Maggie’s body, observing that some of them had scabs and some of them were raw and stuck to her clothing. On Wednesday the 16th of January, Mrs. Theresa Moranville met Maggie in a field between Point Rest and the schoolhouse and examined the upper part of Maggie’s body, where she found four or five wounds ón the fore part of her body and many welts on her back. She saw evidence in several places that blood had been- drawn by a whip. She also found bruises and green places on her body as large as a half dollar. When Maggie returned to school on Monday, January 14th, Miss Codenbach noticed that Maggie appeared to be ill, as she did not play with the pupils as usual and seemed, to be trying to keep her clothes away from her person. At the instance of Miss Codenbach some five or six of the neighbors gathered at the home of Mrs. Theresa Moranville on the 22d of January and made a thorough examination of Maggie’s clothing and injuries. On the 29th of January-Dr. Frank M. Vessels examined her injuries and about the same time also Dr. J. F. Morton examined her. From the testimony of these neighbors and physicians, it appeared that there were seven principal bums and four smaller ones on Maggie’s chest and abdomen, all of which appeared to have been made by the scraping of a hot iron or the use [341]*341of some blunt instrument. One burn, near tbe collar bone, was in form and. size like that of tbe end of tbe stove-lid lifter described as tbe instrument by means of which the burns were inflicted. There was the appearance of a continuous burn started on the left breast, passing down the left side and across the abdomen, as if made by one stroke with a blunt iron instrument, which touched heavier and burned deeper as it passed across and over the ribs and over the prominent places of the abdomen, leaving severe wounds at the prominent points and merely a red streak across the depressions in her body. The marks of this stroke between the prominent places varied in width from one-half an inch to three-fourths of an inch, and its whole length was about eighteen inches. The large and deep bums at the prominent places, one of which was as large as a dollar, and several of which were of the size of a half dollar, were, at the time of the examination by the physicians, running sores, and the marks of the stroke connecting them were indicated by the redness of the skin. Both of the physicians were of the opinion that these burus were made by a blunt iron instrument and could not have been made by a hot liquid or by the spilling of acid. On Maggie’s shoulders, back, thighs and legs were found many welts as if made by a whip. Dr. Vessels counted thirty-two welts, which were prominent and distinct. In some places the welts were so thick that they ran into one another and made a continuous bruise.

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Bluebook (online)
117 S.W. 73, 217 Mo. 332, 1909 Mo. LEXIS 280, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-nieuhaus-mo-1909.