State v. Olthoff

40 P.2d 384, 141 Kan. 70, 1935 Kan. LEXIS 91
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedJanuary 26, 1935
DocketNo. 31,891
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 40 P.2d 384 (State v. Olthoff) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Olthoff, 40 P.2d 384, 141 Kan. 70, 1935 Kan. LEXIS 91 (kan 1935).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Harvey, J.:

John Olthoff, charged with the murder of his wife at their home in Independence the night of May 9, 1933, was tried, found guilty of murder in the first degree, and sentenced to life imprisonment. He has appealed, and complains of rulings of the trial court relating to the admission of evidence and the examination of witnesses, and contends the verdict is not supported by the evidence.

The facts disclosed by the record — as under the evidence the jury was entitled to find them to be — many of which were not controverted, may be stated as follows:

John Olthoff and Bertha Ritter, three years his senior, were married in 1911. Two children were born to them; a son, Martin, [71]*71about twenty years of age at the time of the homicide, and a daughter, Helene, a year or more younger. The parties had lived at Independence since their marriage, and all of that time Mr. Olthoff had been employed by a retail mercantile company there, his hours of work being from seven to twelve in the forenoon and from one to six in the afternoon, with one Saturday off every two weeks. It was his practice to go home for lunch. The amount of his salary is not shown. Mrs. Olthoff was an only child and inherited her parents’ property, and from this she owned, at the time of her death, the bungalow in which the family lived, another one near by, which she rented, some real property in Oklahoma, and bonds and other securities of the value of about $8,000, and from her funds she had been paying the expenses of maintaining their two children in school. She personally looked after her property and managed her own financial affairs. Defendant testified that at the time of the homicide he had about $600 secreted in their home, for the reason that a year or two before he had sustained a loss by having a deposit in a bank which failed. What other property of consequence he had, if any, is not shown. The Olthoffs were of German descent, frugal and industrious. They were members and attendants of the German Lutheran church in Independence. Ever since about the time of the birth of her children Mrs. Olthoff had been in poor health. She suffered a great deal with what defendant spoke of as “female trouble.” At least three major surgical operations had been performed upon her. At each of these times she was treated at the hospital several weeks before she was able to be taken home, and this was followed by a long period of convalescence, during which she gradually regained strength to do her housework, or most of it. One of these major operations was about two years before the homicide, and she had not fully regained her strength at the time of her death.

Never a demonstrative couple, Mr. and Mrs. Olthoff, to their friends and neighbors, appeared to get along together with reaspnable harmony, and there is no evidence of a passionate fuss or quarrel between them. For three years prior to the homicide they had not occupied the same bed. For some months, perhaps a year and a half, prior to the homicide defendant had been paying some attention to and spending some of his spare time with a widow, Mrs. Stucker, who worked in a store around the corner and a few doors from the store in which he worked. The rear of the two [72]*72stores came near each other at the alley. Frequently defendant would hurry through his lunch at home, get in his car, go to Mrs. Stucker’s house, or near there, have her get into the car, and take her to the store where she worked, or within a few doors of it. He also took her riding in the evening — about town, to the country, where they pleased to go. Defendant did not tell his wife about these things and she learned of them slowly, if at all. She did notice his absences from home and his increasing lack of interest in his home and family. She mentioned these matters to him; he was provoked that she did so. On some occasions, on trips with his family, defendant invited Mrs. Stucker to go with them, which she did. One of these trips was to Longton, another to Tulsa; perhaps there were others. Mrs. Olthoff wondered why her husband invited this other woman to go with them. She mentioned that to her children, and to her husband. He did not quarrel with her, but “went out to the garage to cool off.” He got to spending his week-ends away from home, every two or three weeks, on “fishing trips.” His wife did not like that, but he went. On one occasion, when he was preparing to go on one of these trips, she “took him to task” for leaving his family and spending so much of his spare time away from home, and insisted on knowing where he was going and whom he was going with. He told her he was going to Niotaze, a town in an adjoining county, with a Mr. Wilson, near Schoenfeldt’s garage. She wrote these words — “Niotaze, Wilson, garage by Schoenfeldt’s” — on a card, which she put in the cupboard. Her reason for doing this, as she explained to her daughter, was to be able to locate him if anyone called for him while he was away. It is conceded that on this occasion he willfully falsified to his wife about where he was going, and with whom. Instead of doing as he told his wife, he took Mrs. Stucker with him in his car, drove to Coffeyville, where they stayed and had sexual intercourse at a cottage camp.' The next day, Sunday, he brought Mrs. Stucker to he? home at Independence, and without going to his own home on that day drove south into Oklahoma, where he stayed until the next Thursday, when he came home. He testified the first day he was in Oklahoma he “fished some.” What he did the remainder of the time is not disclosed. He was out with Mrs. Stucker on other occasions, and on at least one other occasion stayed with her and had sexual intercourse with her at a cottage camp in another town. These liaisons continued up to the time of the homicide, perhaps later. [73]*73Defendant, also, within the few months prior to the homicide, made himself obnoxious to some of the young ladies of the town by inviting them to ride with him. at times and under circumstances which indicated rides or trips for immoral purposes. These he repeated several times, and to as many as three young ladies, with whom he had only a passing acquaintance, although each time his invitation was firmly declined.

The home occupied by the Olthoffs at the time of the homicide is of the bungalow type. It faces west on Sixteenth street, paved thirty feet wide with brick. It sits back from the street about twenty feet. There is a grassed yard in front, but no sidewalk along the street. North and east of the house a short distance is a flower bed about seven by nine feet, which had been spaded up preparatory to planting, the ground of which was loose and dry. South of the house a few feet is an east-and-west alley, sixteen feet wide, surfaced with gravel. North of the house, about forty feet, is the other bungalow owned by Mrs. Olthoff,. situated on the same lots, facing north on Laurel street, the bedroom being at the south. It was then occupied by O. G. Griffin and family. These two houses, with their yards and appurtenances, occupy the space for half a block along Sixteenth street from Laurel street south to the alley. Between the two bungalows is a cement driveway from Sixteenth street east to a double garage near the east line of the lots. This driveway is widened to the south, so as to permit a car to stand just north of the middle and front portion of the Olthoff house.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
40 P.2d 384, 141 Kan. 70, 1935 Kan. LEXIS 91, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-olthoff-kan-1935.