State v. Priest

103 A. 359, 117 Me. 223, 1918 Me. LEXIS 48
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedMarch 29, 1918
StatusPublished
Cited by34 cases

This text of 103 A. 359 (State v. Priest) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Priest, 103 A. 359, 117 Me. 223, 1918 Me. LEXIS 48 (Me. 1918).

Opinion

Cornish, C. J.

In the early evening of Tuesday, March 14, 1916, the body of one George Herbert was' discovered by two neighbors lying on the floor of his camp, face downward in a pool of blood. This camp was located at Rand Cove in Lake View Plantation, at a remote and somewhat secluded spot between Schoodic Lake and a branch of the Bangor & Aroostook Railroad known as the Medford cut-off. Herbert was last seen alive about noon of the previous day. He was [225]*225a man seventy-two or seventy-three years of age, whose history and antecedents were unknown, and who had lived alone in this camp for several years, a recluse, of quiet habits and somewhat feeble health. He was reputed to have considerable money about him and the report was not without foundation as subsequent events proved. The room, twelve by sixteen feet in size, in which Herbert was lying, was found to be in great disorder, showing not only evidences of a struggle but the apparent rifling of its contents. Chairs were overturned, the bedding and clothing were scattered on the floor, stains and spatters of blood appeared on the table, the stove, the floor and the walls, while the shade at one window had been drawn down by a blood stained hand. Mr. Herbert’s head was bruised in several places, his scalp broken, and above the left ear his skull was shattered for a space of about three inches in length by one and one-half inches in width. Death was due, as the physicians testified, to this fracture of the skull and the consequent loss of blood. Fragments of a broken bottle upon some of which were found blood and matted hair, were scattered over the floor, probably the instrument with which the fatal blow was struck. A pail of water and a blood marked towel showed where the perpetrators had washed and wiped their hands after the scene had closed. The tracks of two men in the deep snow led from the camp to the shore of the lake and thence up the lake for a considerable distance until they reached and followed the railroad track. These were, at the time, the only clues.

The officers and a detective promptly took up the case and ferreted out many facts that pointed to the guilt of the respondent. On July 19,1916, he -was arrested in Portland. After being taken to the police station he was interrogated by the detective in presence of police officers and his answers connected him directly with the tragedy. Another young man, named Roy Wood, was his accomplice, as he stated, and this accomplice has never been apprehended. The evidence leads to the reasonable inference that he fled to Canada the next day after Herbert was killed. He has never been found, although extended search has been made for him. The next day, July 20, the respondent was taken to Dover and at the Dover court house was interrogated at length by the County Attorney. This examination was taken down by a stenographer and a transcript of the notes was subsequently signed by the respondent. The admissibility of these two confessions, or of the statements made by Priest on these two occasions, was resisted by [226]*226his counsel' but they were admitted by the court and the exceptions on this branch of the case will be considered later.

At the March term, 1917, of the Supreme Judicial Court in Piscataquis County, the respondent was tried on an indictment for murder and convicted by the jury. The case is now before the Law Court on appeal from the decision of the Justice before whom it was tried, denying a motion for new trial, (R. S., Chap. 136, Sec. 28), and on exceptions.

Appeal.

The evidence, covering nearly seven hundred printed pages, has been examined with care and as a result the court has no hesitancy in holding that the verdict is fully justified. The respondent took the stand and testified in his own behalf, and from his testimony alone, balanced in the judgment of reasoning men, conviction could well have followed. Out of his own mouth, as well as the mouth of others, he was condemned.. True, on some points he attempted to deny certain facts or to evade the consequences of certain acts, but his attempted explanations did not explain and his attempted excuses did not excuse. The intelligence of the jury pierced the veil, and separated the true from the false and the probable from the improbable.

Viewing the tragedy in the light of all the testimony and the circumstances, it is obvious that the respondent and his companion Wood left their home in Milo, where they had both been at work until within a short time, with the deliberate and well formed intention of going to Rand Cove, a distance of about twenty miles, and obtaining money from Herbert, both being in need of it as Priest testified. Robbery was undoubtedly their purpose, but in this case robbery unfortunately culminated in homicide. The respondent’s familiarity with the premises, having worked near by Herbert’s camp during the previous Summer, Fall and early Winter, his knowledge of Herbert’s solitary life and reputed possession of money, the circuitous route taken by them on Monday, March 13, to reach the camp from Milo, partly by rail and partly on foot four miles across Schoodic Lake in the midst of a heavy snow storm, the scene in the camp after their arrival, two yioung men each about twenty years of age over against one of seventy-three, the condition of the camp after the struggle, the nature of the [227]*227wounds that caused his death, the heartless abandonment of him in his desperate or dying condition, although help could have easily been secured, the route of hurried departure designed to escape detection, their studied separation after the train was taken, the stealing from Herbert’s camp of four hundred dollars as the fruit of their wicked enterprise, its equal division between them soon after they left, the retention by the respondent of his share and the sending of a little over one hundred dollars to his friend Ferris in Portland, as he admits, or one hundred and fifty as Ferris testifies, with instructions for Ferris to keep it for him and if he did not call for it in ten or fifteen years to keep it for himself, his subsequent going to Portland where he spent his ill gotten gains, and where he was finally arrested, all combine to prove beyond any reasonable doubt a premeditated and concerted robbery, ending in the brutal murder of an innocent, unprotected and somewhat enfeebled old man.

The claim of the respondent that he simply went to Herbert to borrow money with which to meet an outstanding and pressing bill, while on their way to Millinocket for work, that Herbert twice treated them to liquor and himself drank with them, then suddenly, without the slightest provocation, became seemingly crazy and pulling a revolver from his bed threatened to kill them, and when this weapon was wrested from him he seized Priest by the throat, threw him twice upon his knees, and a severe struggle ensued, Herbert having the better of the assault until Wood seized a stick of wood and struck Herbert over the head, felling him to the floor, this claim of self defense needs no other refutation than the number and age of the respective parties, the entire absence of any marks, bruises or even scratches upon Wood or Priest the next morning after the affray, and the condition of Herbert as left by them with bruised and shattered skull lying in his own blood. The “poor poor dumb mouths” speak to disprove the flimsy excuse of self defense.

The single question before the Law Court on the appeal is whether, in view of all the testimony, the jury were warranted in believing beyond a reasonable doubt, and therefore in declaring by their verdict, that the respondent was guilty of murder.

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Bluebook (online)
103 A. 359, 117 Me. 223, 1918 Me. LEXIS 48, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-priest-me-1918.