State v. Schneider

208 N.W. 566, 53 N.D. 931, 1926 N.D. LEXIS 39
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 29, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 208 N.W. 566 (State v. Schneider) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Dakota 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. Schneider, 208 N.W. 566, 53 N.D. 931, 1926 N.D. LEXIS 39 (N.D. 1926).

Opinion

ENGLEbt, District J.

The defendant was charged in the district court of Burleigh county, with the murder of bis wife, Amelia Schneider by the administration of poison. On his application the case was transferred to Barnes county, North Dakota, some 140 miles from the city of Bismarck. The jury found him guilty of murder in the first degree. He appeals from the judgment of conviction and from the order denying a new trial.

Defendant is about forty-five years of age, and had been previously married. An infant child, the issue of the first marriage survived. *933 Defendant and Amelia married on December 5, 1921, after an acquaintance of only three days. After marriage they took up tbeir abode at bis borne in Bismarck and continued to reside there until her death on June 15, 1922. At the time of her death Amelia was twenty-five years of age.

The defendant challenges the legal sufficiency of the evidence.

This requires a statement of some of the more important or substantial facts developed by the state. The transcript contains over seven hundred typewritten pages of evidence. To state more than a mere synopsis of the same would require too much space.

The evidence shows that the deceased, at the time of her marriage to defendant on December 5, 1921, was a “strong and healthy” girl. During the latter part of said month, she was examined for life insurance, accepted, and a policy of insurance was issued to her by the Yeomen Lodge, for the sum of $2,000, payable to the defendant..

The mother of deceased was staying at the Schneider home, during the last week in March and first week in April. Amelia became very sick and started to vomit. The mother wanted defendant to call a doctor, but he refused. He told her if Amelia did not get better by morning, that he would call a doctor.

At that time, deceased was quite sick for about three hours, and her mother applied whatever “remedies” she knew of, and did everything she could to relieve the pain. “The next morning she was all right, and I took her along,” — having reference to the taking of Amelia ^ home with her. She was at the mother’s home for ten or eleven dáys, and while there, Amelia “wasn’t-sick.”

Some time after Amelia returned to her home, her mother Mrs.' Schitz being informed that Amelia had another one of those so-called' “spells,” sent another daughter to be with Amelia. About this time, defendant came to Mrs. Schitz’s home, and when asked why he did not bring his wife with him, he replied that on getting back home, “I will send her over, and she can stay.”

• He was then asked whether he had had a doctor for Amelia, and he answered, “yes.” “He says, Dr. Lipp, the doctor, says she got' spells, and is going to get seven spells, and if she lasted through the, seven, she will be free, but I don’t think she will pull through.”

He told her that he was giving Amelia soda. He left for home the *934 next morning. On leaving, Mrs, Scbitz told bim that she was “homesick for Amelia,” and wanted him to send her. The next time she heard of Amelia was after her death. She left at once for Bismarck, and on reaching the Schneider home, she asked him for Amelia, and defendant told her that she had been taken away by the undertaker.

On inquiry as to whether he had sent for a priest before she died, he said that he had not. Then, asked whether he had sent for a doctor, he answered, “No.” She wanted to know whether he had anybody there with her, and he said, “No.” Mrs. Schitz then wanted to know why he didn’t let her know, and hq said that he had phoned her, and that he talked with her personally. She then wanted to know if he did not know that she never talked “over the phone,” and he said that he paid no attention thereto.

She then wanted to go and see Amelia at the undertaking parlors, and he told her, “They won’t let you in, so I didn’t go down.” He then told her that because of Amelia’s insurance, he was going to get into trouble. She wanted to know why, and he replied, “Because they sent a piece of her liver away.”

Mrs. Lena Schwahn testified that she learned of Amelia’s illness in the early part of April, 1922, from defendant. lie was asked whether he had gotten a doctor, and after saying that he had not, he was asked: “Why don’t you call a doctor ?” lie replied, “There is no use to incur that expense, she won’t live anyhow.” He also told them that he knew “just as much as the doctors do.” That while she was at the Schneider home, Amelia drank water, and then “vomited quite green.” That defendant had inquired o’f her husband, Joseph Schwahn, in her presence, of the effect of sugar of lead on rats and dogs, and whether it would kill them. On being told that it would, and that a spoonful ■of sugar of lead would kill a man too, defendant replied that it would not.

The following day, he inquired about the poisonous effect of sugar •of lead again, and the amount it would require to kill certain animals. The night on which Amelia died, Mr. and Mrs. Schwahn were over at the Schneider home from J: 30 to about 8:30 in the evening, and while there, no lights were lit. That Amelia was lying in bed, and that the defendant was the only person about.

*935 Tbe next morning at about six o’clock, tbe Scbwabns were informed d>y tbe defendant of tbe death of Amelia.

They were close neighbors, and Mrs. Schwahn was tbe first outsider to arrive at tbe Schneider home on tbe morning of Amelia’s death. She went to tbe bedroom, and found tbe deceased lying “on her back, with her bands nicely folded and her bead a little to one side. ■She was nicely covered and tbe left band just peeked out over tbe covers a little.” She testified that she did not touch tbe body nor the •covers. She asked tbe defendant about a doctor, and be replied, “what •can I do with a doctor now?”

Tbe testimony of Mrs. Schwahn is supported by tbe testimony of her husband, Joseph Schwahn, and while be went a little more into ■detail, it is not necessary to mention tbe same, except in two or three particulars.

In tbe early part of April, defendant asked Mr. Schwahn whether “sugar of lead is poison.” When told that it was, defendant inquired, '“Will it kill rats and dogs?” Schwahn said, “Yes, and men too.” Defendant replied, “No, it will not.” Defendant also said, “a teaspoonful will not kill a man.”

Defendant told Schwahn six or seven times about his wife being sick, and when told to get a doctor, defendant said, “It’s no use,” and that the doctor had told him so. Defendant complained to Schwahn •of his sexual relations with his wife, in language not necessary to mention. That defendant did not take his wife out, and that he went visiting without her.

Defendant had complained to this witness that in marrying Amelia, he was “beat,” and that he blamed the parties that induced him to meet and marry her. When told that no one could force him to marry her, he replied that he wanted a home for his baby, but that “it has none.”

On the morning of Amelia’s death, he was the second person to arrive at the Schneider home. He described the appearance of the body in bed and the neatness of the bed clothes, and the general arrangements, in the manner described by Lena Schwahn.

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Related

State v. Puhr
316 N.W.2d 75 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 1982)
State v. Oliver
49 N.W.2d 564 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 1951)
State v. Braathen
43 N.W.2d 202 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 1950)

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Bluebook (online)
208 N.W. 566, 53 N.D. 931, 1926 N.D. LEXIS 39, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-schneider-nd-1926.