State v. Small

102 A. 883, 78 N.H. 525, 1917 N.H. LEXIS 60
CourtSupreme Court of New Hampshire
DecidedDecember 26, 1917
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 102 A. 883 (State v. Small) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Hampshire primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Small, 102 A. 883, 78 N.H. 525, 1917 N.H. LEXIS 60 (N.H. 1917).

Opinion

Plummer, J.

No important or difficult questions of law are presented by the exceptions. Substantially all the questions are questions of law only because they are such as require decision by this court.

Whether the record contains evidence authorizing the submission of the case to the jury, or presents facts upon which the verdict found may legally be rested, is a question mainly of fact which can be answered only by an examination of the record.. Exhaustive and careful study of this record of the evidence before the jury, leaves no room for question as to the legality of the action of the trial court in invoking the judgment of the jury upon the charge made by the state. The state claimed that the defendant, Frederick L. Small, murdered his wife, Florence Arlene Small, on September 28th, 1916, in a cottage in which they were living upon the shore of Ossipee lake in Ossipee, and to obliterate the evidence of *527 the murder destroyed the cottage by fire, that the motive for the crime was to recover $20,000 upon a joint policy of insurance upon the lives of the defendant and his wife, whom he had threatened with bodily violence and death. That the crime charged was committed by some one, and that Mrs. Small was murdered September 28, 1916, was conclusively established and admitted. To fasten the crime upon the defendant the state relied upon circumstantial evidence, and the motive furnished by the opportunity to realize the insurance and the defendant’s want of affection for his wife.

Where there is direct evidence of a crime, the motive prompting, it may not be of importance in establishing guilt. But where, as in this case, the evidence is wholly circumstantial, a motive that might induce a person to commit the crime may be of moving and compelling force. A sane person, though cruel and wicked, does not run the risk of life imprisonment or death unless impelled by some powerful motive which moves him to cast aside all consideration of punishment and humanity in order to accomplish his purpose. “Motive is the moving power which impels to action for a definite result.” People v. Molineux, 168 N. Y. 264, 297; People v. Fitzgerald,, 156 N. Y. 253, 258; In re Eaves, 30 Fed. Rep. 21, 26.

March 4, 1916, through one Merritt, general agent for the insurance company, Small secured a joint policy of insurance for $20,000-upon his own life and that of his wife, payable to the survivor, paying therefor a premium of $1,107.60. Before making this payment Small had in bank on deposit $4,835.71; he owned the Ossipee lake cottage upon which, and contents, he had a fire policy of $3,000. This comprised his entire property as disclosed by the case except, that at one time he had some currency, the amount of which did not appear, in a safe deposit vault. What his annual income or means of earning an income were, was not shown. The evidence as to the-nature of Small’s regard for his wife is of various instances from 1912, soon after the marriage, up to within a month of her death. He frequently addressed to her violent and profane language, saying in her presence, that he had hit her in the head with a boot-jack; that he ought to kill her and would yet. And, at another time, he-threatened to strike her with an oar. On two occasions, a woman’s screams were heard in the night coming from the cottage when occupied only by Small and his wife. Mrs. Small was last seen alive at the cottage at about 11 a. m., September 28. Small left the cottage at about 2.30 p. m. of that day, being driven in a carriage to the railroad station at Mountainview, where with a friend he took a train *528 for Boston, arriving at 8 p. m. The cottage was discovered to b‘e on fire a,bout 10 p. m., and an hour later was practically consumed. The next morning the charred remains of Mrs. Small’s body, — with a cord about the neck showing she was strangled, a mask over the face, a bullet hole through and other injuries to the skull,— were found in the ruins. At about midnight, Small, in Boston, was notified by telephone of the fire and returned to Mountainview by automobile, reaching there about 4.30 a. m., but not going to the cottage until about six o’clock. The state offered evidence of statements of defendant as to Mrs. Small’s condition, made before her body was found, subsequently proved false, and tending to show knowledge of the crime; of his inquiry of his companion before starting on the return trip whether he thought Merritt, the insurance agent, would be all right about the insurance; and of a claim made when he was arrested that the person who drove him to the railroad station the day before, saw Mrs. Small and heard her bid him good-bye and ask him not to forget an errand, which was contradicted by the driver who testified he did not see or hear Mrs. Small. The state also offered evidence tending to show an arrangement such as would cause fire to break out in the building some hours after Small left. Evidence of many other circumstances, corroborating more or less strongly the state’s theory, was put before the jury, which it is unnecessary to review. Enough has been recited to make it clear that the jury had before it evidence which, if believed with the inferences that might be drawn therefrom, fully authorized the verdict.

As the fire was first discovered some seven or eight hours after the defendant left the cottage, the state endeavored to prove that a device could be constructed which would start a fire after such lapse of time. One method suggested involved the use of an alarm clock and certain electrical apparatus. The remains of such a clock and apparatus having been found in the ruins, the state was permitted to inquire of witnesses called by it whether with such apparatus a fire could be started at any time within ten hours in the future. There was no objection to the 'competency of the witnesses. The hypothetical questions were unobjectionable. They were asked upon an assumed state of facts suggested by the evidence as to a matter upon which it must here be assumed the witnesses were found or conceded to have special knowledge. Challis v. Lake, 71 N. H. 90, 93.

Mrs. Small’s head was competent evidence of the cause of death. If the exhibition was not made for the purpose of proving some fact *529 material to the issue, it should not have been allowed. Nebonne v. Concord Railroad, 68 N. H. 296. The bill of exceptions does not show that the evidence was offered or used for an improper purpose. On the contrary, it appears the exhibition was permitted because such exhibition was reasonably necessary in support of the state’s claim as to the manner in which the crime was committed. It does not appear there was no evidence in support of this finding, and upon it the exception presents no question of law.

The evidence of the heat of a hot wood fire combined with the evidence of the presence of a chemical producing much greater heat may have been material. There is no ground upon which it can be said the evidence was incompetent as matter of law. The evidence of the witness Wedger, that melted iron found in the ruins was a reaction of a chemical called thermit was competent as one of the circumstances in the case. The evidence was not rendered incompetent by the failure of the state to prove the defendant’s possession of thermit.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
102 A. 883, 78 N.H. 525, 1917 N.H. LEXIS 60, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-small-nh-1917.