State v. Solomon

210 N.W. 448, 203 Iowa 954
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedOctober 26, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 210 N.W. 448 (State v. Solomon) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Solomon, 210 N.W. 448, 203 Iowa 954 (iowa 1926).

Opinion

Stevens, J.

The indictment in this case charges the de: fendant with the crime of murder in the first degree. It is the claim of the State that he assaulted, and in some way inflicted severe injuries upon, his wife, and then thrust the trunk of her body into the ash pit of the furnace in the basement, of his home, and dumped the. fire upon her face and body until it was severely burned. Whether viewed from- the standpoint of the. prosecution or of the defendant, the tragedy was a gruesome one, and the conduct of the defendant repulsive and brutal in the extreme.

The family of the' defendant consisted of himself, the deceased, and nine children,&emdash;seven sons and two daughters,&emdash;all of whom resided at the home at 1308 Court Street, Sioux City. The tragedy occurred sometime in the forenoon of February 3, 1926. Russell and Mary Solomon, aged 14 and 12 years, respectively, testified that they went to school in the morning of the day in question, and returned about 12:30. They attended different schools, and. Russell was the first to arrive home for dinner. The lunch was prepared by the defendant, and served in the kitchen. The children inquired for their mother, and were informed by the defendant that she had gone down town. They repeated the inquiry when .they returned home from.school, and were again informed that their mother had not yet returned. Clarence testified that he-talked with his mother about 11:15, requesting her to lay out some clothing for him which he desired to put on when he came home. She complied with his request. Maurice, who was 23 years of age, came home early in the evening, and, discovering the absence of his mother, inquired of the defendant where she was. The defendant told him that she -had been burned, and was in the basement. The father and son went immediately to the basement, and found the body lying upon a pile of rags in the fruit room, completely covered up with clothing and other rag's. Maurice then immediately, which was approximately 7 o’clock in the evening, telephoned Dr. Keeffe, tell *956 ing Mm that his mother was dead, and requesting Mm to come at once. When Dr. Keeffe arrived, he found the body in the fruit room, covered as above stated. A light was obtained, and he observed the condition of the body above the waistline. He testified that she had been dead eight or ten hours. The coroner and several police officers were called, and the body removed to the undertaking rooms. Subsequent examination of the' body by the coroner and others disclosed that the right wrist Avas fractured ; that the skin on one knee was tom loose; that there were blood clots under the scalp in the back' part of the head; that there Avas a depression in the skin on the forehead, which looked as though she might have been struck Avith some instrument. The hair was burned off the head; the face and breasts and other parts of the'body above the navel'were charred, and the arms were severely burned; all of the clothing AArora by her approximately above the waistline was completely consumed by fire, except that about eight inches of her dress sleeves were discovered in a basket of ashes in the basement. There AArere also some hairpins and a bundle of false hair in the ashes. The clothing removed from the body consisted of a house dress, a black skirt, and a suit of fleece-lined underclothing, remoAred, as above stated, and a pair of hose. She had on no shoes. The burned portion of the body was marked by a definite line across her body a little above the ‘ navel. Medical experts examined on behalf of the State testified that death was probably due to asphyxiation resulting from the bums.

The explanation offered by the defendant to his family, Dr. Keeffe, and the officers was that he was sleeping, and, awakened around 11 o ’clock by the smell of smoke, he Avent to the basement, and found his wife lying on the floor in front of the furnace, Avitli the furnace door open, her body burned, as described; that he threw Avater upon her clothing, put the fire out, and carried the body into the fruit room, laid it on some rags, and covered it up as it was when viewed by Maurice and the doctor in the evening. Defendant gave as his reason for not informing the children of the death of their mother when they returned from school at noon that he did not want to worry them, and he stated that he did not call the officers' because he did not want to bother them. He said that he did not call his son Maurice, aaAio was manager of a grocery store in Sioux City, as he could *957 not hear well over the telephone. .He'did not, in any statement made by him, claim to have heard screams or any outcry.from the basement. There were no marks upon the back of the deceased.- Here hands were burned, but not so badly as her body.

Two propositions upon which a reversal is asked are urged by- appellant:, (a) That the State failed to.prove the corpus delicti; and (b) that the evidence is insufficient to convict the defendant. '

As already appears, the evidence introduced by the State to prove the corpus delicti and the commission of the crime by the defendant, was largely ■ circumstantial! .That the same may be so proven is well settled in this state. State v. Kelley, 193 Iowa 62; State v. Grba, 196 Iowa 241; State v. Townsend; 191 Iowa 362.

■First, as to the corpus delicti. The theory of the defendant that the clothing of the deceased was set on fire by a puff or blaze from the furnace when the-door was.,opened by her is, it seems to us, overcome by every rational fact and hypothesis of the cáse. An examination of the furnace made on the evening of the tragedy disclosed that strings of soot several' inches in length were hanging in 'front of, and adjacent to, the upper furnace door. A puff of the furnace sufficient to carry a blaze to the clothing of the deceased would probably have blown away these strings of soot. While several hours elapsed after the tragedy and before the clothing was removed, by the coroner, it was not damp, nor was there any indication upon the floor of the basement that water had been- poured upon the body, as claimed by the defendant. The ashes were all removed from the furnacé and dumped into a- bucket, in which the pieces of the dress sleeves and the false hair were found. One of the sons reT quested the doctor, when he arrived, to watch the actions of his father, and said to one of the police officers, in reply to an inquiry, that he “thought Dad did it.” The admission of'this, testimony is not complained of. He. further stated that his fa- . ther and mother had quarreled, a few days before. The removal of the body to the fruit room and its concealment in the manner stated are so utterly inconsistent with every instinct of humanity that it is next to impossible to believe that any husband who was innocent could be so' brutal as to thus dispose of the body, of- his deceased wife immediately after she had met death in the hor *958 rible manner indicated. It is unbelievable that he would not have called a physician, or that he would have lied to his children about it and gone about the affairs of the household in a manner not to attract the attention or arouse the suspicion of the children. Mary testified that she went to the basement to feed some kittens, and that she neither saw nor observed anything out of the ordinary, except that she closed a basement window.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

State v. Stewart
1 N.W.2d 626 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1942)
State v. Henricksen
243 N.W. 521 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1932)
State v. Manly
233 N.W. 110 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1930)
State v. Bingaman
230 N.W. 394 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1930)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
210 N.W. 448, 203 Iowa 954, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-solomon-iowa-1926.