State v. Winters

112 A. 198, 102 Vt. 36, 1929 Vt. LEXIS 142
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedMarch 22, 1929
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 112 A. 198 (State v. Winters) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Vermont primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Winters, 112 A. 198, 102 Vt. 36, 1929 Vt. LEXIS 142 (Vt. 1929).

Opinion

Watson, C. J.

This is a prosecution on indictment, charging the respondent, John C. Winters, with the murder of Cecelia Gullivan at Windsor, this State, on November 7, 1926. Much evidence was introduced by the prosecution, and also in defense. The respondent took the witness stand in his own behalf, and testified at great length both in chief and in cross-examination. The jury returned a verdict of guilty of murder in the first degree. The official transcript, duly certified, and the exhibits in the case, are referred to in the bill of exceptions as a part thereof, and made controlling. The • exceptions shown by the bill are numbered, and those relied upon by respondent in argument, will be referred to by number.

*40 The prosecution was based entirely upon circumstantial evidence.

The evidence on the part of the State tended to show, among other things, the following facts:

That on Monday morning, November 8, 1926, the dead body of Cecelia Gullivan was found in her bed on the sleeping porch at her home in the village of Windsor; that her head had been struck with some cutting instrument; that the appearance of the head indicated that two different implements were used, one on the neck and face, and the other upon the scalp; that there were many cuts upon the head which were made with an edged instrument bevelled on one side; that the body was found lying with the face toward the left as it lay in the bed, wholly undressed, except that it had on a night gown; that there was a large quantity of blood upon the bed and sheets; that in several places near the foot of the bed, below the body, were found sand, gravel, coal ashes, cinders and. particles of fine coal or dust, and near where these materials were found were also two scuffs of dirt, one on each side of the body, on the lower sheet itself, which were apparently made by person’s feet; that the bed was up tight against the south wall of the sleeping porch, and on that wall about four inches from the top of mattress were dark-colored marks which appeared like foot marks of a shoe; that there were also found in the bed burdock burrs and pieces of burdock burrs (commonly hereinafter called “bur-docks”) ; that the bed pillow was gone; that nothing in the room was disturbed except the bed; that the covering on the bed consisted of two sheets, a quilt and couch cover; that the couch cover was nearer the body than the quilt; that the victim owned the bungalow in which she lived, she having built it about two years prior to her decease; that she was a single woman and lived there alone; that she was the treasurer of the Cone Automatic Machine Company at Windsor, and as such worked in the office continuously and took active management in the affairs of the company, she being a woman of considerable executive and business ability; that she was forty-four years of age; that the autopsy revealed that she had a vaginal tumor, sometimes described as a fibroid uterus, which extended down in such proportions and was of such size that it was impossible for her to have sexual relations with a male person; that this condition had existed in all probability for from five *41 to ten years prior to her decease; that she was killed on Sunday morning, November 7, between two and four o’clock; that entrance to the house was made by the removal of a cellar window on the north side, the window being found below the house a short distance, on what is known as the Kennedy millpond dam, shortly after the homicide; that in going from the house to the dam, there is a high barbed wire fence with an opening where a person can go through by spreading the strands of barbed wire; that the pillow and pillow-slip used by the decedent on her bed were found tucked under a float which was in the water at the Kennedy millpond dam; and that there were evidences of blood on the pillow and pillow-slip.

It was the claim of the State that, on the evidence, the person who perpetrated the crime went down from the house, and across the dam where the pillow and pillow-slip and cellar window were found; that the pillow-slip had tears in it, indicating that they had been made by some sharp prick, like that of a barb on a barbed wire fence; that respondent lived a short distance from the Kennedy millpond, and, for him to go to his home, the most direct route on foot was to go down through the barbed wire fence and across the Kennedy dam to his house.

Evidence on the part of the prosecution further tended to show that in the afternoon of Monday, the day the homicide was discovered, several officers went together to the home of the respondent in the village of Windsor; that they found him there in bed undressed, except he had on a night shirt; that one of the officers told respondent to get up and dress himself, which he did, that when dressing he picked a burdock off his stocking as he put it on, and threw the burdock on the floor; that one of the officers picked the burdock up, but afterwards threw it away; that when proceeding to dress, respondent called for another pair of trousers, saying one pair was torn; that in the cuffs of the torn pair of trousers were burdocks and coal dust; that while there the officers searched the house for a weapon or weapons used in committing the murder, discovered that morning, and in the course of such search they found concealed under a large amount of old clothing on a couch in the front hall, the chisel (State’s 23), a piece of an automobile spring (State’s 24) and hereinafter referred to as the “spring,” and a bottle containing liquor (State’s 28) ; that later, same day, respondent was taken to the State’s prison for detention; that in *42 the evening of same day, the State’s attorney and State Detective Brown being present, there was found on the back side of respondent’s left leg above the knee, seven or eight fresh parallel wounds, in the nature of scratches, varying, from a quarter of an inch to three inches in length; that respondent was asked about his overcoat and trousers, and about the bur-docks and coal dust that were in the cuffs of his trousers and about the scratches on his leg, and about spots on his overcoat and trousers resembling blood, add about his trousers being torn; that in answer he said the spots on his coat and trousers, and coal dust, he did not know where he got them; but thought he must have torn his trousers, getting in or out of his automobile ; that he got the scratches on his leg in getting in or out of his automobile; that the trousers which were torn were the trousers he had worn the Saturday night before making the statement, and the overcoat was the one he was wearing the same night. It appeared that the torn trousers were State’s 19, and that the overcoat referred to'was State’s 20. And when testifying in this case, respondent stated the same as he did on the occasion just mentioned, regarding the overcoat and trousers, marked as such exhibits, being the ones worn by him on the night of the homicide. But he denied all knowledge as to how the trousers became torn, and as to where the burdocks came from, and as to where the coal dust and other materials later found in the cuffs of his trousers came from, and as to how the spots on his overcoat and trousers subsequently found, resembling blood, came there.

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Bluebook (online)
112 A. 198, 102 Vt. 36, 1929 Vt. LEXIS 142, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-winters-vt-1929.