Wilcox v. State

1940 OK CR 24, 99 P.2d 531, 69 Okla. Crim. 1, 1940 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 2
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma
DecidedFebruary 15, 1940
DocketNo. A-9619.
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 1940 OK CR 24 (Wilcox v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wilcox v. State, 1940 OK CR 24, 99 P.2d 531, 69 Okla. Crim. 1, 1940 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 2 (Okla. Ct. App. 1940).

Opinion

JONES, J.

Charles T. Wilcox was charged in the district court of Osage county with the offense of murder; was tried, convicted and sentenced to serve a term of life imprisonment in the state penitentiary, and has appealed.

The record is voluminous, covering more than 700 pages.

The proof on behalf of the state was that about 4:30 a. m. on June 10, 1938, the fire department at Pawhuska was called to the home of Josephine Rogers in Pawhuska. Upon arriving at the home, the body of the deceased, Josephine Rogers, a woman about 75 years of age, was found lying in the doorway on a screened-in porch, the door being open. The defendant was there with the body. The body was badly burned and charred. There was a *3 fire in the southwest bedroom of the house, from which room a door led to the screened-in porch on the south. A gas fire in a stove in the northeast corner of the bedroom was burning. A mattress on a bed in the southwest corner of the room was afire. There was a fire on the floor about a foot or foot and a half from the bed. A smoking cord was hanging from the doorsill about three feet above the stove. The defendant Wilcox had on a pair of house slippers, trousers and an undershirt. They were not burned, but Wilcox’s hands, neck and chest were burned. Two or three charred embers of some kind, of cloth material were found near the stove. There were two chairs in the room, a wheel chair and a wicker chair. The nearest bum on the rug was about one and. one-half feet from the bed. The north edge of the mattress was burned. The firemen sent for an ambulance for the deceased, which arrived in a few minutes; that there was no door between the room where the fire was and the north room where a bed was located, the head of which was about two feet from the stove; but there was an opening between the rooms; that bedspreads or blankets were hung over the windows in the room where the fire was, and that the lights were on in the room when they arrived. That based on the experience of the firemen, it would have taken the mattress from 40 minutes to an hour to be burned in the condition in which it was found and with the body lying on it, and that it would have taken 30 or 40 minutes lying on the mattress for the body to have been burned in the condition in which Mrs. ■Rogers was found. There was only a small piece of clothing left on the body of the deceased, her hair was burned off short, and there were no signs of life in, her body.

A negro servant, Bill Williams, testified that he lived in the servant’s quarters, north of the Rogers house; *4 that the defendant called him. just before daylight to come and help him; that he went to the screened-in porch and saw the body of Mrs. Rogers lying there as it was found by the firemen; that Wilcox told him that the fire started from the heater; that he looked in the room, and that there was no fire on in the heater at that time; that before the firemen arrived Wilcox went in the house, but the witness did not see what he did.

A neighbor, Hazel Sponsler, together with other witnesses, testified that the deceased was partially paralyzed; that she could move both of her arms; that neither of them was entirely paralyzed; that she saw Mrs. Rogers the afternoon before she died the following morning, and that she could move her arms that afternoon, and demonstrated to the jury the manner in which she could use her arms.

Walter Johnson, the funeral director, answered the ambulance call to the Rogers home. The body was still lying in the doorway with the head just over the door-sill. She was dead. The body was burned considerably on the left side; the hair on her head had been burned short; but neither hand, on front or back, was burned; that the body on the left side showed that it had had long heat to' have been burned so badly. The tip of the tongue was badly burned where it protruded through her teeth.

The defendant was taken to the county attorney’s office for investigation, and he made a statement there to the officials that he had been staying at the deceased’s home for several months; that on November 13, 1937, he and the deceased were secretly married at Deering, Kan.; that the marriage was kept secret because the deceased did not want her son, George Hood, a narcotic addict, *5 to learn of the marriage because he might kill them; that Wilcox stated that the first he realized anything was wrong was that he was awakened by an outcry or smoke; that he jumped up and started in the bedroom where the deceased was lying; that she said, “Charley, get me out of here; I am burning up.” That Wilcox picked her up off the bed and started out of the room, and ran over the wheel chair and dropped the deceased; that he moved the chair, and picked her up and started to the door; that he was able to partially hold her up with one hand and open the door with the other; and that after getting her out on the porch, he had to let her completely down and open the door, as he had to use both hands to unlock the door; that after opening the door, he picked the deceased up and dragged her to the door where her head was protruding at the time the firemen arrived; that Mrs. Rogers had not smoked that evening, but that the fire started because some clothes which he had taken off of Mrs. Rogers and hung on the cord had caught fire from the stove which was turned too high; that only he and the deceased were in the house at the time of her death.

Witnesses were produced from Kansas who verified the fact of the marriage of the defendant to the deceased. The marriage license was obtained by the defendant on November 12, 1937, at Independence, Kan.; they were married the following night at Deering, Kan., in an automobile. The defendant explained to the minister who performed the marriage ceremony that Mrs. Rogers was an invalid and could not get out of the car.

The evidence showed that the deceased had been previously married and was the owner of one and one-third Osage Indian headrights; that she owned about 700 acres of land, the residence property at Pawhuska, and about 60 shares of stock in the American Telephone & Telegraph *6 Company; that she had only one child, a grown son by the name of George Hood.

The state introduced the evidence of five physicians who testified concerning the condition of the body of the deceased as disclosed by examination made by them.

Dr. Daly testified that he made X-rays of the neck of the deceased; that the X-ray pictures disclose that the deceased had a broken and dislocated neck which was sufficient to produce death; that there was an upward displacement toward the chin, and that the neck was twisted.

Dr. Hemphill and Dr. Walker testified that they saw the body of Mrs. Rogers at Johnson’s Undertaking Parlor on June 10, 1938. The body was severely burned on the left side of the face and left side of the chest; the hands were not burned; the eyes were closed; the lids had second degree burns and blisters so that the skin had sloughed off the eyelids, but the eyes showed no irritation. The tip of the tongue where the tongue was sticking out from the teeth was burned black, the teeth were clamped down on the tongue, and there- were no- burns nor inflammation in the mouth. An autopsy was performed; they removed the larynx, the thyroid gland and brain.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1940 OK CR 24, 99 P.2d 531, 69 Okla. Crim. 1, 1940 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 2, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wilcox-v-state-oklacrimapp-1940.