James v. State

Decision Date27 April 1949
Docket Number137.
Citation65 A.2d 888,193 Md. 31
PartiesJAMES v. STATE.
CourtMaryland Court of Appeals

Appeal from Criminal Court of Baltimore; Herman M. Moser, Judge.

Eugene H. James was convicted of murder in the first degree, and he appeals.

Judgement affirmed.

William H. Murphy, of Baltimore (Charles H. Houston of Washington, D. C., on the brief), for appellant.

Harrison L. Winter, Asst. Atty. Gen. (Hall Hammond, Atty. Gen., and J Bernard Wells, State's Atty., and Anselm Sodaro and Alan H. Murrell, Asst. State's Attys., all of Baltimore, on the brief), for appellee.

Before MARBURY, C.J., and DELAPLAINE, COLLINS, GRASON, HENDERSON and MARKELL, JJ.

MARKELL Judge.

This is an appeal in forma pauperis from a sentence to death on a verdict, by the court without a jury, of guilty of murder in the first degree.

On July 6, 1948, a few minutes after noon, Marsha Brill, eleven years old, was stabbed with a large knife by a colored man who came up Glen Avenue or out of the bushes on the side of Glen Avenue. She died of the wound at Union Memorial Hospital early the same afternoon. There is no evidence of an attempt to rape or that before the killer appeared on Glen Avenue appellant had even seen her.

Before she was stabbed she and two young friends, Barbara and Allan Sapper-stein, eleven and eight years old respectively, had been riding bicycles down Glen Avenue. The boy had turned back up the hill and the girls had stopped. When the man appeared he pointed a large knife at Marsha. She ran down the hill and Barbara up. The man followed and overtook Marsha, who was found lying on the ground, stabbed and crying, beside the road. A woman who lived in the neighborhood testified that about noon she saw appellant pass her house with a large knife in his hand.

Appellant was 31 years old. He had gone to several schools, never got beyond the fourth or fifth grade, and left school when he was about thirteen or fourteen. Four psychiatrists, Dr. Lerner, Dr. Guttmacher, medical officer of the Supreme Bench, Dr. Cushing and Dr. Spear, and one psychologist, Mr. Schoenrich, an assistant in Dr. Guttmacher's office, examined him and testified. Drs. Cushing and Spear were called by the State, the others by the defense. Drs. Guttmacher, Cushing and Spear testify that appellant was a responsible agent, that is, he knew the difference between right and wrong and the nature and consequences of his acts as applied to himself. There is no testimony to the contrary.

Dr. Guttmacher testifies that appellant 'has rather meager intellectual endowments, but is not seriously intellectually deficient. He can probably best be classified in the borderline group.' Mr. Schoenrich agrees with Dr. Guttmacher that 'although he is somewhat deficient intellectually, his defect is not a very serious one.' Dr. Guttmacher considers him 'a very severely mentally disordered individual,' but 'does not feel that he is suffering from a definite psychosis,' that is, 'from definite insanity'; he believes that 'he is an extremely abnormal individual from the psychiatric point of view.' Dr. Guttmacher 'would need a great deal of confirmation to be sure of any story he gave' him. He 'appears to wish to give the impression that he is mentally disordered. His efforts in this direction are inconsistent, and quite unintelligent.' Dr. Guttmacher believes that, when he was examined, he was malingering 'in a very stupid psychopathic way.' In Mr. Schoenrich's opinion, 'he has a severe mental disorder,' which 'expresses itself in a relative disregard for reality, tendency to indulge in fantastic thinking which has little connection with external realities,' and there are also 'indications of paranoid trends * * *, tendency to develop delusional sustems,' and 'schizophrenia is indicated'; he would say 'it is exceedingly hazardous' to rely upon the accuracy of any responses which he might give to questions, he thinks 'he is given to developing ideas which suit his fancy, and which have little relation to the real situation.' Dr. Lerner's opinion is that appellant 'is a mental defective belonging to the class of low-grade morons, and may be classified as a defective delinquent.' A certain test represented that he 'is a mental defective classified as a low-grade moron.' His mental age was 'somewhere just under ten'; he very definitely had fantastic ideas. A test revealed 'some schizoid characteristics and evidence of hostility towards the immature female.'

Dr. Cushing says in his report that appellant 'is feeble-minded with an estimated I. Q. 60 to 65' and that during examination he quite definitely was malingering; that he was not, in his opinion, 'a psychopath, but would fall into the group of defective delinquents, that is, mentally defective but not totally irresponsible as to his relations to society and to individuals in any intimate contact with him.' Dr. Spear testifies that tests showed 'he had the intelligence of the average individual of about eleven years. He was below normal. Taking into consideration his contacts, his opportunities, and so forth, I should say that he had the average intelligence for a man of his age and opportunities. He wasn't a smart person, he wasn't an absolutely dumb person, but he was a shrewd individual. The examination showed him to be a pathological liar.'

On July 6, 1948, the day of the killing, about 10:45 P.M. appellant was arrested at his home by two policemen, taken to the Northern Police Station, 'placed on the books' at 11:05, 'charged with investigation,' searched and put in a cell. About 12:15 A.M. (on July 7th) he was brought out of the cell, taken into Captain Lusby's office and questioned until about 1:30 A.M. He was then put back in his cell and remained there till about 2:55 P.M. He slept practically the whole night on the bench in the cell, part of the time in a sitting position, the rest of the time lying on his back. While he was at the Northern Police Station, he was given meals. At 2:55 P.M. he was given 'coveralls,' which the police had taken out of his house that morning, to put on. They were put on, and he was taken to Police headquarters and about 3:30 P.M. was put in a 'lineup.' Then he was taken into the cell block at the Bertillon Bureau for a few minutes, then into the office of Captain of Detectives Kriss, where Captain Kriss and Lieutenant Bryan had a short talk with him. Then, about 4:55 P.M., he was taken by Detective Lieutenants German and Hettchen and Sergeant Mahrer to a wooded section at Wabash and Sequoia Avenues. About 7:25 P.M. he was brought back to the Central Police Station, turned over to the turnkey and put in a cell. He remained in the cell until about 8:20 A.M. (on July 8th), when he was taken upstairs to Captain Kriss's office at Detective Headquarters. About 9 o'clock Captain Kriss turned him over to Lieutenant Bryan, who took him around the Bertillon Bureau till after roll call and about 9:15 back to Captain Kriss's office, where they talked to him till about 9:45. Lieutenant Bryan then took him back into his own office and took a statement from him, not about this case, and about 10:20 took him back to Captain Kriss's office, where they questioned him till about noon. He was then sent back to the Homicide Bureau, where he got his dinner. He was told to order what he wanted and ordered pork chops. About 1:55 P.M. Captain Kriss brought him back to his office where he remained with Captain Kriss, Inspector Itzel and Lieutenant Bryan until about 2:10 P.M.

He then was taken by Inspector Itzel and other policemen on an automobile trip through northern sections of the city and about six o'clock back to the Northern Police Station, where he was charged with murder and then put in a cell. Captain Lusby and another policeman went on the trip in another car. On the trip, at the scene of the crime, appellant confessed his guilt. After giving false leads, first to a trash dump for a 'sharp pointed stick,' and then to his home for a non-existent chisel, with which he 'might have done it,' he admitted 'it was a knife' and showed where he had buried the knife, and had marked the place with a stone and some twigs, in the woods on Whitney Avenue near Key Avenue. The knife was then and there dug up and at the trial was, with the stone and twigs, offered in evidence. About eight o'clock the same evening appellant was taken from his cell at the Northern Police Station to the 'Board Room' at the Central Police Station, where questions to him by Inspector Itzel and his answers were taken and written by a stenographer, read and signed by appellant, who also initialed each page, and witnessed by Inspector Itzel, Captain Lusby and two other policemen. The questioning began at 8:03 P.M. and ended at 8:43 P.M. The statement was transcribed by 9:43 P.M. and signed at 10 P.M. At 1 A.M. (July 9th) appellant was put in a cell at the Central Police Station for the night.

Appellant's mother and two of his sisters testify that on July 7th, about the middle of the day, at their house the mother asked Officer Lowman whether she could see appellant and the officer told her, no, she couldn't see him, nobody could see him but 'the lawyer.' The same day, as a result of that statement, she saw and employed a lawyer (who participated in the trial below and argued the case in this court), but did not tell him that statement till Friday (July 9th).

Appellant's signed statement was substantially the same as his oral statements in the afternoon of the same day. It was a complete confession of guilt of the crime charged. It was mutely corroborated by the knife, the stone and the twigs. Upwards of twenty-five witnesses, apparently practically everyone who had any contact with him from the time of his arrest till he signed the ...

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1 cases
  • Kier v. State
    • United States
    • Maryland Court of Appeals
    • June 6, 1957
    ...The inner psychological pressure of conscience to tell the truth does not constitute coercion in the legal sense. Cf. James v. State, 193 Md. 31, 42, 65 A.2d 888. See also Wigmore, Evidence (3rd ed.), §§ 832, 840; Underhill, Criminal Evidence (5th ed.), Sec. 388. In the instant case, howeve......

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