The Art of Cross-Examination Part 16
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CHAPTER XII
THE CROSS-EXAMINATION OF DR. ---- IN THE CARLYLE W. HARRIS CASE
The records of the criminal courts in this country contain few cases that have excited so much human interest among all cla.s.ses of the community as the prosecution and conviction of Carlyle W. Harris.
Even to this day--ten years after the trial--there is a widespread belief among men, perhaps more especially among women, who did not attend the trial, but simply listened to the current gossip of the day and followed the newspaper accounts of the court proceedings, that Harris was innocent of the crime for the commission of which his life was forfeited to the state.
It is proposed in this chapter to discuss some of the facts that led up to the testimony of one of the most distinguished toxicologists in the country, who was called for the defence on the crucial point in the case; and to give extracts from his cross-examination, his failure to withstand which was the turning-point in the entire trial. He returned to his home in Philadelphia after he left the witness-stand, and openly declared in public, when asked to describe his experiences in New York, that he had "gone to New York only to make a fool of himself and return home again."
It is also proposed to give some of the _inside_ history of the case--facts that never came out at the trial, not because they were unknown at the time to the district attorney, nor unsusceptible of proof, but because the strict rules of evidence in such cases often, as it seems to the writer, withhold from the ears of the jury certain facts, the mere recital of which seems to conclude the question of guilt. For example, the rule forbidding the presentation to the jury of anything that was said by the victim of a homicide, even to witnesses surrounding the death-bed, unless the victim in express terms makes known his own belief that he cannot live, and that he has abandoned all _hope_ or expectation of recovery before he tells the tale of the manner in which he was slain, or the causes that led up to it, has allowed many a guilty prisoner, if not to escape entirely, at least to avoid the full penalty for the crime he had undoubtedly committed.
Carlyle Harris was a gentleman's son, with all the advantages of education and breeding. In his twenty-second year, and just after graduating with honors from the College of Physicians and Surgeons in New York City, he was indicted and tried for the murder of Miss Helen Potts, a young, pretty, intelligent, and talented school girl in attendance at Miss Day's Ladies' Boarding School, on 40th Street, New York City.
Harris had made the acquaintance of Miss Potts in the summer of 1889, and all during the winter paid marked attention to her. The following spring, while visiting her uncle, who was a doctor, she was delivered of a four months' child, and was obliged to confess to her mother that she was secretly married to Harris under a.s.sumed names, and that her student husband had himself performed an abortion upon her.
Harris was sent for. He acknowledged the truth of his wife's statements, but refused to make the marriage public. From this time on, till the day of her daughter's death, the wretched mother made every effort to induce Harris to acknowledge his wife publicly. She finally wrote him on the 20th of January, 1891, "You must go on the 8th of February, the anniversary of your secret marriage, before a minister of the gospel, and there have a Christian marriage performed--no other course than this will any longer be satisfactory to me or keep me quiet."
That very day Harris ordered at an apothecary store six capsules, each containing 4-1/2 grains of quinine and 1/6 of a grain of morphine, and had the box marked: "C. W. H. Student. One before retiring." Miss Potts had been complaining of sick headaches, and Harris gave her four of these capsules as an ostensible remedy. He then wrote to Mrs. Potts that he would agree to her terms "unless some other way could be found of satisfying her scruples," and went hurriedly to Old Point Comfort. Upon hearing from his wife that the capsules made her worse instead of better, he still persuaded her to continue taking them. On the day of her death she complained to her mother about the medicine Carlyle had given her, and threatened to throw the box with the remaining capsule out of the window. Her mother persuaded her to try this last one, which she promised to do. Miss Potts slept in a room with three cla.s.smates who, on this particular night, had gone to a symphony concert. Upon their return they found Helen asleep, but woke her up and learned from her that she had been having "such beautiful dreams," she "had been dreaming of Carl." Then she complained of feeling numb, and becoming frightened, begged the girls not to let her go to sleep. She repeated that she had taken the medicine Harris had given her, and asked them if they thought it possible that he would give her anything to harm her.
She soon fell into a profound coma, breathing only twice to the minute.
The doctors worked over her for eleven hours without restoring her to consciousness, when she stopped breathing entirely.
The autopsy, fifty-six days afterward, disclosed an apparently healthy body, and the chemical a.n.a.lysis of the contents of the stomach disclosed the presence of morphine but _not_ of quinine, though the capsules as originally compounded by the druggist contained twenty-seven times as much quinine as morphine.
This astounding discovery led to the theory of the prosecution: that Harris had emptied the contents of _one_ of the capsules, had subst.i.tuted morphine in sufficient quant.i.ties to kill, _in place of_ the 4-1/2 grains of quinine (to the eye, powdered quinine and morphine are identical), and had placed this fatal capsule in the box with the other three harmless ones, one to be taken each night. He had then fled from the city, not knowing which day would brand him a murderer.
Immediately after his wife's death Harris went to one of his medical friends and said: "I only gave her four capsules of the six I had made up; _the two I kept out will show that they are perfectly harmless. No jury can convict me with those in my possession; they can be a.n.a.lyzed and proved to be harmless._"
They _were_ a.n.a.lyzed and it was proved that the prescription had been correctly compounded. But oftentimes the means a criminal uses in order to conceal his deed are the very means that Providence employs to reveal the sin that lies hidden in his soul. Harris failed to foresee that it was the preservation of these capsules that would really convict him.
Miss Potts had taken _all_ that he had given her, and no one could ever have been certain that it was not the druggist's awful mistake, had not these retained capsules been a.n.a.lyzed. When Harris emptied one capsule and reloaded it with morphine, _he had himself become the druggist_.
It was contended that Harris never intended to recognize Helen Potts as his wife. He married her in secret, it appeared at the trial,--as it were from his own lips through the medium of conversation with a friend,--"because he could not accomplish her ruin in any other way." He brought her to New York, was married to her before an alderman under a.s.sumed names, and then having accomplished his purpose, burned the evidence of their marriage, the false certificate. Finally, when the day was set upon which he _must_ acknowledge her as his wife, he planned her death.
The late recorder, Frederick Smyth, presided at the trial with great dignity and fairness. The prisoner was ably represented by John A.
Taylor, Esq., and William Travers Jerome, Esq., the present district attorney of New York.
Mr. Jerome's cross-examination of Professor Witthaus, the leading chemist for the prosecution, was an extremely able piece of work, and during its eight hours disclosed an amount of technical information and research such as is seldom seen in our courts. Had it not been for the witness's impregnable position, he certainly would have succ.u.mbed before the attack. The length and technicality of the examination render its use impracticable in this connection; but it is recommended to all students of cross-examination who find themselves confronted with the task of examination in so remote a branch of the advocate's equipment as a knowledge of chemistry.
The defence consisted entirely of medical testimony, directed toward creating a doubt as to our theory that morphine was the cause of death.
Their cross-examination of our witnesses was suggestive of death from natural causes: from heart disease, a brain tumor, apoplexy, epilepsy, uremia. In fact, the multiplicity of their defences was a great weakness. Gradually they were forced to abandon all but two possible causes of death,--that by morphine poisoning and that by uremic poisoning. This narrowed the issue down to the question, Was it a large dose of morphine that caused death, or was it a latent kidney disease that was superinduced and brought to light in the form of uremic coma by small doses of morphine, such as the one-sixth of a grain admittedly contained in the capsules Harris administered? In one case Harris was guilty; in the other he was innocent.
Helen Potts died in a profound coma. Was it the coma of morphine, or that of kidney disease? Many of the leading authorities in this city had given their convictions in favor of the morphine theory. In reply to those, the defence was able to call a number of young doctors, who have since made famous names for themselves, but who at the time were almost useless as witnesses with the jury because of their comparative inexperience. Mr. Jerome had, however, secured the services of one physician who, of all the others in the country, had perhaps apparently best qualified himself by his writings and thirty years of hospital experience to speak authoritatively upon the subject.
His direct testimony was to the effect that--basing his opinion partly upon wide reading of the literature of the subject, and what seemed to him to be the general consensus of professional opinion about it, and "_very largely on his own experience_"--no living doctor can distinguish the coma of morphine from that of kidney disease; and as the theory of the criminal law is that, if the death can be equally as well attributed to natural causes as to the use of poison, the jury would be bound to give the prisoner the benefit of the doubt and acquit him.
It was the turning-point in the trial. If any of the jurors credited this testimony,--the witness gave the reasons for his opinion in a very quiet, conscientious, and impressive manner,--there certainly could be no conviction in the case, nothing better than a disagreement of the jury. It was certain Harris had given the capsules, but unless his wife had died of morphine poisoning, he was innocent of her death.
The cross-examination that follows is much abbreviated and given partly from memory. It was apparent that the witness would withstand any amount of technical examination and easily get the better of the cross-examiner if such matters were gone into. He had made a profound impression. The court had listened to him with breathless interest. He must be dealt with gently and, if possible, led into self-contradictions where he was least prepared for them.
The cross-examiner sparred for an opening with the determination to strike quickly and to sit down if he got in one telling blow. The first one missed aim a little, but the second brought a peal of laughter from the jury and the audience, and the witness retired in great confusion.
Even the lawyers for the defence seemed to lose heart, and although two hours before time of adjournment, begged the court for a recess till the following day.
_Counsel_ (quietly). "Do you wish the jury to understand, doctor, that Miss Helen Potts did not die of morphine poisoning?"
_Witness._ "I do not swear to that."
_Counsel._ "What did she die of?"
_Witness._ "I don't swear what she died of."
_Counsel._ "I understood you to say that in your opinion the symptoms of morphine could not be sworn to with positiveness. Is that correct?"
_Witness._ "I don't think they can, with positiveness."
_Counsel._ "Do you wish to go out to the world as saying that you have never diagnosed a case of morphine poisoning excepting when you had an autopsy to exclude kidney disease?"
_Witness._ "I do not. I have not said so."
_Counsel._ "Then you have diagnosed a case on the symptoms alone, yes?
or no? I want a categorical answer."
_Witness_ (sparring). "I would refuse to answer that question categorically; the word 'diagnosed' is used with two different meanings.
One has to make what is known as a 'working diagnosis' when he is called to a case, not a positive diagnosis."
_Counsel._ "When was your last case of opium or morphine poisoning?"
_Witness._ "I can't remember which was the last."
_Counsel_ (seeing an opening). "I don't want the name of the patient.
Give me the date approximately, that is, the year--but under oath."
_Witness._ "I think the last was some years ago."
_Counsel._ "How many years ago?"
_Witness_ (hesitating). "It may be eight or ten years ago."
_Counsel._ "Was it a case of death from morphine poisoning?"
_Witness._ "Yes, sir."
_Counsel._ "Was there an autopsy?"
_Witness._ "No, sir."
_Counsel._ "How did you know it was a death from morphine, if, as you said before, such symptoms cannot be distinguished?"
The Art of Cross-Examination Part 16
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The Art of Cross-Examination Part 16 summary
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