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The Complete Newgate Calendar
Volume IV

BARTHOLOMEW QUAILN

Executed, after a great Legal Argument, On 7th of
March, 1791, in the Isle of Ely, for the Murder of
his Wife

IN the case of this unfortunate man the judges were
called upon to decide whether he had murdered his
wife by kicking her, or whether her death was occasioned
only after "reasonable chastisement," which he had inflicted
upon her.
   Bartholomew Quailn, a poor labouring man, was tried
at the assizes for the Isle of Ely for the wilful murder of
his wife; but on the Court doubting whether the affair was
murder or manslaughter the jury found a special verdict,
which, being removed certiorari, was now argued, in the
presence of the prisoner, by Mr Plumtre for the Crown,
and Mr Wilson for the unhappy man at the bar.
   The facts were principally these. The prisoner, with
his infant child on one arm, and a coarse bag on the other,
followed his wife out of a public-house in the parish of
Hadgrane, in the county of Cambridge. Soon afterwards
his wife was seen lying on the road, quarrelling with her hus-
band, who stood near her, because he would not give her
the bag which he held in his left hand. High words passed
between them; and, upon some provoking expressions
being made use of by the wife, the prisoner ran up to her
and kicked her violently as she lay on the ground. She got

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up and endeavoured to run away from him, but he ran after
her, and on his overtaking her she again fell to the ground,
when he again kicked her with great violence. She rose
again, and endeavoured to make her escape, but he again
followed her, and on her falling down he kicked her violently
as before.
   While she lay on the ground a person called to him and
asked him how he could treat his wife so barbarously. To
which he replied that he would serve her in the same
manner. The deceased rose again from the ground, and
endeavoured to get from him, but he followed her, threw
her down, and gave her several violent kicks, upon which
she clapped her hand to her side and exclaimed, " Oh,
Bat, now you have done for me ! " or " Now you have
killed me," or some words to that effect; and soon after
she expired.
   The prisoner showed great grief and concern for her
death. The jurors found that she had not given him any
other provocation ; that her spleen had been burst by the
kicks she so received ; and that the said bursting of the
spleen had been the cause of her death.
   Mr Plumtre, after an elegant exordium, entered into the
definition of murder as laid down by Hawkins and Hale;
described the two kinds of malice in fact and in law, or, as
they are more generally called, malice express and malice im-
plied ; and contended that, from the circumstances of this
case, the Court must imply that the prisoner was impelled
by that malice which, according to the words of Mr Justice
Forster, showed " his heart to be regardless of social duty,
and his mind deliberately bent upon mischief."
   Mr Wilson, for the prisoner, raised two objections in
point of form, which, however, were overruled by the
Court.
   The judges gave their opinions seriatim, and were clear
and unanimous that the facts as stated on the special verdict
amounted to the crime of murder. They relied upon the
doctrine laid down by Mr Justice Forster that " in every
charge of murder, the fact of killing being first proved, all

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the circumstances of accident, necessity or infirmity are to
be satisfactorily proved by the prisoner, unless they arise
out of the evidence produced against him; for the law
presumes the fact to be founded on malice until the contrary
appears " ; that upon the present occasion there was no one
fact of provocation stated on the verdict that could induce
the prisoner to kick his wife in so violent a manner, for,
so far from her making any resistance, it appeared she en-
deavoured all she could to get away from him. Chastisement,
wherever that right exists, must be done in a reasonable
manner ; but where it is exercised in so violent a manner
as in the present case it shows the heart to be regardless
of social duty, and deliberately bent on mischief.
   This case was like the case of the park-keeper who tied
a boy to a horse's tail and then struck the boy, which
occasioned the horse to run away, by which the boy was
killed. Death, perhaps, was not intended in either case,
but the mode of correction in both was violent ; or, as the
printed report of the case called it, it was a deliberate
act; from which, as death ensued, it was adjudged to be
murder,
   There was also a case in Kelynge, pages 64 and 65,
where a woman was indicted for murdering her child; and
it appeared that she had kicked her on the belly, and it was
adjudged murder.
   The Clerk of the Crown called upon the prisoner and,
after reading the proceedings, asked him what he had to
say why the Court should not pronounce on him judgment
to die according to law.
   Mr Justice Ashurst, putting on the black coif which
is worn on these occasions, pronounced sentence of death
in the most solemn and affecting manner -- viz. that the
prisoner should be hanged by the neck, and his body
delivered to the surgeons to be dissected and anatomised.
   He was executed on the 7th of March, 1791.

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