79 Mo. 509 | Mo. | 1883
Carver sued Huskey before a justice of the peace for wantonly and maliciously killing his hound, and recovered judgment. Huskey appealed to the circuit court, where Carver again had judgment, from 'which Hus-key appeals to this court.
Upon the trial before the circuit court the plaintiff, among other things, offered to prove that defendant had told witness sometime before the alleged killing that “ he and his neighbors were going to put a stop to people hunting in their neighborhood ; and if they did not keep out of that neighborhood with their hounds, they .would be prosecuted and their hounds killed that defendant also told a witness that .he, defendant, “ sent word to Sam Byrns and Andrew Huskey that if they brought their hounds out into his neighborhood he would kill them.” These declarations or threats were objected to by the defendant, but the court overruled his objection, and he asks that the judgment be reversed because of their admission as evidence. There was other evidence in the case upon which the jury might very well have based their verdict, but these statements are alleged by the defendant to be incompetent.
In Benedict v. State, 14 Wis. 423, which was an indictment for murder, the court says: “ The prisoner, while exhibiting the knife with which he is charged to have committed the murder, said that he would take some man’s life before next Sunday,” and to other witnesses he used “ general threatening language that the knife would probably be the death of some person before the week was out,” that he “ had made up his mind to kill a man.” “ These declarations were correctly received and submitted to the consideration of the jury.” "When contemplating some unlawful or malicious act, men are prone to exhibit malicious intent by mysterious inuendoes or threats, or boasts
This case being for the malicious and wanton destruction of personal property, (R. S. 1879, § 3929,) the declarations complained of are competent, as tending to show the malicious intent and to be considered by the jury for that purpose. Let the judgment be affirmed.