78 Mo. App. 505 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1899
A reference to the statement made by us of this case when it was here on a former appeal — 69 Mo. App. 192 — and to such additional matters as we shall herein-after notice, will, we think, be found sufficient for a correct understanding of the questions presented by the present record.
The defendant objected, when the case was here before, that the trial court had erred in its action denying the demurrer which had been interposed to the evidence. In passing
An examination of the evidence presented by the present record discloses that about the only fact which it tends to show, different from that shown by the record in the other case, is to the effect that at about dark on the evening of the homicide on Independence Avenue in Sheffield, Biggs was seen to pursue Smith and to throw with great force a rock at the latter as he fled. It is suggested that the three witnesses whose testimony tended to prove these facts were not credible. As to what weight, if any, was to be given the testimony of these witnesses was a question for the jury and not for the court. It was not only contradictory of that of Biggs, but it tended to prove that he was the aggressor at the very inception of the hostilities.
Two women who kept a restaurant near the railway station at Sheffield testified for the first time in the case in substance that fifteen or twenty minutes before the homicide happened Smith, with a gun in his hands, came into then-house in an excited condition and made a purchase of a couple of cigars, and, on leaving, remarked, “I will get him or he will get me, the A. P. A. son-of-a-bitch.” It appears from the record that the two Brooks testified at each trial to similar declarations made by Smith in their hearing shortly before the homicide. The testimony of the keepers of the restaurant was but cumulative and tended to establish no fact that was not considered by us in passing on the demurrer on the first appeal. It does not appear that the plaintiff testified at- the
If the colloquy leading up to the homicide took place between Biggs and Smith as the former testified, then there would be no liability under the rule declared in Lovelace v. Ins. Co., 126 Mo. 104, and the other cases cited by defendant. If it were an undisputed fact that when Biggs met Smith near the roundhouse, he told the latter that he did not want to have any difficulty with him and warned him that he was armed and that such latter, after this, persisted in bringing on the difficulty, which he must have known would likely result in fatal consequences to himself, and did so result, then he thereby voluntarily assumed the risk of death. But the evidence in which reliance is had to prove that Smith brought on the difficulty, which resulted in his death, and thereby voluntarily assumed the risk which he knew, or ought to have known as a reasonable man, would likely ensue, can not be said to be undisputed. The relation which the evidence conduces to show Biggs sustained to the homicide was a fact to be considered in determining the truthfulness of his account of how the homicide occurred. It must not be forgotten that he was the only living eye witness to the homicide. The manner and means by which Smith lost his life can be gleaned only from the uncorroborated testimony of Biggs and the circumstances otherwise established by the evidence. It was but natural for Biggs to give such an account of the homicide as would screen himself from all criminal responsibility and the blame and reproach of his fellow men. The inborn and natural inclination to utter the truth in such cases generally yields to the requirements of the law of self-preservation.
It appears from the testimony of Biggs that shortly after Smith passed by the house of Brooks on his way to the coal chute, he, Biggs, went to his room and armed himself with an English bull dog pistol, and from there went toward the coal chute himself where he met Smith and the fatal shooting
These facts and circumstances with others, to which we have made no reference, convince us that the evidence of the facts upon which defendant relies to show nonliability is not uncontradicted. The testimony given by Biggs, and upon which the defense depends for its main support can not be considered as undisputed evidence. The evidence is, indeed, in very many material particulars quite contradictory.
It seems to us that the principal vice in the instruction in question is that it assumes in effect that there was-undisputed evidence adduced showing the manner in which Smith was shot when it is disclosed by the record that the only evidence of that fact is the testimony of Biggs, which is rendered unsatisfactory if not destroyed by the facts and circumstances disclosed by other evidence. If this instruction had told the jury that if they believed from all the evidence before them that the account of the manner of Smith’s death as detailed in the testimony of the witness Biggs was correct, then no presumption could be indulged that Smith came to his death in a manner different from that detailed by the witness Biggs; or, in other words, that such explanation was sufficient to rebut the presumption that Smith was in the exercise of ordinary care when he was shot. If the rule asserted by the defendant’s instruction can be successfully invoked and applied in a case like this, then the assassin, having, as under
The instructions given by the court very fully and-clearly covered every issue in the case and fairly met every suggestion made by us in relation thereto, when the ease was' here on the former appeal. It results from the views expressed by us respecting the defendant’s demurrer to the evidence, that the verdict is amply supported by such evidence. The judgment will accordingly be affirmed.