89 Mo. 312 | Mo. | 1886
defendants were indicted for the murder of John Rea, the indictment charging Anderson as the principal, and Baugh as accessory. The crime was charged to have been committed by shooting with a shot gun; and on being tried they were convicted •of murder in the first degree, and sentenced accordingly. At a former trial they were convicted of murder in the second degree, but on appeal that judgment was reversed because of the absence of certain instructions, which there is every reason to believe the trial court gave, but which were not incorporated in the bill of ex- ' ceptions. The cause is again here on appeal, counsel for defendants assigning several errors; errors relating to the grade of the crime of which the defendants were convicted; the failure of the evidence to show deliberation and malice ; the giving of improper instructions on behalf of the state; the failure to properly instruct the jury on behalf of the defendants ; the failure to admit proper testimony offered by defendants, and the failure of the evidence to show that Baugh was guilty of any grade of homicide.
I. The constitutional point raised by counsel for defendants, that, having been found guilty of murder in the second degree, thereby they go forever acquit of murder in the first degree, and cannot again be tried therefor, has been otherwise ruled in State v. Simms, 71 Mo. 538.
Upon Singleton’s asking who killed Rea, Anderson said : “We did it — I did it.” Said that Rea had tried to break the door open, and then shot at Baugh twice, then came at him ; that Rea jerked the pistol out of Baugh’s hands ; then shot at him twice-; that he cut Baugh and
When Dr. Grant, the coroner, arrived at Baugh’s cabin, about eleven o’clock the same evening, he found a large pocket knife, half open, lying on the doorstep • this had no blood stains on it, and when handed by the coroner to Snider, who was also present, tobacco crumbs fell out of it. No weapon, knife, or pistol, was found in Rea’s hands, or on his person, and a wound was found in the left shoulder, back of the top of the shoulder, about the size of the bottom of a tea cup, which penetrated downwards and inwards, and the shot taken from it was about the size of a turkey shot, and the indications were that when shot he was stooping forward, facing the man who shot him, who was above him. Rea had no coat on, and his clothing on his right breast had been burned, and there was a burn on that breast, and one of the witnesses states that there was a wound on that breast, as well as a bruise about an inch and a half long. The bed in the
This is tbe testimony of a witness who went to tbe ■cabin only four or five minutes after the shooting occurred. The knife found on tbe door step was proven to have been borrowed by Rea, tbe day before be was killed, from Hill, with whom be was at work, in order to fix bis harness. Rea bad formerly lived with Baugh, and after a ■difference and law-suit bad occurred between them, bad moved over to Singleton’s, leaving a bed-stead and mattress at Baugb’s. Threats frequently made by Baugh towards Rea’s life, in case be came to tbe cabin again, were testified to, some of them occurring but a few days before tbe homicide. Threats also on tbe part of Rea towards Baugh, made some month or more before tbe fatal occurrence, were proven, but were not so pronounced in their nature as those of Baugh. It was also
The evidence further discloses that Anderson and Baugh are cousins, Anderson living two miles from Baugh’s; that Baugh went in the morning of the eighth of April to Anderson’s house ; went away and returned again, and remained there from about noon till about .four p. M. Anderson was having the chills, had one that day and was covered up in bed. It was a cold, blustering, raw afternoon, the wind was blowing quite hard, a sudden cold north" wind having sprung up about 3:30, when Anderson got out of bed and accompanied Baugh to his cabin. They had arrived there by five p. sr., for Mrs. Singleton says they passed her house that afternoon, and Murphy says they passed his house about four o’ clock that afternoon going towards the mill, and Trotter passed within three feet of the corner of the cabin on his return from Cary’s, and when he did so he saw the door closed, and heard the voice of Baugh and someone else inside, his attention]being attracted thereto by hearing “ the door create /” and in about two minutes thereafter, when he had gone his way, he heard the shots fired. There was evidence also that Baugh was seen just after the homicide, by one who met him about two hundred and fifty yards from his cabin, walking pretty fast; that he did not speak, and no blood or cuts were •seen upon him. And it was shown in evidence that Anderson had subsequently admitted that Baugh, on the day of the killing, had told him there was to be a row or difficulty that night, or the next, and wanted him to go home with him; but he told Baugh he did not want
On the part of the defence, Joel Anderson testified: ££I am one of the defendants ; was born in this county, and am fifty-three years old; never was away from the state except in time of the war. John Rea and I were friends, never had an unfriendly word ; he had been at my house to borrow money within a week before he was killed; when he shot a negro I befriended him and kept him at my house nine weeks ; I was having chills — ■ had a chill every third day ; had a chill April 8, 1884 when Baugh came to my house not one word was said about John Rea, or any difficulty between him and Baugh; or of any expected row or fuss; while Baugh was there I wanted to see Thomas about hauling some wheat, and Marlow about some corn, and went up with Baugh; on the way I saw Thomas about hauling the wheat; we passed near Singleton’s house, and I spoke to her as we passed; we went along the road in sight of the men at the mill; we went to Baugh ’ s cabin, and I felt so bad after the walk that I laid down; it was a blustery April day ; the wind was blowing quite hard; the door of the cabin was shut most of the time; Baugh got a bite to eat; I drank a cup of tea and ate a little something and went back to bed; we went up about four p. m. ; about dusk Rea came to the door and said, £ Hello, let me in.’ Baugh said, £ Who is it ? ’ Rea said, £ It is me, Laurel, I want to come in and put up, my bed ; ’ Baugh said, ‘You can’t do it, we have had trouble and we can’t do it; ’ I told Baugh to open the door and let him in; as he opened the door Rea came with his knife and
And there was also evidence that on the evening in question, Anderson was seen going home from Baugh’s cabin, with his hand bleeding and blood on the skirt of his coat, and that the cut was in the palm of his hand, and was dressed by a druggist the next morning. And there was evidence that the- chinking had been knocked out and the strip sawed off the door several days prior to the eighth day of April; and evidence of the opinion
The state, in rebuttal, showed that it was from six and a half to seven and a half feet from-the edge of the’ door up to the breach of the gun when in the rack, and that upon a careful and thorough examination no bullet holes were found in the roof of the cabin, and when examined, log by log, no bullet holes were found in the cottonwood logs, of which the walls of the cabin were built.
The foregoing is a sufficient statement of the evidence, apart from the testimony of Singleton, taken on the preliminary hearing, which was introduced in order to contradict his testimony at the trial, and which it does in some particulars, but the effect of such contradictions are measurably, if not altogether, neutralized by the explanation of the witness that he wished to correct his testimony after it was read to him, but was told it made no difference. Whether this explanation was satisfactory was exclusively for the jury.
I have been thus particular in narrating the salient features of the evidence, pro and con, and of setting forth the evidence of Anderson in its entirety, because it is insisted that the evidence fails to show deliberation and malice, and because upon that evidence depends the propriety of giving several instructions on behalf of the state, and of the refusal to give others in regard to a lower grade of homicide than those given by the court. And I have been the more particular, also, because two human lives are being weighed in the scales of justice ; and weighed against that evidence and all legitimate inferences therefrom.
But if Rea, after the door was opened, had cut Baugh, taken his pistol from him, and returning from pursuing him, had fired two shots at Anderson at close range, as lie stood stooping in the cabin door, one of which passed through his hat, and one through his clothes, how does it happen that in Rea’s left hand is found his hat, and how does it happen that a diligent search made by two witnesses failed to discover any traces of the bullets thus fired ? How does it happen, also, that in the alleged struggle in the small cabin, between Rea and Baugh, none of the furniture was disarranged, or overturned, and no blood stained the floor ? But, more than all, what became of the pistol which Rea had in his left hand, and of the knife which he held in his right hand at the time he attacked Anderson and was shot dead in his tracks ? These weapons were found neither in Rea’s hands, nor on, nor near his person. That neither of defendants would have removed them, furnishing, as thejr would, such convincing proofs of the truth of Anderson’s story, is attested by every consideration of the most obvious and the most powerful self-interest. As to the half-opened knife haying been found on the door step, it may be disposed of by the remark that it bore upon it no blood stains, and that it had not
These physical facts are of such irresistible cogency, that testimony which attempts to overthrow them, must be baffled in the effort. As to the fact of Baugh having been wounded severely by Rea, it is a very pregnant circumstance that he made no complaint when Singleton and others reached the cabin, and this, it seems, he would instinctively have done, had the wounds, after-wards discovered, been then in existence. If these wounds on Baugh were inflicted at a period subsequent to the conflict; inflicted by his own hand or the hand of another, and there is ample room in the evidence for such an inference, that inference entirely legitimate as it is, is most damaging in its tendency, as showing that Baugh, in order to exonerate himself, and to support Anderson’s story, had fabricated evidence with that exculpatory purpose in view. This is termed the forgery of real evidence. Best’s Evid. [Chamberlayne’s Ed.] 205, et seq.; and the maxim “ Omnia preswmmtur contra spoliatorem ” apnlies.' lb. 397, 197, 117.
But notice further, Anderson came on the stand as a witness ; he testified to facts peculiarly within his own knowledge ; he knew how the clothing was burned, and the bruise and the wound inflicted on- Rea’s right breast, and yet he is wholly silent on the point. Why thus silent % He testified to the bullet hole shot through his hat and to the one through his clothes, and yet neither hat nor clothes were produced on the trial, though they would have spoken most powerfully in this behalf. And while it is true that under the statute no comment or allusion can be made as to the failure of a defendant to testify in his own behalf, ,yet this statutory rule extends no further than the terms of the statute, so that when a defendant in a criminal cause takes the stand as a witness, and fails, as in this case, to
III. Now as to the instructions: Objection is-taken to the seventh instruction on behalf of the state on the ground that there is no evidence whatever that the-defendants brought on or voluntarily entered into the difficulty. On this matter it suffices to point to the evidence itself, and to all the legitimate inferences to be-drawn therefrom. The form of the instruction is objectionable in that it does not use after the words “ brought on the difficulty,” the qualifying words “with.the view to wreak their malice.” I still entertain the views on this point which I took occasion to express in State v. Culler, 82 Mo. 623, and that view is amply supported by the authorities; I find none to the contrary, in addition to those there cited, see King v. State, 13 Tex. App. 277; Stoffer v. State, Harrigan & Thompson’s Cases on Self-Defence, pp. 213, 227; Adams case, lb.-208. But notwithstanding this, the omission of the words mentioned, or of equivalent words did no harm, since it is evident that if defendants brought on the difficulty they brought it on of their umaliee pre
IY. The failure of the court to give any instruction as to any lower grade of homicide, has already been touched upon. The evidence adduced, giving the greatest latitude of credibility to Anderson’s testimony, and considering it apart from any other, made out a clear case of self-defence, and on this topic instructions were given. On the other hand, the other evidence in the cause powerfully tends to show a case of murder in the first degree, and on this, as well as murder in the second ■degree, appropriate instructions were given. On no other theories could the cause have been tried, and this was the view taken of the case when here on a former occasion. And, indeed, it may well be doubted, considering the intrinsic improbability of Anderson’s story, •contradicted as it was by the physical facts of the case, whether any instruction involving the question of self-defence should have been given. Neither courts nor juries should be required to base their action or belief on physical impossibilities. If this be the correct position, then the case, shorn of-all its extraneous and irrelevant features, stands out upon the record, just as the verdict of the jury finds it to be, one of murder in the first degree, without a single palliating feature, and unredeemed by a single extenuating circumstance.
Y. In regard to the instructions asked by defendants : There was no error in modifying the fifth asked on their behalf. The sixth instruction had told the jury
VI. The only remaining point is the refusal of the-court to permit Moore to contradict Mrs. Singleton as to whether she had said at her house on the morning of the homicide that there was “.going to be some fun there that day.” The proposed testimony had no possible bearing or relevancy, and was wholly immaterial. This is enough on the point.