214 Mo. 392 | Mo. | 1908
This cause is here upon appeal by the defendants from a. judgment in the circuit court of the city of St. Louis, convicting- them of the offense of attempted robbery in the first degree. The offense upon which the judgments are predicated was thus charged in an information filed by the assistant circuit attorney:
“State of Missouri,-City of St. Louis, ss.
“Circuit Court, City of St. Louis, December Term, 1906.
“Richard M. Johnson, assistant circuit attorney, in and for the city of St. Louis aforesaid, within and for the body of the city of St. Louis, on behalf of the State of Missouri, upon his official oath, information makes as follows:
*395 “That Edward Carroll and Edward Gleason on the twenty-first day of December, in the year of onr Lord, one thousand nine hundred and six, at the city of St. Louis aforesaid, with force and arms in and upon T. P. Hoxey, violently and feloniously did make an assault, and by force and violence to his person and by putting him in fear of immediate injury to his person, did then and there violently and feloniously attempt to rob, steal, take and carry away the money and personal property of him, the said T. P. Hoxey, from his person and in the presence and against his will with the intent then and there to permanently deprive the owner of the use thereof and to convert the same to their own use, and in such attempt did then and there violently and feloniously strike the said T. P. Hoxey with a hilly and did then and there violently and feloniously with a pistol, loaded with gunpowder and leaden ball, shoot and wound the said T. P. Hoxey, in and upon the head and body of the said T. P. Hoxey, but did then and there fail in the accomplishment of such robbery, against the peace and dignity of the State.
“Rich. M. Johnson,
“Assistant Circuit Attorney.
“State of Missouri, City of St. Louis, ss.
“Richard M. Johnson being duly sworn, upon his oath, says that the statements made in the foregoing information are true.
“Rich. M. Johnson.
“Subscribed and sworn to before me this 21st day of January, 1907,” etc.
To this information the defendants entered their pleas of not guilty, and on April 3, 1907, they were put upon their trial. The evidence upon the part of the State tended substantially to prove the following state of facts: That what is known as the Buss Mill was located at No. 7550 North Broadway, in the
Conrad Hart, aged about nineteen years, testified that for eight or ten years he had been acquainted with the defendants, who were about his age. He said that in the fall of 1906 he had been out in California with the defendant Gleason, and had talked several times with Gleason on the subject of robbing’ the Buss Mill, where Gleason told him there was lots of easy money for them to get when they returned to St. Louis. Early in December Hart returned, to St. Louis and met the defendants, but nothing further was said about the suggested robbery until the day before the attempt was made, when Gleason asked Hart to go out to the Buss Mill, and said that the money was easy to get. The next morning' Gleason met Hart again and arranged for a meeting between Hart, Gleason and defendant Carroll at a later hour that morning. Pursuant to appointment, Hart met the defendants about 10:30 a. m., each, according to arrangements, having brought with him his overcoat. None of them had any money and the overcoats were brought for the purpose of pawning them in order to raise money with which to buy revolvers and ammunition and carry out the plan of robbery. They visited several pawnshops and pawned the overcoats of Hart and Carroll, thereby raising seven dollars. Gleason kept his overcoat. With the money thus obtained they visited stores, and Hart and Carroll each bought a cheap revolver and some ammunition. About noon they ate and drank together and soon afterwards took a car on the way to the mill on North Broadway. Hart said that while on the way they talked over the plan
The testimony of Hart, T. P. Hoxey and Pat O’Neill tended to prove that Hoxey and O’Neill were sitting in the office when Hart and Gleason entered. Gleason asked the privilege of using the telephone, which was in the office, and, being permitted to do so, he called up a plumbers’ supply company and talked about a fixture, or piece of fitting, for which he was going to send, and, as he hung up the telephone, he turned to Hart and asked whether Hart had money for the car fare. Hart replied that he had not, whereupon Gleason asked Hoxey if he could change a two-dollar bill. Hoxey, saying that he could do so, stepped to the safe, which was a small safe about three feet high sitting on the floor of the office, opened the safe and took from it the said money, of which he was in
Defendants offered no evidence.
At the close of the case the court instructed the jury and the cause was submitted to them. It is not necessary to reproduce the instructions, as counsel for
OPINION.
Learned counsel for appellants in their brief and argument present but two legal propositions for our consideration:
First. It is insisted that the information is insufficient to support the judgment in this, that it fails to charge an intent to deprive the owner of the use thereof without his consent. In other words, it is contended that it was essential to the validity of this information that it charge an intent to deprive the owner of the use of his property without his consent.
Second. That the evidence fails to show to whom the money, alleged to be in the safe, belonged. We will give these propositions in the order named such attention as their importance merits:
I.
In our opinion the information in this case is sufficient and there was no necessity for the use of the terms to which our attention has been directed by learned counsel for appellant, “without his consent,” in order to make the charge a valid one. This information properly charges every essential element nec
In State v. Lamb, 141 Mo. 298, the sufficiency of the indictment, which was one for robbery, was challenged by counsel for appellant, and it was expressly ruled by this court that the indictment was sufficient, and the information in the case at bar is substantially in the same form as in the Lamb case, with the exception that in the one case the charge was for robbery, and in the other attempted robbery; but so far as concerns the essential elements constituting the offense of robbery, an examination will demonstrate that the charge in the two cases is substantially the same.
To the same effect is the information in State v. Montgomery, 181 Mo. 19. The defendant in that case was convicted of robbery, and the judgment was affirmed. The information upon which the judgment was predicated, in charging the offense of robbery, employed substantially the same terms as embraced in the case at bar.
The information in this case is in perfect harmony with approved precedents. Neither the Lamb Case nor the Montgomery case, which were charges of robbery, employed the use of the terms without Ms consent, which counsel for appellants in the case at bar contend are essential to the validity of the information now being considered.
II.
It is insisted by appellants that the evidence fails to show to whom the property belonged which was
In State v. Montgomery, supra, the authorities upon this proposition were exhaustively reviewed. In that case it appeared that one Mr. Radford was the real owner of the property but a man by the name of Mills was in the lawful possession of it, and the information charged the ownership of the property in Mills, and after a careful consideration and exhaustive review of all the authorities upon this proposition, the
Learned counsel for appellant direct our attention to the case of State v. Davis, 138 Mo. 107; State v. Horned, 178 Mo. 59; State v. Jones, 168 Mo. 398; State v. Kelley, 206 Mo. 685. An examination of those cases will demonstrate that they charged the ownership of the property in some company, either a mercantile company, or a railroad company. It was held that it was essential, if those companies were a partnership, to give the names of the partners, or if a corporation to so charge in the information or indictment. It is by no means ruled in those cases, and it is not even suggested, that if some individual was in possession of the property the ownership of it could not be laid in such person.
T. P. Hoxey was in the lawful possession of this property, and it was charged that he was the owner of such property, and the proof fully sustains the allegations of ownership1. There is no pretense that the testimony in this case was insufficient to support the verdicts.
We have given expression to our views upon the only propositions urged by counsel for appellants, which results in the conclusion that the judgment of the trial court should be affirmed, and it is so ordered.