199 Mo. 154 | Mo. | 1906
By this appeal the reversal of a verdict and judgment of the circuit court of St. Francois county, convicting the defendant of murder in the second degree and fixing his punishment at ninety-nine years in the penitentiary for having shot to death.with a pistol at said county on the fourth day of July, 1904, one Samuel Gann, is sought.
In due time after verdict defendant filed motions for á new trial and in arrest, which were overruled. He appeals.
At a picnic at Knob Lick in said county on the 4th day of July, 1904, late in the evening there was dancing, a platform about sixteen by twenty feet having, been constructed for that purpose. Between eight and nine o’clock, Ed Gann, a brother of the deceased, was dancing upon this platform and got into a controversy with-one Bert Williams. The platform was poorly lighted. Ed Gann and Williams wanted to dance with
The defendant’s evidence tended to prove that Bert Williams was standing on the dancing platform just prior to the shooting, talking to Miss Mattie Wompler about dancing the next set. That Ed Gann
In rebuttal, the State proved that the town of
Tbe court instructed for murder in tbe first and second degrees, self-defense, want of motive and good character of defendant.
Defendant is not represented in this court. Various grounds of error are assigned in tbe motions for new trial and in arrest, all of which are practically without merit.
Tbe information is well enough, contains all necessary averments, and is properly verified.
There was no reversible error in admitting evidence upon tbe part of tbe State, although some of it tended to show that defendant shot and killed a different person from tbe one tbe information charges him with killing. If be shot at Ed Gann with tbe felonious intent to kill and murder him and tbe ball bit and killed Samuel Gann, the law transfers tbe felonious intent to tbe latter, and be was just as much guilty of murder under such circumstances as if be bad shot directly at Samuel Gann with tbe felonious intent to kill and murder him. [State v. Gilmore, 95 Mo. 554; State v. Clark, 147 Mo. 20.]
Moreover, all that occurred at tbe time of tbe shooting with respect thereto was part of tbe res gestae, and properly admitted upon that ground. [State v. Woodward, 191 Mo. 617.]
While no objection was made to tbe instructions at tbe time and could not be raised for tbe first time in tbe motion for new trial, and therefore not before us for review, they were exceedingly fair to tbe defend- • ant, and upon tbe subject of self-defense unwarranted by tbe evidence — but as this is an error in favor of defendant be is not in position to complain of it.
Tbe evidence was sufficient to have justified tbe
The judgment should be affirmed. It is so ordered.