212 Mo. 132 | Mo. | 1908
— On January 15,1907, the prosecuting attorney of Butler county, Missouri, filed an amended information in the circuit court of said county, charging the defendant with murder in the second degree, in having shot and killed, with a pistol, one John Hargrove, also known as John McCall. The case was first tried on January 23,1907, when the jury disagreed and were discharged. The second trial occurred on
The testimony showed that on the afternoon of December 29,1906, the defendant and deceased were in and around Wright’s saloon in Poplar Bluff, Butler county, Missouri. The deceased was in the saloon, talking to a friend, and the defendant was outside talking to some one, and gesticulating and “making faces” at the deceased, who was looking at him through the glass door of the saloon. Deceased asked E. E. Fee, to whom he was talking, if he did not see the defendant making motions and nodding his head towards him. Fee said he did, but advised the deceased not to notice the defendant as he didn’t amount to much. The deceased, however, stepped to the door and asked the defendant what he was making faces at him for. The defendant said he was not making faces at him, but that he was not afraid to do so. They began arguing about the matter, and each called the other a liar, other vile language being also used by both. The deceased walked towards the defendant, when the defendant backed away, reached for his revolver, which was seen by several witnesses, and told the deceased to keep off. Then the deceased turned and ran quickly into the saloon for a shot-gun of his which had been loaned by him to a hunter and which had been left at the saloon for him a few days before. In the meantime, the defendant went into an alley on one side of the saloon, and crouched down on the lower steps of a stairway which led up to the second story of a building immediately across the alley from the saloon. The deceased came out the side door of the saloon, with the gun in his hands, but he was immediately stopped by one D. II. Black, who tried to take the gun away from him and
While the defendant is not represented in this court, we have carefully examined the record and shall pass upon such questions presented therein as seem to demand consideration.
The information charges the defendant with murder in the second degree, and is correct; and it also contains all necessary allegations for manslaughter in
The defendant objected to all the instructions given by the court, and saved his exceptions to thé action of the court in disregarding his objections, but made no complaint at the time of the failure of the court to give all proper and necessary instructions. In State v. Cantlin, 118 Mo. l. c. 111, it is said: “If the court did fail to instruct the jury upon all questions of law arising in the case, which were necessary for the information of the jury in giving their verdict, exceptions should have been saved at the time such failure occurred.”
While the defendant filed two motions for a new trial, only the first one filed can be considered, as it was the only one filed within four days after the verdict. [State v. Brown, 206 Mo. 501.]
It is asserted in the motion for new trial that “the court erred in permitting the attorney who represented the State, in his closing argument, to argue on facts, prejudicial to the defendant, things which had not been proven to the jury, and would have been incompetent if offered,” and “in not correcting or reprimanding the counsel for the State when he was making said improper statements or argument, when the defendant objected thereto, and in not in any way informing the jury to disregard such statements when considering of their verdict.” But this point must fail the defendant, as the record does not show that defendant either asked the court to rebuke the prosecuting attorney for any improper remarks made by him, or excepted to the court’s action in failing to do so. [Champagne v. Hamey, 189 Mo. 709; State v. Valle, 196 Mo. 29; Estes v. Railroad, 111 Mo. App. 1; State v. McCarver, 194 Mo. 717.]
There was ample evidence to take the case to the jury, whose province it was to pass upon its weight,
The judgment is affirmed.