STATE of Missouri, Respondent, v. Glen E. CROW, Appellant.
No. 50863.
Supreme Court of Missouri, Division No. 2.
March 8, 1965.
Motion for Rehearing or to Transfer to Court En Banc Denied April 12, 1965.
388 S.W.2d 817
The judgment is affirmed.
BARRETT and STOCKARD, CC., concur.
PER CURIAM.
The foregoing opinion by PRITCHARD, C., is adopted as the opinion of the Court.
All of the Judges concur.
Glen E. Crow, appellant pro se.
STOCKARD, Commissioner.
Glen Eugene Crow was found guilty by a jury of burglary, second degree, and steal-
When the cаse was here previously the transcript did not contain a motion for a new trial, but it did show that at the time of allocution defendant insisted that he had attempted to mail one from the jail where he was confined, and it also indicated that defendant handed to the trial court what he said was a copy of his motion. In our previous opinion we said this: “At the time of allocution when this matter was presented, the trial court should have determined the factual issue, and made a record of its findings, of whether such motion, if mailed at the time defendant asserted it was, would have been timely, and if so, whether its failure to reach the clerk was the result of any unlawful interference on the part of public officials. * * * An alternative action would have been to incorporate into the record the copy of the motion for new trial, if in fact one was presented by the defendant to the court at that time, and if, as a matter of law, each assignment of error therein was without merit, defendant could not have been prejudiced by the fact the motion was not filed, regardless of the reason.”
The transcript now shows that if a motion for new trial had been mailed by defendant at the timе he claimed, in the normal course of mail service it would have been received and timely filed. After a hearing the trial court found that a motion for new trial was not filed, but it made no findings as to whether defendant did in fact attempt to mail one from the jail, and if so, whether the reason it was not received and timely filed was because of any unlawful interference on the part of public officials. The copy of the motion which defendant asserted he had handed to the trial court at the time of the first allocution could not be located. However, the trial court then granted defendant permission to file a motion for new trial within ten days, and defendant filed such a motion which he said contained all the assignments of error which were in the motion he had attempted to mail to the court from the jail. He also filed what he called a “Supplemental Motion for New Trial” which he admits contained new and other assignments of error. A hearing was held on the two motions, and each assignment of error contained therein was argued to the court by counsel, considered by the court, and overruled.
We have repeatedly held that the provisions of
The first assignment is that the trial court erred in “overruling defendant‘s personal objection to trial on March 5, 1962, upon the grounds of insufficient notice to defendant of the amendment of the information, which was amended to include allegations
The second assignment is that the “trial court erred in overruling defendant‘s objection to use of an alleged prior felony conviction and sentence for attempting to break jail.” He asserts that this was a misdemeanor, and in that he is correct.
The third assignment is that the “trial court erred in overruling defendant‘s objection to the prosecuting attorney‘s cross-examination of defense witness, Mrs. Marsella Crow, wife of the defendant, wherein said prosecutor asked the following question, ‘Wasn‘t your house raided by the police and a lot of stolen articles taken out of it.‘” The transcript shows that there was no objection to this particular question, and that an objection, made after the three immediately follоwing questions, “to any further questioning along this line” was sustained. All the relief requested by appellant was granted. No error occurred, State v. Velanti, Mo., 331 S.W.2d 542, 546, 547, and this assignment of error is without merit.
The fourth assignment is that “the trial court erred in failing to give the jury, as a matter of law of the case, an instruction setting out the applicable law to guide the jury on the mattеr of guilt and punishment relating to a verdict of guilty on stealing alone.” He also asserts the court was required to instruct the jury that “upon a finding of ‘Guilty of stealing and not guilty of burglary’ the value of the property being less than fifty dollars, such offense is a misdemeanor and the jury is required to fix the punishment of not more than оne year in the county jail, or a fine not exceeding $1,000, or both such fine and sentence.” Defendant argues that by reason of the above, Instruction No. 4 which submitted stealing in connection with burglary, was confusing and that it misled the jury “that stealing alone was a felony.”
We should first note that no objection whatеver was made to any instruc-
The motion for new trial contains another point pertaining to alleged newly discovered evidence which defendant admits was not in the motion which he attempted to file by mailing it from the jail. It and thе assignments in the “supplemental” motion were not timely filed, and no attempt was made to file them timely. They are a nullity and preserve nothing for appellate review. We note, however, that we have examined them pursuant to
Each and every assignment of error in the motion for new trial whiсh appellant says he attempted to file is without merit, as above demonstrated, and for that reason when we give defendant the benefit of every assertion he has made, we find that he was not prejudiced by the failure of his motion for new trial to have been timely filed.
Defendant challengеs the propriety of his sentence under the habitual criminal act, a matter we examine as part of the record before us,
When defendant was resentenсed on May 13, 1964, he was given the exact sentence he had received on April 24, 1962, but the trial court directed that he receive no credit for the period of approximately two years he had been confined in the peni-
We find no error in those parts of the record which we examine pursuant to
Other than as above set forth pertaining to credit for time previously served in the penitentiary the judgment is affirmed.
BARRETT and PRITCHARD, CC., concur.
PER CURIAM.
The foregoing opinion by STOCKARD, C., is adopted as the opinion of the Court.
All of the Judges concur.
On Motion for Rehearing or in the Alternative to Transfer to Court En Banc
PER CURIAM:
In defendant‘s motion for rehearing he states that we did not rule on points numbered 12 and 13 in his brief in which he contended that he was denied a fair trial “because of persоnal interest and prejudice of the trial judge,” and that the trial court erred in overruling his motion to “disqualify the trial judge.” First, the motion to disqualify was not timely filed in compliance with
Defendant also asserts that we failed to rule on his points number 11 and number 15. In point 11 he makes general assertions that he was denied due process of law because employed counsel of his own selectiоn did not do certain things that defendant now thinks he should have done. What was or was not done by trial counsel could well have been the result of considered trial strategy, and the point is without merit. Point 15 is quite lengthy, but by it defendant asserts he was prejudiced “by the trial court‘s action in sentencing him upon the basis of assumptions concerning a prior criminal record and prior criminal activity, and misinformation as to other material matters, or carelessness in that respect.” Defendant was properly charged and sentenced under the habitual criminal act, and the sentence imposed was within thе statutory limits.
Points in a brief totally without merit, such as these, are automatically ruled in the order affirming the judgment. We mention them in this per curiam only because we made no general statement in the principal opinion to that effect. Other matters in the motion for rehearing are reargument of issues previously ruled.
The motion for rehearing, or in the alternative to transfer the case to the court in banc, is overruled.
