Defendant was indicted by the grand jury of the City of St. Louis, together with three others, for murder in the first degree in having shot and killed Henry Becker. A severance was granted and defendant was tried, convicted and sentenced to life imprisonment in the penitentiary. From this judgment he appeals.
Henry Becker was returning to his home on the corner of Compton and Russell avenues in the City of St. Louis at a little before nine o’clock on the night of April 14, 1919. He had alighted from his automobile opposite his residence, the chauffeur had left, and Becker was about to step upon the walk leading from the street to the house when he was shot and robbed of about $1300 he had on his person. His wife, who was ill and confined to her bed, heard a shuffling, as of feet, on the walk, the report of a gun and an exclamation, “They *86 have shot me.” She recognized her husband’s voice and asked her mother to go out and bring him in. The mother and the immediate neighbors, who • had also heard the shot, found Becker with his feet lying in the gutter and his head in the street in front of his home. Upon their approach he exclaimed, “I’m shot; I’m shot.”' He was carried into his home and a doctor near at hand was summoned. He found Becker in a precarious condition. He was panting for breath, his pulse was weak, irregular and rapid, indicative of an internal hemorrhage. An examination disclosed a gunshot wound in his abdomen. To those present he said, “This is ¿ shame, to shoot a man like this. I asked them not to shoot me and g’ave them everything I had and still they shot me.” To his mother-in-law, who was standing near, he said, “Grandma, it’s all over with me; I’m a goner.” This he repeated several times, adding, “It’s a shame to shoot a man like this.” Soon after he made these statements he was taken to a hospital, operated on, and died six hours after being shot.
The defendant made a statement to the police after his arrest. The voluntary making of this statement and the correctness of its subject-matter as made by the defendant are attested by several persons. The defendant on the witness stand denied much of it. The material portions of same are that he and the other defendants agreed on the day of the commission of the crime to “hold up” Becker-; and that they went to the neighborhood of his residence to await his return to accomplish their purpose; that he and the others were standing on the opposite side of the street from Becker’s residence when they saw his automobile approach; that two of the party crossed over the street to a point where the automobile would stop to enable Becker to alight, while he and one of the others remained on the opposite side of the street; that when two of his companions crossed the street defendant ran and when about a block distant he heard a shot fired; that he mounted a street car going east at Compton and Park avenues and got *87 off at Eighteenth and Compton, where he found two of the other defendants; that upon his arrival they “split up” the money and he got $240 for his share; that Kahmann, one of the defendants, said, “they got $1300 from Becker and that he [Kahmann] shot him because he hollered;” that they then went to a saloon in the neighborhood and had several drinks, bummed around a while and then went to defendant’s mother’s home, where they had a drinking and dancing party which continued until six o’clock the next morning; that as defendant ran away from the scene of the crime he threw his gun on a lawn about a block west of Becker’s house; that he left some of the money he had gotten with his mother and $150 of it at Stevens’s saloon; that he and the other defendants talked about holding up Becker about a week before the occurrence, but that he had said he did not want anything to do with it. The jury believed this statement and not defendant’s subsequent denial of same. The truth of his statements in regard to the money left with his mother and the saloon-keeper was attested by them and the money was turned over to the police. The pistol was found where he said he had thrown it. The record discloses other incriminatory facts and circumstances which need not be repeated, enough having been shown to demonstrate defendant’s presence and participation in the crime. No question is raised as to the quantum or probative force of the testimony. The defense is purely technical.
However, the circumstances under which the statement was originally made furnish a more substantial reason for the overruling of defendant’s contention in that it was shown to have been made at the time- of the killing and necessarily formed a part of the facts and circumstances attending the crime; in other words, it was so indissolubly connected with the act' itself as to form a part of the
res gestae.
The general rule in regard to a declaration of the character here in question is that if it is shown that it was made under such circumstances as to raise a reasonable presumption that the utterance was spontaneous and was created by or sprang out of the transaction itself and was made contemporaneously with the act or so soon thereafter as to exclude the presumption that it was the result of premeditation, then it should not be classified as a mere narrative of a past occurrence, but as a part of the
res gestae,
whether for or against the declarant, and hence not subject to the general rule excluding hearsay testimony. [State v. Lockett,
Finally, the remark is not of such a nature when admitted in evidence as to prejudice the defendant. It did not designate him as' one of the assailants and its only probative effect was to show that the wound inflicted was in the commission of an assault; the trial court, therefore, did not err in the admission of testimony in regard thereto.
*89
Every possible phase of this question, as applied to objections to instructions in motions for new trials in criminal proceedings, has been definitely determined in the cases above cited without a dissenting voice, and there remains no reason for a further discussion of this matter. The reqirirements of the statute (Sec. 4079, R. S. 1919) are reasonable; its purpose is wholesome; it denies no right of defense to the accused to which he is entitled under the law, and simply requires him to apprise the trial court of the grounds of his objections to the instructions, and not to obscure them and thus mislead the court by what cannot be otherwise properly designated than a dragnet.
*90
There was no infraction in the instant case of the well-established rule that it is duty of the trial court to clearly, in a hypothetical manner,, present the facts upon which the State relies for a conviction which, if found by the jury to be true, will authorize a verdict of guilty, and in like manner to present the facts upon which the defendant relies for his defense, which if found to be true will authorize an acquittal. This has been the course pursued from the establishment of our code of criminal procedure, and it was not departed from in the instant case. There is, therefore, no merit in the defendant’s contention that a converse instruction should have been given.
Human depravity reached its lowest level in the commission of this crime. It was a ruthless, cold-blooded murder. Its cruel and sordid details are relieved by none of the palliating circumstances sometimes present and often interposed as defenses in cases of homicide. Despite these facts, the statement of which cannot but appall the normal mind, the defendant was accorded a fair and impartial trial and has no just ground of complaint. The judgment of the trial court is therefore affirmed.
