182 S.W.2d 38 | Mo. | 1944
Lead Opinion
In killing her husband, William Ferguson, the jury found that Grace Ferguson was guilty of murder in the second degree and assessed her punishment at ten years in the penitentiary. On this appeal she concedes that there was evidence from which the jury could find her guilty of murder in the second degree. But she contends that there was also evidence, both from the state's witnesses *50
and from her own testimony, from which the jury could have found her guilty of manslaughter on which the court did not charge the jury and that thus she was deprived of the right to have the jury say and find whether she was guilty of the lesser offense. State v. Creighton,
The appellant and the deceased had been married for thirty years and the appellant's evidence tends to show that their life as husband and wife had been rather turbulent and unhappy. There was evidence that he had threatened to kill her. To demonstrate manslaughter the appellant points to the events of their life as husband and wife as forming the background for her mental state with reference to her husband. She then stresses her testimony that her husband had come to her room several times during the night, turned on the lights and stood staring at her, as he frequently did. Finally when she requested him to turn out the lights and go to bed he said: "Well, I could sleep better if I could kill you. God-damn you, this is one time I will get you." Then, (using the facts as she relates them in her argument) she says her husband ran from the room "and came back almost immediately with a stick in each hand, and was approaching the defendant, [40] who had slipped down in the bed, `and he looked very mad, . . . he was awfully nervous and his eyes looked glassy and he looked just like a mad man.' It was at that point, while the deceased was coming nearer to her with the upraised sticks that the defendant fired the first shot. The deceased immediately turned and went to the kitchen, and then instantly turned back to the bedroom, holding both of the sticks in both hands, in a crouching position, and approached the defendant with the sticks upraised, preparatory to striking her. It was at this point that the fatal shot was fired."
[1] The appellant contends that these events and facts, the repeated threats, the conduct and appearance of her husband, the insulting, threatening words and his menacing and threatening attitude which occurred in but a few seconds did not leave time for thought. It is her contention that these facts may have aroused a "heat of passion" or an impulse and an intentional homicide but, she says, they dispel malice, the existence or nonexistence of which determines whether the homicide is second degree or manslaughter. State v. Gadwood,
[2] To demonstrate her second theory of manslaughter the appellant again relates her version of the shooting, adding some facts and changing the emphasis on certain events. After her husband threatened to kill her he left the room and she thought he had gone to get a gun "`but when he came back, as I heard him coming back I slipped to the foot of the bed and over towards the west side.' That when the deceased came back in to the bedroom, he had two sticks, one in each hand, `and was coming towards me, and he looked very mad, . . . he was awfully nervous and his eyes looked glassy and he looked just like a mad man.' The defendant slipped her gun out from under the pillow, and said: `Don't come any closer or I will shoot you.' That the deceased kept on coming towards the defendant, and holding the pistol in both of her hands, she fired; that she did not shoot to hit him; that deceased `kind of dodged down and ran back into the kitchen, and immediately turned around and started to come back into the bedroom'; that as he came back `he had both of the sticks in both hands, and he would dodge down, and then as he came towards me I had stepped out of bed and he had leaned forward like this (indicating) with his right hand to strike.' The defendant said: `Don't come any closer, or I will shoot you'; that, as the deceased leaned over to strike the defendant, she shot, because `I knew he would kill me.'"
Following the homicide the appellant was questioned by the prosecuting attorneys and by the police and they as well as others who were present testified to her admissions and statements. In connection with the appellant's version of the occurrence she particularly stresses the testimony of Mrs. Tonnies, the record clerk at the police station; *52
"Q. Do you remember the position Mrs. Ferguson said she was in when she fired the second shot and the fatal shot — the second shot which was the fatal shot?
A. [41] She said she got up and followed him, and he turned around and came back.
"Q. Where did she follow him to? A. To the kitchen.
"Q. Into the kitchen? A. Yes, sir.
"Q. Go ahead and tell what she said. A. Well, she followed him towards the kitchen and she said he was just inside the door, or she was just inside when she fired the last time.
"Q. She followed him out of her bedroom towards the kitchen? A. Yes, sir."
Furthermore, the appellant was cross-examined along the same line and especially with reference to what she had said at the police station with reference to following her husband after the first shot.
The appellant says that these facts entitled her to an instruction permitting the jury to find her guilty of manslaughter "if they found from the evidence that following the firing of the first shot, the defendant, instead of retreating to a place of safety, went towards the door through which the deceased had immediately prior thereto left the room, without felonious intent, and if the jury find by so doing, the defendant had from a legal standpoint assumed the role of the aggressor, and if the jury should further find that it thereafter became necessary for the defendant to shoot the deceased to prevent him from killing her or inflicting great bodily injury to her." It is her contention that these facts and the suggested instruction hypothesize the so-called right of "imperfect self-defense" which, if found, would reduce the homicide to manslaughter. In substance, she puts her contention in this language: "if one who has been attacked and thereafter abandons the role of defender and becomes an aggressor and renews the controversy with felonious intent, such party is thereby deprived of the right of self-defense; but if, after being attacked, a party returns to the place of conflict or follows the attacker, without any felonious intent, then, although the party is deprived of the right of `perfect self-defense,' he does have the right of imperfect self-defense, which reduces the offense to manslaughter."
It is doubtful that this doctrine with the paradoxical name, "imperfect self-defense," means any more in the law of homicide than that if there is evidence showing or from which the jury could find a lack of malice on the part of the accused he is entitled to an instruction on manslaughter. State v. Rennison,
[3] The appellant testified and offered evidence with reference to her reputation as well. In rebuttal of her reputation evidence the state proved by several witnesses that her reputation for "general morality" was bad. The appellant contends that it was error for the court to admit evidence of her reputation for "general morality" because such evidence must have been confined, by both parties, to traits of character [42] involved in the offense for which she was being tried or to her reputation for truth and veracity which would reflect on her credibility as a witness. There can be no question but that both parties should confine their reputation evidence to traits of character involved in the offense charged. State v. Anslinger,
But these cases do not solve the problem presented by this appeal. Here the appellant offered two witnesses to her good reputation for being a peaceful, law-abiding citizen. But her first reputation witness was asked about and testified that "her general reputation in the community there is which she lives for being a truthful, honest upright woman" was good. On cross-examination the following occurred:
"Q. What do you mean by `upright,' Mr. Draeger? A. How is that? Q. What do you mean, you said she is an upright woman? A. I just meant she was a good woman, paid her bills and tended to her own business. Q. She paid her bills, is that right? A. Yes, sir. Q.Did you mean she was a moral woman? A. So far as I know. Q. Well, you stated her reputation was good? A. So far as I know."
The appellant says that "uprightness" and "honesty" were not traits of character involved in the offense and for that reason the evidence was probably not admissible but that it was admitted without objection on the part of the state, therefore, she says, it is not necessary to decide whether this testimony "opened the door for the State of attack the defendant's reputation for the specific traits of character of honesty and uprightness."
With this we cannot agree. The basis of excluding reputation evidence of traits not involved in the offense is the policy of avoiding uncontrollable, undue prejudice and unjust condemnation which such evidence might induce. 1 Wigmore, Evidence, Sec. 57, p. 454. But in this case can it be said, in view of the witness' own definition of "upright" and his evidence that she was an "honest" woman, that these traits and her general morality were not involved and in issue? Or that she thought they were involved and in issue and offered the evidence accordingly? As motives for killing her husband there was evidence from which the jury could find that she was more than friendly with another man (State v. Duestrow,
[4] During the progress of the trial, on the second night, and before the cause was submitted to the jury, the jury attended a moving picture show in Carthage and because of that fact the appellant insists that she is entitled to a new trial. It is not claimed that the jury was permitted to separate (Mo. R.S.A., Secs. 4071, 4072; State v. Shawley,
The circumstances under which the jury was permitted to attend the show were related by the trial judge. "On the evening of June 22nd which was the second evening [43] of the trial of this case after adjournment, as I recall the elevator was out of order, and I was walking down from the third floor, and as I passed the second floor the Sheriff stopped me and told me some of the jurors wanted to be taken to the picture show that night. He had the jury in custody there at that place and I told the Sheriff at that time that the courts did not look with favor upon the taking of jurors to the picture show or other public gatherings. I was familiar with the case of State versus Dodson, and I recall the statement made in that case by the Supreme Court. One or two of the jurors said it was so terribly hot up there in that hotel where we are being kept and nothing to do for such a long evening, it is almost unbearable, and we would be a whole lot better off if we could be taken to a picture show where it is cooler. I then told the Sheriff that the only way I would consent for the jury being taken to the picture show would be that he could make arrangements for the seating of that jury where they would not be thrown in contact with the general public; would not have to enter the picture show by being mixed and mingled with the public generally, and if he could make arrangements to take the jury to the picture show under those circumstances it would be agreeable to the Court. So that if there is any error in the taking of the jury to the picture show it rests squarely upon the Court and not with the Sheriff or any other official."
Neither the defendant nor her counsel were present at the time, did not consent to the jury's attending the picture show and did not know of the fact until several days after the case was tried. The affidavit of the sheriff and the deputy sheriff who had charge of the jury and who accompanied them to the picture show ("Once Upon A Honeymoon," a humorous love story,) stated that the jury expressed a desire to go to the show because of the extreme heat in their quarters in the Crane Hotel. They say, in their affidavit, "That said jury accompanied by said affiants occupied seven seats in each of two rows on the south side of the theatre. That in the back row there sat six jurors and deputy sheriff John Baine and that in the next row in front thereof sat George Tatum (the sheriff) and the other six jurors. That only one personoccupied the seats immediately behind the jury and there was noconversation between any member of the jury and any other person,save and except among the jury themselves and conversation withthe sheriffs and nothing was said pertaining *56 to this said case. No person spoke a word or came in closeproximity with said jury while said jury was in said theatre andthese affiants at all times kept a diligent watch to see that noone talked with or came close to said jury. That said Tiger Theatre has in the center of the ceiling two separate clusters of yellow lights, which gives only a semi-darkness over the theatre and it was possible at all times to see the said jury and any and all other people in said theatre and said theatre at no time was dark."
Two members of the jury were called as witnesses by the appellant on the hearing of the motion for a new trial. They testified to the jury's attendance of the show. One of them thought they all sat in one row of seats and the other thought they sat in two rows. One of them thought that no one sat closer to the jury than three or four rows. This one said that the sheriff caused an usher to have "the seats cleared out before we went in." He said it was dark and he did not look back to see whether anyone sat behind them. As to the jury's talking to others in the show this witness said: "No, I never seen anybody talk to anyone there; we all went in and sat down until the end of the show and then we all got up and marched out, and if there was any words said by anybody I never seen them. . . . I never saw a soul speak to any juror while we were in there." From this juror it was developed that the sheriff bought and paid for the tickets. The other juror said that they did not mix with other people as they went into the show and he did not see anyone talk to any member of the jury. He couldn't say how many people sat behind the jury because he did not pay any attention.
The appellant does not except to the fact of the sheriff's having custody of the jury but he was a witness for the state. The first shot fired by the appellant hit the west wall of the kitchen and one of the questions in the case was whether that shot could have been fired by the appellant as she sat on the bed as she testified. The sheriff examined the bedroom and kitchen and testified, as did several others, that "From the position of the bed I could not see where the bullet could have been fired from a gun into the wall from the bed." The appellant in her argument says that she does not intend to suggest that the [44] sheriff had any improper motive in taking the jurors to the picture show as his guests but insists that the fact that he did, in addition to his being a witness to a material fact, might unconsciously influence the jury. The appellant does not contend that there was any improper conduct on the part of the jury but says that under the circumstances there was ample opportunity for outside influence to have been brought to bear upon the jury during the motion picture.
As we have said, no point is made of the sheriff's having charge of the jury, and having them in charge he had or could have an opportunity to improperly influence them whether they went to a picture *57
show or not. Under the circumstances we cannot attach much importance to that fact alone. However, it was not proper for the sheriff to act as host to the jury in attending the show. That conduct cannot be condoned anymore than a jury's attending any public gathering can be condoned or recommended. State v. Dodson,
There is a vast difference in this case and State v. Dodson. There the cause had been submitted to the jury. The jury went to see the "New Zephyr" train, then on exhibition, and mingled with the crowd. In addition the jury went to two shows and one dance while the trial was in progress. State v. Hayes,
[5] In her motion for a new trial the appellant assigns as error misconduct on the part of the jury in their deliberations in that they took into consideration and were influenced by facts relative to her which were not testified to by witnesses but which were furnished by two jurors. In support of her assignment the appellant filed and relies upon the affidavits of an attorney employed to represent her and an individual whom the attorney employed to assist him. The substantial part of the affidavits is that after the case was over and in the town of Jasper one of the jurors told them that another juror *58 said, after the jury retired to consider its verdict: "I know the defendant and know that she is a no-good woman; I know these facts regardless of the evidence in the case; I have seen her in company with Mr. Trusty in Kansas City, Springfield and Miami, Oklahoma." Another juror is said to have agreed that he knew the same facts to be true. One of the affiants said that the juror from whom he obtained the information was influenced by the statements and that he did not think the appellant guilty. Though the appellant makes no point of it she offered but the court refused to hear the evidence of the two informing jurors. The state filed the affidavit of the juror who was supposed to have made the statements and he categorically denied making them or that he knew the appellant.
In State v. Malone,
[6] The appellant offered and the court declined to give an instruction which told the jury that they could not "indulge in speculation or guesses as to the evidence in this case." It told them that they were to find the facts solely from the testimony and the law from the court's instructions. The last sentence said that after receiving the instructions and finding the facts the jury were "to judge of them and *59 say what the verdict ought to be, considering what the law is and what the facts are" and "you are not authorized to go outside of the testimony submitted on the trial of this case to find the facts of the case."
The appellant concedes that this is a cautionary instruction and that whether it was given or refused was within the trial court's discretion, reasonably exercised. State v. Peters (Mo.), 123 S.W.2d 34. But the appellant reviews the evidence and says that the court abused its discretion. It is unnecessary to review the evidence and the possible inferences, and even insinuations, which might be drawn from it in the light of this instruction. One given instruction said: "It is the duty of the court to instruct the jury on all questions of law arising in the case, and it is your duty to receive such instructions as the law of the case, and to find the defendant guilty or not guilty according to the law as declared by the Court in these instructions and the evidence as you have received it under the direction of the Court." It appears to us that this instruction substantially embodies everything contained in the appellant's instruction. In addition, the court instructed fully on reasonable doubt and the credibility of the witnesses. Under the circumstances the court did not abuse its discretion or err in refusing the abstract cautionary instruction.
None of the briefed and argued assignments being well taken the judgment is affirmed. Westhues and Bohling, CC., concur.
Addendum
The foregoing opinion by BARRETT, C., is adopted as the opinion of the court. All the judges concur.
Addendum
[7] But the appellant contends that we have overlooked certain testimony [46] which brings the case within State v. Roberts,
"Question. Was that in your bedroom? Answer.
`No, in the kitchen.' Question. `Where were you?' Answer. I think I was in the kitchen door, as I said, I had stepped out tosee what had happened and whether he was coming back at me orwhat.' Are those your words, Mrs. Ferguson? A. Yes."
In the first place, in State v. Roberts, the court was considering a self-defense instruction which covered the subject of voluntarily entering or renewing a difficulty as a pretext for the defendant's taking the life of his assailant. However, the court did say that if the "appellant wrongfully invoked or sought a renewal of the quarrel with the intention of merely overawing the deceased, or of holding him in check while a discussion could be had and a settlement or a mutual understanding reached as to their future status towards each other, or to accomplish any result other than the death or great bodily harm of the deceased, the appellant, while he would not be entitled to invoke the perfect right of self-defense, would under the well established rule, we think, be entitled to invoke the right known as the imperfect right of self-defense, which would reduce the crime to manslaughter in the fourth degree."
But in the second place, going into the kitchen "to see whathad happened and whether he was coming back at me or what" is an entirely different matter from returning to the controversy for the purpose of holding one's adversary in check for the purpose of reaching a mutual understanding or settlement of one's difficulties with one's adversary. Merely going into the kitchen, after having fired one shot, for the purpose of seeing "what hadhappened and whether he was coming back at me or what" is certainly not comparable to "Well, I went down there to see if I could settle the difficulty without any further trouble if I could, because I wanted to settle it while it was new. He and I had been good friends, and I thought probably I could do it in that way, and I took the gun along with me to defend myself if I couldn't." The latter statement and version of the matter dispels malice, while the former statement and circumstance is but consonant with self-defense and certainly consistent with murder.
The motion for a rehearing is overruled. *61