229 Mo. 642 | Mo. | 1910
— On tlie 30th of November, 1908, the prosecuting attorney of Montgomery county filed in the office of the clerk of said county an information, duly verified, charging the defendant with the crime of murder in the first degree in having on the 19th day of November, 1908, shot and killed one Willard Grant. Both the deceased and the defendant were negroes. The defendant being in custody, having been committed by the justice of the peace upon his waiver of a preliminary examination, was duly arraigned at the regular November term, 1908, of the said court, and thereupon the cause was continued to the May term, 1909, to enable the defendant to prepare for trial. At the May term, 1909, the defendant was put upon his trial before a jury, and was found guilty of murder in the second degree, and his punishment assessed at a term of thirty-five years in the State penitentiary.
The evidence on the part of the State tended to prove that the defendant was a negro man about twenty-four years of age, and the deceased, Willard Grant, was also a- negro man, married and living in Montgomery City at the time of the homicide. On the night of November 19, 1908, there was a dance at the house of the deceased and a number of negroes were present, among them the defendant Arthur
The evidence tends to show that while this attack was being made upon his brother Wesley, the defendant, Arthur Green, left the house and went across the street to his own home and procured a single-barrel shotgun and some shells and started back towards the house of the deceased. By this time the guests had dispersed from the house in different directions. The testimony discloses that as the defendant returned toward the house of the deceased, he met the deceased in the road or street at a point about fifty-eight feet east of the gate in front of the deceased’s house and there shot him with a single-barrel shotgun, making a wound
The evidence also tended to prove that a pick belonging to the deceased was found on the ground about fifty-eight feet east of the front gate of the deceased’s yard, and that bloody spots were observed on the ground and on the fence leading from and beyond seventeen feet west of where the pick was found to the front porch of the deceased’s house, where he was found dead a few minutes after the shot was fired. Several witnesses identified the defendant as the person who fired the fatal shot, and one of the witnesses testified that as the deceased came back down the street or road he said, “Where is the black s— of a b— at, I will get Mm,” and soon after fired the shot which killed the deceased. These witnesses, also testified that at the time the deceased was shot, he had nothing in his hands, no weapon of any kind, and was making no demonstration towards the defendant.
On the part of the defendant the evidence tended to show that his general reputation for peace and quietude in that community was good, and there was some evidence to the contrary. His testimony tended to show that he attended the dance on the night of November 19, 1908, at the home of the deceased, and was one of the musicians on that occasion; that upon his brother becoming involved in the difficulty with the Windsor woman, he thought his brother was in danger of being seriously injured and thereupon he immediately went out of the house across the street and to his own home, calling to his brother Wes to come on and go home; that he procured the shotgun and some shells, loaded the gun and started back towards the house of the deceased; that he stopped and called for his brother Wes, and while standing there he heard someone running towards him and suddenly dis
Defendant also offered evidence tending to show that the wound upon the deceased consisted of one wound an inch in diameter and that the defendant was in close proximity to the deceased at the time he fired the fatal shot, and in support of his contention that the deceased was very close to him when he shot him he offered experimental evidence as to the distances within which the shot would scatter and those in which they would not scatter.
Defendant also offered testimony tending to show that deceased was intoxicated at the time of the killing, and bore a bad reputation in the neighborhood in which he resided for peace and quietude when he was intoxicated, and that the deceased was a person six feet and six inches in height and weighed from two hundred pounds to two hundred and forty pounds, and was a man of great strength.
The defendant testified in his own behalf that he was twenty-four years of age and had lived in Montgomery county all of his life, and at the time of the killing was living with his mother in Montgomery City; that he had known the deceased six years and their relations were friendly and they had never had any trouble; that the last time he saw the deceased was that night before the killing, deceased was drunk; that when defendant left the house of the deceased, his brother Wesley was threatened, that the women had all run into the room where his brother was and were assailing him, and that Wes Windsor came through the door with a chair trying to get at his brother to hit him and thereupon, he, the defendant, went out of the door; that before going, he saw his brother was overpowered, and he went home to get a gun to defend
At the close of the evidence the court instructed the jury on murder in the first degree and second degree and on self-defense, the competency of the defendant as a witness in his own behalf and on the credibility of witnesses generally, the presumption of innocence and reasonable doubt. In behalf of the defendant the court gave an additional instruction on self-defense and modified a number of other instructions requested, all of which will be considered as occasion may require in the course of the opinion. Within four days after the rendition of the verdict of guilty, the defendant filed his motion for new trial, which was heard and overruled, and also his motion in arrest of judgment, which was heard and overruled. And the defendant was then sentenced in accordance
I. The information is sufficient in form and substance, and is such as has often met the approval of this court, and no objection has been made to it in this court, nor was there any made to it in the circuit court. The defendant was duly arraigned and entered his plea of not guilty. The jury was duly and regularly impaneled and sworn to try the cause.
II. The Attorney-General with much industry has called attention to all the exceptions to the rulings of the court on the admissibility and objection to testimony. The first of these objections was to the introduction of any testimony, because the information was verified by the prosecuting attorney only, and not upon the affidavit of any witness. In State v. Temple, 194 Mo. 241, a like objection was made, but it was there ruled that our statute permits a verification of an information'by the prosecuting attorney upon his information and belief and that the defendant waived this point by failing to challenge the information by motion to quash. That such an objection could not be made for the first time to the introduction of testimony. [State v. Brown, 181 Mo. l. c. 226.] The objection was properly overruled.
Mr. Lorton, a witness for the State, was asked as to certain statements made by defendant at the time of his arrest in explanation of the absence of his hat and the torn condition of his clothing, and defendant’s
The objection by the State to the question propounded to W. W. Hammack, if defendant was “a hard-working, industrious, honest colored boy,” was properly sustained. This was not the proper way to prove defendant’s general reputation for peace and quietude nor good character.
There was no merit in the objection to the testimony of the sheriff, Mr. Ernest, as to the finding of the pick and the marking of the place by digging a hole. The witness was perfectly, competent to testify as to the place where it was found.
The objections to the questions asked of Mr. Ernest in regard to statements made by defendant to the prosecuting attorney after his arrest were properly overruled, on the same ground as already noted in regard to Mr. Lorton’s evidence.
No érror occurred in refusing to permit the sheriff to state defendant had given no trouble since his arrest. It was immaterial. There was no suggestion of flight in the case.
There are various other exceptions grouped together by the Attorney-General that are -so clearly without merit that we do not feel called upon to reproduce them, especially as counsel have not thought them important enough to attempt to sustain them in a brief in this case. We have read the record carefully in each of these instances and have no doubt whatever of the propriety of the court’s ruling in each of them.
Numerous other exceptions appear in the record to the admission and exclusion of testimony, but we discover no error in the ruling of the court thereon, for the reason that the exceptions were either so unimportant, or so clearly groundless, or the evidence elicited or excluded was so utterly harmless in view of the whole record, that no ■ reversible error was committed by the court in that respect.
An objection which was relied upon by the defendant’s counsel with apparent earnestness and sincerity was made to a question asked by the prosecuting attorney of the defendant while he was on the
Considerable time was occupied in the examination of Mr. Ball as an expert in regard to his experiments with a single-barrel shotgun in shooting at objects with certain shells taken from a box of shells from which the defendant testified he had taken the shell with which he loaded .his gun with which he killed the deceased. The court refused to permit the witness to testify to his experimental or demonstrative evidence for the reason that no evidence was produced to the court showing that the shell used in the experiment contained the same amount of lead and powder that was in the shell that the defendant used when he shot the deceased, but permitted the witness to testify as an expert as to the distance a gun of the size, quality and gauge of the gun used by defendant would scatter shot, and permitted him to testify as to what distance this kind of a gun would scatter the shot in a given distance from the muzzle of the gun to the object struck. The witness testified that the scattering of the shot would be the same with a twelve-gauge whether it was a high class gun or a cheap gun, and that the scattering of the shot from the muzzle of the gun would be more in a greater distance than, in a shorter, and that at a distance of three feet from the muzzle of the gun it would make a hole in the object struck from one to one and a quarter inches in diameter, and that at a distance of six feet the main hole would be smaller in diameter with some scattering shot around the main hole. This witness’s evidence tended to show that the muzzle of the gun was close to the deceased at the time the shot was fired, there being no scattering of shot
III. In regard to the instructions, it need only be said that the court correctly defined the words willfully, deliberately, premeditatedly, malice and malice aforethought as those word's have time and again been defined with the approval of this court.
While we can discover no objection whatever to the instruction on murder in the first degree, inasmuch as the jury found the defendant guilty of murder in the second degree only, the instruction on murder in the first degree is not before us for review. The instruction defining murder in the second degree was correct and has often met the approval of this court.
The other instructions in regard to reasonable doubt, the presumption of innocence, the credibility of witnesses are all in the usually approved form. And the modifications of the instructions requested by the defendant were proper and afford no ground of complaint.
The court refused an instruction numbered one re quested by the defendant, in regard to the weighing of testimony of the defendant himself, but there was
There was no error in refusing instruction number two prayed by the defendant, because there was absolutely no testimony on the subject and it could have done no good and its refusal worked no harm. It was entirely unnecessary.
IV. In the supplementary motion for new trial, complaint is made that the prosecuting attorney had no authority to file the information in this case, because the defendant had not been afforded a preliminary examination before a justice of the peace before the filing'of said information. And the same ground is asserted in the motion in arrest. In State v. Jeffries, 210 Mo. 302, and in Ex Parte Buckley, 215 Mo. 93, it was held that it was not essential that an indictment or information should show upon its face that the defendant had been accorded a preliminary examination. In this case there is no merit whatever in the proposition in the motion for new trial that the defendant was denied a preliminary examination. The defendant himself introduced the record of the justice/ of the peace showing that he was brought before the justice for preliminary examination and expressly waived it. This was a privilege that he could waive. [Ex Parte McLaughlin, 210 Mo. 657; State v. McKee, 212 Mo. 138.]
V. Complaint is made in the motion for new trial of alleged improper remarks by the counsel for the State in the argument of the case. As to this it is only necessary to say that no exception to the court’s action in this respect was made, and of course these remarks are not before us for review. This has been too often decided to require a citation of authority.
VII. Among other grounds for a new trial it is asserted that one of the jurors, John Q. Adams, was biased and prejudiced against the negro race in general, and that on the 5th day of May, 1909, he was engaged in a personal difficulty with John Stewart, a negro, because he refused to drink at the bar of a saloon at the same time this negro was drinking at the same bar. The voir dire examination of this juror is preserved in the record and he qualified as a competent juror and no objections or exceptions were taken to his sitting as a juror in the case. The mere fact that this juror refused to put himself on a social level with the negro Stewart did not disqualify him to sit in the trial of this cause or render him incompetent of rendering a fair and impartial verdict under the law and the testimony in the case.
VIII. Finally the cause was submitted to the jury under proper instructions and there was ample evidence to support the verdict. The defendant had a fair and impartial trial. According to his own evidence he left the house of the deceased and went to Ms own house across the street and armed Mmself with a deadly weapon and returned in the direction of the home of the deceased. Before firing the fatal shot he was fully advised that his brother Wes Green had left the premises of the deceased and was no longer