278 S.W. 977 | Mo. | 1925
The appellant was charged with robbery in the first degree in an information filed in the Circuit Court of Jackson County. Upon a trial to a jury he was found guilty and his punishment assessed at five *601 years' imprisonment in the penitentiary. From this judgment he appeals.
At about eleven o'clock P.M., June 21, 1924, two masked men came into a drug store at 1744 Broadway, in Kansas City; one of them drew a revolver on Bell, the clerk, and ordered him to hold up his hands, and the other went to the cash register and took therefrom money, amounting to about eighteen dollars; they backed out of the store after the robbery and fled. About fifteen minutes thereafter a motorcycle policeman arrived on the scene in response to a phone call from the drug store. After securing a description of the robbers he proceeded in the direction of their reported flight and arrested two men in an alley who had dodged off of Washington Avenue and had run through a vacant lot.
Wiley Morris, who testified for the State, and who had seen the men in the drug store at the time of the robbery, accompanied the policeman and saw him make the arrest. After the arrest the men were brought back to the drug store and were identified by Morris, not positively, as they were masked, but by their apparel and size. A witness named Slaughter, employed at the drug store, saw the men walking up and down the street opposite the drug store. The last he saw of them before the robbery they were going towards the drug store. At that time they were not masked. When they were arrested and brought back to the drug store, about fifteen or twenty minutes after the robbery, they were identified by Slaughter as the men he had seen patrolling the street in front of the drug store. At the justice's office the appellant was positively identified by this witness. Minor circumstances also appear in the testimony which support the truth of the witnesses for the State in the identification of the appellant in the commission of the robbery.
In view of the statement we have set forth of the testimony it is deemed unnecessary to recount the circumstances in detail. The testimony of Shelton Thatcher, who was arrested with the appellant as a participant in *602 the robbery, is to the effect that he was keeping a restaurant in Kansas City at the time of the robbery; that the appellant was employed by him, and on the night the robbery occurred he and the appellant were at work in the restaurant until about eight o'clock, and between that time and nine o'clock he paid the appellant fourteen dollars for his services and left the restaurant; that he did not see the appellant thereafter until he was under arrest. He denied that he was dressed on the night of the robbery in the manner described by the State's witnesses, and stated that at the time the robbery is alleged to have occurred he had returned to his restaurant and had gone upstairs, after which, at about 11:45 P.M., he went to his room and retired. A rooming-house keeper where appellant and Thatcher lodged, stated that she saw them at her house at about 8:20 o'clock P.M., which was at least two and a half hours before the robbery, and that they were not dressed as stated by witnesses for the State.
A girl, who was a waiter in Thatcher's restaurant, stated that the appellant was at her room about an hour and a half, at from ten to 11:30 P.M., the night of the robbery; that Thatcher was also there at about ten o'clock. The appellant did not testify at the trial.
I. It is contended that there was no substantial testimony on which to base the verdict and that a demurrer to the evidence should have been sustained. We have set forth the facts bearing on the identification of the appellant as a party to the robbery and his arrest a few minutes thereafter while fleeingSufficient from the place of the crime. These facts were deemedEvidence. sufficient by the jury to sustain a conviction and the trial judge in overruling the motion for a new trial put the seal of his sanction upon their verity. A careful examination of the facts, as fully set forth in the record, lends no encouragement to the contention that there was no substantial evidence for the State and we overrule the same. *603
II. A review of the repeated objections to the conduct and remarks of the prosecuting attorney does not disclose a violation of the statutory injunction against comments byDefendant's counsel for the State on the failure of theFailure to appellant to testify. If Section 4037, RevisedTestify. Statutes 1919, be construed as contended by counsel for the appellant it would preclude any reference whatever to his conduct or condition at the time of the commission of the offense and when he was arrested, and in addition any testimony of the witnesses for the defense. The record does not show that the references of the prosecuting attorney came within the inhibition of the statute which is limited to a reference to the defendant's failure to testify. The remarks complained of commented upon the condition of the appellant when brought back to the drug store after his arrest and also to the inconsistencies appearing in the testimony of appellant's witnesses. This was permissible and we find nothing in the remarks prejudicial to the appellant. [State v. Tracy,
III. It was not error to permit the State to show the exhausted condition of the appellant when brought back to the drug store as indicative of his flight. Flight is always admissible as an incriminating circumstance in the proof of a crime. [State v. Jackson, 253 S.W. (Mo.) l.c. 735; State v.Condition Witherspoon, 231 Mo. l.c. 721; State v. Shipley, 171When Mo. 544; Porter v. State, 190 S.W. (Tex. Cr.) l.c.Arrested. 164.] Evidence of the facts and circumstances attending the flight, which includes the condition of the accused when apprehended, is admissible to give probative force to the proof indicative of the appellant's guilt. [Johnson v. State,
The foregoing are the only points stressed by the appellant. They present no error justifying a reversal and the judgment is affirmed. All concur.