THE STATE v. LEONARD JENNINGS, Appellant
Division Two
December 20, 1930
34 S. W. (2d) 50
The judgment of the circuit court is affirmed. Davis and Westhues, CC., concur.
PER CURIAM: —The foregoing opinion by COOLEY, C., is adopted as the opinion of the court. All of the judges concur.
THE STATE v. LEONARD JENNINGS, Appellant. —34 S. W. (2d) 50.
Division Two, December 20, 1930.
DAVIS, C.—In an information filed in the Circuit Court of Boone County by the prosecuting attorney, defendant was charged with burglary and larceny. The verdict of the jury found defendant guilty of burglary, and assessed his punishment at imprisonment in the penitentiary for a term of two years; and further found him guilty of grand larceny, and assessed his punishment therefor at imprisonment in the penitentiary for two years. From the judgment entered on the verdict defendant appealed.
Defendant does not question the sufficiency of the evidence, but raises procedural errors, which we proceed to consider.
I. Defendant charges that, under
Before the jury were examined on their voir dire, selected and sworn, defendant filed a motion to quash the information and suppress the evidence. The court heard evidence in relation to the matter. The jurat of the circuit clerk was not affixed to the information at the time said motion was filed. The said evidence tended to show that the prosecuting attorney drafted the information and after signing it in two places, handed it to his stenographer to be lodged with the circuit clerk, which was accordingly done. The stenographer testified that she transcribed the information and the prosecuting attorney signed it prior to its lodgment with the clerk. The circuit clerk testified that the stenographer lodged informations with him and that later the prosecuting attorney appeared and made affidavit to them, and then he put them on his book and filed them; that it was his general practice to lay the informations aside, and refuse to file them until the prosecuting attorney had made an affidavit to them; that the information, as shown by his handwriting, was
(a) We have held that an information unverified by the oath of the prosecuting attorney or some one competent to testify as a witness in the case did not meet the requirements of
(b) We do not think that
We have never held seemingly that it constituted error for the trial court to permit the indorsement of the names of additional prospective witnesses on the indictment or information on the day of trial, although we have said that we disapproved of such action on the part of the prosecuting attorney. [State v. Kuebler, 14 S. W. (2d) 449.] But the question here involves a continuance or at least a postponement of the trial for a few days, and that depends upon a prejudice or injury to defendant resulting from the indorsement of the names of the additional witnesses on the information. The record shows that the only additional witness used in its case in chief by the State was Clarence Laxton. The evidence of Clarence Laxton tends to show that he and his father, George A. Laxton, a copartnership, owned the store that was burglarized. This was merely cumulative of other evidence submitted. Clarence Laxton testified further that, on going to defendant‘s home a day or so subsequent to the burglary with Constable Moynihan to serve a search warrant, he found a hammer belonging to the firm in a rat hole in defendant‘s smokehouse, the handle of which he observed in the straw. This hammer he last saw before the burglary in the store. The evidence tends to show that defendant knew shortly thereafter that Clarence Laxton, at the time of serving the search warrant, found the hammer as related. It further tends to show that defendant was not then at home, but that his sixteen-year-old son was there, and that he testified at the trial. The record does not show that defendant, either before or during the trial or by motion for a new trial, could or might have produced evidence at a future time that would have tended to contradict or impeach Laxton‘s testimony or his character. Prejudice or injury to defendant does not appear. The reasoning in State v. Pinson, 291 Mo. 328, l. c. 335, 236 S. W. 354, appears sound and to the point.
The other additional witnesses, whose names were indorsed on the information just prior to the trial, testified in rebuttal, and we have held that the statutes requiring the names of witnesses to be indorsed on an indictment or information do not refer to witnesses called in rebuttal. [State v. Bauer, 285 S. W. 82; State v. Cook, 318 Mo. 1233, 3 S. W. (2d) 365.]
The record discloses that the information was filed in the Circut Court of Boone County on March 20, 1929, and that the trial was commenced on the day it was set, to-wit, April 3, 1929. The record seems to disclose that ten days prior to April 3, 1929, defendant and the prosecuting attorney agreed upon the setting of April 3, 1929, but even though they did not, it will be presumed that defendant had plenary notice of the setting of the cause, in the absence of a showing otherwise. The sustention of an application for a change of venue by the court is ever problematical, and, when a cause is set for trial, notwithstanding the intention to file such application, the defendant should be prepared for the exigencies of events. While courts should be solicitous to see that defendants in criminal cases are given plenary opportunity to prepare for trial, yet it appears, in addition to the agreement of the setting of the cause, that about two months elapsed between defendant‘s arrest and the trial. The convenience of the court and the welfare of the State, relative to continuances or postponements of trials, must also be taken into consideration, provided always that a defendant has not been denied his legal or fair rights. Defendant was given an adequate opportunity to prepare for trial, and if he did not do so, it was due to his own neglect. [State v. Dalton, 23 S. W. (2d) 1, 4.]
IV. Defendant further predicates his right to a new trial on the basis of newly-discovered evidence (
This calls for a further summary of defendant‘s evidence. It shows that defendant contemplated riding home with Delaney in his car, and that between eleven and eleven-thirty on the night of February 4th, while defendant, Delaney and Pete Powers were awaiting the bringing of a lantern, Claude Powers, accompanied by Conklin, drove up and accosted them. Claud asked what they were doing, and, turning to Pete, desired to know what he had done with his truck. Claude then questioned them regarding whiskey, and Delaney informed him that he knew nothing about any whiskey. Again turning to Pete, Claud said: “Pete, come on, get in the car, we can find some.” Pete got in the car and they drove away, returning in thirty or thirty-five minutes. On their return defendant boarded the car. It seems that defendant had been using
The newly-discovered evidence was to the effect that the witness, Rawlings, was seventeen years of age, and a student at the Sturgeon High School. On the night of February 4, 1929, he called upon a young lady in Sturgeon, leaving her home around eleven-fifteen or eleven-twenty P. M. About eleven-twenty-five, he passed the store of Laxton & Company, and there saw two men and heard them talking in an undertone. They were standing near the sidewalk between the store and a parked car. As he was on the other side of the street, he was unable to see their faces, but in the light of bright street light, he identified, fifty feet away, Claud Powers by his stature and Pete Powers by an old hat he had seen him wearing that day. As he passed on, he heard, on arriving at a church, the breaking and tinkling of glass, as though it was falling into the store, but it was not very plain. He thought nothing of it. Defendant was not with the Powers boys at the time. He had never mentioned these facts to any one until after defendant‘s trial, when he was heard to say at school that they had convicted the wrong man.
The rules as to granting a new trial on the ground of newly-discovered evidence are to be found in State v. Estes, 209 Mo. 288, l. c. 306, 107 S. W. 1059. One rule reads: “That it is so material that it would probably produce a different result if the new trial were granted.” That courts do not favor the sustention of motions
Of course, neither a trial nor an appellate court ought to grant a new trial on the ground of newly-discovered evidence, where it is clear that an opposite result would not obtain. To be given thoughtful consideration, such evidence must be material. What then is meant by the word probably as used in its connection with the rule mentioned? We think and hold that it means nothing more than that the newly-discovered evidence submitted was credible and reasonably sufficient to produce a different verdict on a retrial; or, that it must be credible and reasonably sufficient to raise a substantial doubt in the mind of a reasonable person as to the result in the event of a new trial. It is said on this subject in State v. Bailey, 94 Mo. 311, l. c. 316, 7 S. W. 425: “Of course, if it be clear that the new evidence will have no effect upon another verdict, the motion for a new trial should be denied; but if it be doubtful how the evidence would affect the result, the motion should be granted. The court, in such cases, should not attempt to pronounce for the jury in advance, but should give them an opportunity to pass upon the evidence, if competent and material, and to determine its weight for themselves.” [State v. Murray, 91 Mo. 95, 3 S. W. 397.]
The motion for a new trial avers the other substantial requisites necessary to obtain a new trial on the ground of newly-discovered evidence. The statement of Rawlings, that he observed Claud and Pete Powers about eleven-twenty-five on the night of February 4th, and that as he passed on he heard the breaking and tinkling of glass and that it sounded as though it fell into the store, taken in connection with all the evidence submitted, was credible and sufficient to raise a reasonable and substantial doubt in the minds of a jury, we think, resulting that a jury again should be permitted to pass upon the guilt of defendant. We reach this conclusion the more readily upon taking into consideration the inability of defendant to avail himself of the testimony of the Marshall brothers, notwithstanding he may not have used legal diligence in having them subpoenaed. [Rhea v. State, 67 Tex. Cr. 197, 148 S. W. 578.] We think the following cases tend to support our conclusions: State v. Wheeler, 94 Mo. 252, 7 S. W. 103; State v. Curtis, 77 Mo. 267;
The judgment is reversed and the cause remanded for a new trial. Cooley, C., concurs.
PER CURIAM: —The foregoing opinion by DAVIS, C., is adopted as the opinion of the court. All of the judges concur.
