209 Mo. 346 | Mo. | 1908
This cause is how pending in this court upon appeal by the defendant from a judgment of conviction in the criminal court of Jackson county for murder in the second degree.
On April 21, 1906, the prosecuting attorney of Jackson county filed an information charging the de
The operator at Independence, having received word to be on the lookout for persons coming into Independence on the night trains, called officers W. H. Rogers and Ed. Booth to the Missouri Pacific depot at Independence. They reached the depot at 9:15 o’clock on the evening of December 5th. They arrived at the depot about the time a Missouri Pacific freight train from Kansas City was coming in sight. The train stopped a short distance west of the water tank; the engine was taken loose and the conductor was requested to wait' a few minutes, so the train could be searched. The train stopped before it reached the switch. At the place where the train stopped, west of the depot, there is a deep' cut which extends for some distance on each side. The sides of the embankment are very high, so high that two overhead bridges are constructed across the track. The station agent assisted the officers in searching the train. One man jumped out from the car, two or three cars ahead of the caboose and started away from the train toward the depot. He was wearing an overcoat, had on a black cap and was a small man. He drew a revolver on the station agent, and the station agent allowed him to escape. He started toward the city and passed around the track toward Lexington. This man was not Frank Johnson. The two officers searched the train, looked under the cars, but failed to find any one in the cars, except two emigrants, a man and his wife. Witness W. H. Rogers testified that he did not see the defendant, Frank Johnson, until about the time the train was leaving the toAvn
Coroner Thompson visited the scene of the shooting a short while after it occurred and found upon the body of the deceased an undershirt and celluloid collar,
The morning after the alleged homicide a Missouri Pacific flagman, John Hall, was walking along the Missouri Pacific track at the foot of Main street, which is one block west of Walnut street, when a porter on the rear end of a passenger train called his attention to a pistol lying between the tracks. The pistol was on the ground by the side of the rail where a board had been nailed down for Wagons to cross the tracks. This pistol was produced by the flagman, who testified that there was frost on it when he found it that morning at seven o’clock, and that it was frozen to the ground. This track was the one used by freight trains in going out of Kansas City toward Independence. That same morning eleven or twelve cartridges were found by Berry Ott, while walking along the.Missouri Pacific track at the foot of Grand avenue. This witness did not say whether they were empty or loaded cartridges nor give the calibre of the gun or pistol they would suit.
John E. Drummond and Edward O. Theiss resided in St. Louis and were in December, 1905, in the employ of T. Dunn Loan & Mercantile Company, brokers, do
The operator at Independence testified that, when they were searching about the cars to see who was on them, a man jumped out who had 'on an overcoat and a little cap, and that he could not stop him for the reason that he drew a pistol on him and made his escape. He also stated that that man was not the defendant in this case. He further testified that, between twelve o’clock and the arrival of the Joplin freight on that date, which Mr. Booth and Mr. Rogers investigated and searched on its arrival from Kansas City at Independence, there was one train that arrived there at 3:20, going west towards Kansas City, which was called an L. & S. transfer; the next one was a train from St. Louis, and in going to Kansas City got to Independence at 4:57; that train was called No. 1. There was also an L. & S. train at 1:55; there was another L. & S. freight at 3:45 and an L. & S. freight at 4:30; then there was an L. & S. freight at 7:30. He further stated that there were two trains in and out of Independence between 6 and 9 o’clock on that evening, both of them west-bound; one got there at 7:35, that was the Sedalia train; the next one was the Lexington passenger, at 7:59.
This is substantially the statement of this cause as made by the Attorney-General representing the
OPINION.
The leading proposition disclosed by the record in this cause is whether or not the testimony developed at the trial was sufficient to support the verdict as returned by the jury and the judgment of conviction upon it.
We have indicated in the statement of this cause substantially the nature and character of the testimony upon which it was submitted to the jury. We have also read in detail and re-read every line of testimony disclosed by the record now before us, and we have no hesitancy in sayiug-that.it is absolutely insufficient to support the verdict as returned by the jury. That Mr. Oarrothers, the saloon-keeper, was brutally murdered, there is no sort of dispute; but that the State has failed
Whether the deceased was shot with an automatic gun of a thirty-eight calibre or some other sort of a gun of a similar calibre, the testimony fails to show. It will not be seriously contended that there are not in existence numerous automatic pistols of thirty-eight calibre and numerous other pistols of a similar calibre, and to find that the defendant, as disclosed by the record, shot and killed the deceased with a thirty-eight cal
That tbe defendant may have been guilty of robbery in taking from tbe brokers in St. Louis, with violence, the pistol found near the railroad tracks, is by no means sufficient to authorize his conviction of murder. It may also be said that the proper place for this defendant is in the penitentiary of this State, and that he is in fact guilty of the crime with which he is charged, but unless we have reached that point in the administration of the criminal laws of this State where we are willing to sanction the overruling of the repeated announcements by this court that before a defendant can be convicted of a criminal offense the testimony must be sufficient to authorize and support such conviction, then we see no escape from the conclusion that the testimony in this case was absolutely insuffi-. cient to support the verdict returned by the jury.
The most that can be said about the testimony developed at the trial of this cause is that it raises a bare suspicion that the defendant may havé committed the murder charged, and this suspicion is aroused by the simple proof of the commission of the offense of robbery in the city of St. Louis.
The law should be universal in its application. It should be applied to every citizen alike. Whether he be humble or exalted he is entitled, when charged with a criminal offense, to have indulged in his favor the presumption of innocence; and the only safe rule for the protection of the citizen is that when he is charged with the commission of a criminal offense, to require at least the introduction of substantial evidence touching his guilt by the government seeking such conviction of the crime charged in the information or indictment.
This court has repeatedly recognized that just, humane and well-settled rule that in order to authorize the conviction of a defendant charged with a criminal
Conceding the truth of every fact developed by the State in the trial of this cause, and viewing such facts in as strong and favorable light to the State as they may properly be susceptible of, yet they fall far short of furnishing sufficient testimony of the guilt of the defendant of the murder charged in the information in this cause. ,
Unless the State is able to introduce more satisfactory evidence of the guilt of the defendant of the offense charged in the information than is disclosed by this record, the trial court should promptly order the discharge of the defendant.
Entertaining the views concerning the sufficiency of the testimony to support the verdict of the jury as heretofore indicated, the judgment should be reversed and the cause remanded. It is so ordered.