The prosecution of this case was begun April 24, 1907, by information filed by the assisttant circuit attorney in the circuit court of the city of St. Louis, charging that the defendant and Albert Kapp on the 6th of April, 1907, at the city of St. Louis, feloniously committed an assault in and upon one John P. Huppert, and by force and violence to his person did rob, steal, take and carry away one gold-filled American Waltham watch, one gold-filled watch chain, one Royal Arcanum charm, one pocket knife, one pocketbook and thirty-five cents in money, all of the value of fifty dollars, from the person of the said John P. Huppert, and against his will, with the intent then and there to deprive him of the use thereof and to convert the same to their own use.
The defendants were duly arraigned and pleaded not guilty, and on the 27th day of May, 1908, were
The testimony introduced by the State tended to show that John F. Huppert was a barber residing at 1423 Blair avenue, and working at 2219 N. Broadway in St. Louis. At about 6 o’clock on the morning of Saturday, April 6, 1907, Huppert left his home for his place of business. He was wearing at the time his gold watch and chain and charm, and carried his pocket knife, finger nail trimmer, poeketbook and small change. At about 11:45 that night he returned home in a very bad condition; over his right eye was a deep cut as if made by a blunt instrument, his eye was swollen, his face bruised, he was bleeding profusely at the nose and mouth, and his clothes were covered with dust, dirt and blood, and one of his pockets was torn. He was very weak from loss of blood and was in a dazed condition, in which he remained for about twelve days, when he died. His watch and chain and the other articles named were gone and the pocket that was torn was bloody. About one hundred and fifty or two hundred feet from Huppert’s residence on the route of his usual travel to and from his place of work, was an alley opening into Blair avenue. At a point in said alley, at its entrance from Blair avenue, was found a short time after Huppert’s return home that night, a pool of blood and from this point to his home was a trail of blood. About ten feet from the pool of blood in the alley was found a piece of his watch chain. It further appeared in evidence that at Fourteenth street and Cass avenue, about one block and a half
About 5:30 o ’clock in the afternoon of Sunday, the next day, William Meyers and Charles Miller met the defendant, King, on the street, and Meyers asked King who held up Huppert, and he replied that he and Kapp did. The defendant King requested Meyers to meet him at 7:30 o’clock that afternoon when he would give Meyers Huppert’s watch, which he then had at his home, to take to Huppert and say nothing. At the appointed hour Meyers met King and received from him Huppert’s watch, which he took to Huppert’s house and delivered to Huppert the next morning. King also told Meyers and Miller that the holdup occurred on Blair avenue.
Mrs. Huppert, corroborated by her daughter, testified that two men giving their names as Murphy and Miller brought her husband’s watch back to him at his home on Monday morning, April 8th, and they also brought fifty dollars to Huppert and had him sign a little note that he was mistaken in the man Miller, that Miller was not the man who had held him up. The watch and chain were introduced in evidence.
At the close of the evidence, the defendants moved the court to direct the jury to acquit them, but this motion was overruled and the defendants offered no evidence. The court instructed the jury on the offense of robbery in the first degree, upon reasonable doubt, circumstantial evidence, presumption of innocence and the credibility of witnesses. As the only objection to these instructions was that they did not cover all the law applicable to the case, and as they are not now challenged in this court by counsel for the defendant, we deem it unnecessary to burden this statement with them. It is sufficient to say that after a careful examination of them, we can discover no error in them.
But this judgment does not rest upon the presumption of guilt from the possession merely of the stolen goods, but that presumption is strongly corroborated by the admissions and statements of the defendant himself immediately after the commission of the robbery in which he and Kapp stated that they had held up a fellow on Blair and Cass avenue, for a watch, and their further statements that they were going to leave before they were arrested. But the most damaging testimony against the defendant was that of William Meyers, who testified that he had known both Kapp and the defendant King for five years, and that on April 7th, the next day after the robbery, the witness and one Miller were together and met the defendant King on 14th street and Cass avenue in St. Louis about half past five in the afternoon. This witness identified the watch in evidence as one which the defendant King had handed to him on April 7th, the day after the robbery. He testified that King, the defendant, requested him to come to King’s residence about half past seven, and he would give him the watch
As to the complaint that the State’s attorney was guilty of improper conduct in alluding to the death ofHuppert in the course of his argument, there is no merit whatever. Mrs. Huppert had testified that her husband had come home that night in a dazed eonditi on and had remained in that condition until his death twelve days later. It was perfectly competent for counsel to account for the absence of Huppert as a witness by referring to this testimony. It was in the record without any objection, and if any had been made it would have been properly overruled.
The defendant, in our opinion, had a fair and impartial trial, and every essential element of the crime of robbery in the first degree.was established by the evidence beyond a reasonable doubt.
The judgment must be and is affirmed.
