238 S.W. 101 | Mo. | 1922
Lead Opinion
On June 2, 1920, the Prosecuting Attorney of Jackson County, Missouri, filed, in the Criminal Court of said county, a verified information charging the defendant herein with robbery in the first degree. Defendant was duly arraigned and entered a plea of not guilty. The trial of said cause was commenced on August 10, 1920, before a jury, and the latter returned into court, on August 11, 1920, the following verdict:
"We, the jury, find defendant, Lawrence Lasson, guilty of robbery in the first degree as charged in the information, and assess his punishment at ten years in the penitentiary.
"JOHN W. ADAMS, Foreman."
The robbery is alleged to have occurred between eleven and twelve o'clock on the forenoon of May 22, 1920, directly in front of the office of the Carnes Artificial Limb Company, at 904-6 East Twelfth Street, in Kansas City, Missouri. The office of above company was on the north side of Twelfth Street, and fronts south. It is one of the busy streets of said city.
The evidence of the State tends to show that John P. Prescott, president of above company, and Mrs. W.A. Huddleston, its cashier and bookkeeper, on the morning of said May 22, 1920, obtained, from the First National Bank of Kansas City, Missouri, $2,063, with which to discharge the weekly pay roll of said company. The above money was placed in a leather bag and delivered to Mrs. Huddleston. She and Mr. Prescott were then driven to the above office in Prescott's Reo sedan, by a negro chauffeur. They stopped at the edge of the sidewalk in front of said office, and about ten feet from same. Mr. Prescott stepped out of said car on the sidewalk, followed by Mrs. Huddleston with the bag of money. The chauffeur opened the door of said car from the inside for them to get out, and remained therein during the robbery. As Mrs. Huddleston started into the office with the bag of money, two men appeared on the sidewalk near where she emerged from the car. Both were in plain view and in a foot or two of each other. One *163 of these men, whom she afterwards positively identified as Louis Thompson, ordered her to give him the bag. Thompson grabbed at the bag, and she tried to hold it. He finally took hold of the handle and wrenched the bag from her arm with force. Mrs. Huddleston describes the situation at this juncture as follows:
"The bag dropped after he had gotten hold of it, and the man that was with him grabbed after it, and he grabbed the bag and ran behind the car and Louis Thompson ran in front of the car."
She testified, that after she got out of the Reo sedan, another car appeared in the street, close to the one she left, and that these two men ran away in this car, which was headed west and turned south on Campbell Street.
Mrs. Huddleston positively identified Louis Thompson as the man who wrenched the bag of money from her, but could not swear that defendant was the man who ran off with the money, although he resembled the man who did so. Prescott positively identified defendant as the man who grabbed the bag of money after it fell to the sidewalk; and as being the man who pushed him down and ran off with the bag toward said car. He could not, however, identify Louis Thompson as the man who wrenched the bag from Mrs. Huddleston.
The colored chauffeur did not get off the Reo sedan, did not render any assistance, in stopping or identifying the robbers, was present at the trial, and was not sworn as a witness in the case.
The evidence of appellant tends to show that he was a small man; that no weapons of any kind were used during the robbery. He testified, at the trial, that he was not present at the time of the alleged robbery, and did not participate therein; that he was at home sick during the entire forenoon of May 22, 1920, and did not leave home before four o'clock in the afternoon of said day. In support of the above testimony, appellant produced five or six witnesses, who claimed to have seen defendant at his home on the forenoon of the above date, and that he was then sick. *164
A number of witnesses testified in behalf of the State, that defendant's general reputation for morality was bad. Other witnesses testified that it was good.
Prescott gave Policeman Dougherty a description of the men who committed the robbery, and recognized defendant, as being the man who grabbed the bag and ran with the money, as soon as he saw him at the police station. Policeman McGuire testified that he had known defendant for about one year before the trial; that he was also acquainted with Louis Thompson; that he had seen Thompson at defendant's place of business nearly every time he passed for the last six months.
The instruction and rulings of the court will be considered in the opinion.
Defendant, in due time, filed motions for a new trial and in arrest of judgment. Both motions were overruled, and defendant duly appealed from the judgment rendered against him.
I. It is insisted by appellant, that "the evidence inSufficient this case is wholly insufficient to sustain theEvidence. judgment of conviction."
We have carefully read the entire evidence the second time, and do not agree with counsel in respect to the above matter. It was the peculiar province of the jury to pass upon the weight of the evidence. The jurors were the sole judges of the credibility of the witnesses and of the weight to be given their testimony. We have set out a very fair and full statement of the general facts relating to the merits of the controversy. Mr. Prescott, the president of the company whose money was taken, stood before the jury unimpeached, and testified positively that defendant Lasson is the man who grabbed the bag containing $2,063, which was forcibly wrenched from the hands of Mrs. Huddleston by Thompson on the forenoon of May 22, 1920, in Kansas City, Jackson County, Missouri. Mrs. Huddleston testified positively that Louis Thompson was on the sidewalk within two or three feet of defendant when he forcibly wrenched from *165
her hands the bag of money aforesaid. She is equally as positive that the man who was with Thompson grabbed the bag of money which had fallen to the sidewalk, when wrenched from her hands, and that he and Thompson ran to and entered the automobile standing near Prescott's Reo sedan, which moved south, on Campbell Street. It is undisputed that the automobile, which carried the two robbers away, was a stolen machine. It is likewise undisputed, that Thompson had been around defendant's place of business frequently during the last six months preceding the trial. The jury had the right, in passing upon defendant's testimony and that of his witnesses, to consider the same in connection with all the facts and circumstances of the case. We are of the opinion, that the record before us contains substantial evidence, tending to show that defendant was guilty of the crime charged against him in the information. [State v. Brown, 234 S.W. (Mo.) 785 and fol.; State v. Cook, 207 S.W. (Mo.) l.c. 832; State v. Dinkelkamp, 207 S.W. (Mo.) 770; State v. Underwood,
II. It is further contended by appellant that, if anyRobbery or offense was committed, it was larceny and notLarceny. robbery.
Without repeating the evidence again, we are satisfied that, taking the case as a whole, there was substantial evidence produced by the State, from which the jury had the legal right to draw the inference that defendant and Thompson were co-operating together at the time of the robbery, under a previous understanding, and that they were acting in concert in forcibly taking said money from Mrs. Huddleston, and fleeing together with same in the automobile, which was there ready for them by prearrangement. The evidence was sufficient to warrant the court in submitting to the jury the issue as to whether appellant was guilty of robbery in the first degree as charged in the information. [Section 3307, R.S. 1919; *166
State v. Bater, 232 S.W. (Mo.) l.c. 1014; State v. Spivey, 204 S.W. (Mo.) l.c. 260-1-2; State v. Graves,
III. It appears from the record that at the conclusion of the testimony counsel for defendant requested the court to instruct the jury on grand larceny, and the court refused to so instruct. As heretofore stated, there was substantial testimony before the jury which warranted the latter in findingInstruction on defendant guilty of robbery in the first degree.Grand Larceny. On the other hand, if the jurors believed from the evidence that defendant was not acting in concert with Thompson, but solely on his own account, without any previous arrangement or understanding with Thompson, he was entitled to have the jury told that he was guilty of grand larceny, and not robbery, if he grabbed and fled with the money in controversy, as heretofore shown. We are of the opinion that reversible error was committed by the court in refusing to instruct the jury, as requested by defendant, on grand larceny. [Sec. 3312, R.S. 1919; State v. Keeland, 90 Mo. l.c. 339-40; State v. Parker, 262 Mo. l.c. 180; State v. Spivey, 204 S.W. (Mo.) l.c. 261.]
IV. Appellant assigns as error the action of the trial court in permitting counsel for the State, over the repeated objections of defendant, to cross-examine the latter as toCross-Examination whether he had been engaged in boot-leggingof Defendant. whiskey; as to whether he had been running a gambling place; as to whether he had been shooting craps; as to whether he had been selling whiskey without a license, etc.
None of these matters had been referred to by defendant in his direct examination. He was thus compelled to furnish evidence of a damaging character against himself, in respect to matters not referred to in chief, and which sustained no relation to the criminal *167 charge upon which he was being tried. After the prosecutor had improperly gotten before the jury, over defendant's objection, the damaging testimony aforesaid, the court then told the jury, at the instance of defendant, to disregard it. Did the prosecutor who conducted the above examination have reason to believe, and know, that he was violating the law and utterly ignoring the admonition of this court in parading before the jury other alleged offenses which sustained no relation to the case on trial?
In State v. Wellman, 253 Mo. l.c. 314, the case was reversed and remanded for a new trial on account of the misconduct of Mr. Curtin, for indulging in the same tactics which were pursued in this case, as above indicated. In State v. Webb, 254 Mo. l.c. 434-5, this court, in discussing Mr. Curtin's conduct under similar circumstances, said:
"Our whole system of jurisprudence is based on the theory that counsel in a cause know the law and the legal effect of the various things done by them at the trial. Counsel for the State must have known that it was not competent on cross-examination of the defendant to ask him about his cutting Arthur Pigg. True an objection to the question was sustained, and the trial court said, as we say, `No defense for such a question as that.' But the astute lawyer for the State (Mr. Curtin) had sunk his fangs deep in the lifeblood of the defendant — too deep for the poison to be withdrawn. The offense was multiplied when he asked of Ben Prock, `Don't you know he had trouble with countless men down there?' The court promptly sustained an objection. As in the first case, we presume that State's counsel knew that the objection would be sustained. He had an object in asking the question. It was asked on the theory that the sting would remain after the objection was sustained. He cannot find fault if we proceed on the same theory."
The Judge who tried the Webb Case, supra, presided at the trial of this case, and presumably knew the views *168 which this court entertained in respect to such conduct as that indulged by counsel for the State.
We are of the opinion, that in cases of this character, where manifestly improper testimony is intentionally sought to be injected into the case, the trial judge should not wait for an objection from defendant's counsel, but promptly strike out the question, and rebuke counsel for pettifogging in the presence of the jury. The unfair manner in which other offenses were dragged into this case, for the purpose of improperly influencing the jury, has been severely criticised, by many recent decisions of this court, some of which are as follows: State v. Harris,
In the recent case of State v. Burns, 228 S.W. l.c. 768-9, involving facts similar to those at bar, we said:
"The defendant was presumed to be innocent of any crime until proven guilty, and he was entitled to this presumption throughout the trial of the case. He was entitled to a fair and impartial trial under the Constitution and laws of this State. The duty devolved upon the trial court and prosecuting attorney of seeing that he was granted a fair and impartial trial upon the merits of the controversy. Did they perform that duty as required by law?
"We are driven to the inevitable conclusion, from reading the record herein, that the prosecuting attorney proceeded, in respect to the above matter, in utter disregard and contempt of our former ruling; that he deliberately and intentionally sought to get before the jury the improper evidence aforesaid, in order to create in the minds of the jurors the unwarranted impression that defendant had sustained improper relations with the wife of deceased, and that he had desecrated the home of the latter, etc. It is true that the prosecuting attorney did not *169
receive any answer to the questions propounded. It is manifest that he did not expect the court to permit the witness to answer these questions. He knew, however, that such an inquiry was improper, and condemned by this court. He evidently knew, regardless of the mild rulings of the court, the questions propounded would indicate to the jury that defendant and the wife of deceased sustained some sort of improper relations with each other, even if overruled. This conclusion is irresistible, when we come to consider the astounding speech, afterwards delivered along the same line by Judge Gossom, in the closing argument for the State, where he dwelt at great length upon the alleged conduct of defendant in destroying the sanctity of deceased's home, without any evidence to support said contention, and without any such issue being lodged in the case. The trial court has a good deal of latitude in dealing with this subject, but in cases like the one before us, where the attorneys for the State deliberately overstep the rules of propriety, ignore the positive rulings of this court, and attempt to get before the jury matters which they know are improper, for the undoubted purpose of creating in the minds of the jurors an unwarranted prejudice against defendant, in a close case like this, the ends of justice require that a new trial should be granted defendant, although the court below may have formally sustained an objection to the proffered evidence. [Levels v. Railroad Co., 196 Mo. loc. cit. 623, 624, 94 S.W. 275; Wojtylak v. Coal Co., 188 Mo. loc. cit. 286, 287, 87 S.W. 506; State v. Jackson, 95 Mo. loc. cit. 652, 653, 8 S.W. 749; Ephland v. Railway Co., 57 Mo. App. loc. cit. 162, 163; Beck v. Railroad,
It is unnecessary to extend this branch of the discussion further. Both the trial courts and counsel for the State, in view of what has been said in the preceding cases, ought to know that verdicts obtained under the circumstances of this case cannot and will not be sustained in this court on appeal, if properly challenged.
V. It is contended by appellant that the instruction given by the court on good character is insufficient to properly advise the jury as to the law on this subject. It reads as follows:
"In determining as to the guilt or innocence of the defendant you should take into account the testimony in relation to his character as to honesty, morality, square dealing and good conduct and you should give to such testimonyInstruction: such weight as you deem proper; but if from allGood Character. the evidence before you, you are satisfied beyond a reasonable doubt, as defined in these instructions, that the defendant is guilty, then his previous good character, if shown, cannot justify, excuse, palliate or mitigate the offense, and you cannot acquit him merely because you may believe he has been a person of good repute."
A similar instruction was approved in State v. Cushenberry, 157 Mo. l.c. 187. Counsel for appellant, in his brief, in discussing the above subject, said:
"The usual and proper instruction, used for a hundred years in Missouri in criminal cases and as quoted in every book of instructions and by every writer on the subject, reads as follows:
"`The court instructs the jury that the previous good character of the defendant, if established, is a fact in this case which the jury ought to consider in passing upon his guilt or innocence of this charge, for the law *171 presumes that one whose character is good is less likely to commit a crime than one whose character is not good. But if all the evidence in the case, including that touching the previous good character of the defendant, shows him to be guilty of the charge beyond a reasonable doubt, then the previous good character of the defendant cannot mitigate, justify, palliate or excuse the offense.'"
We have read the cases cited by appellant in support of this assertion, and do not find that any of them condemn the instruction given in this cause, or point out that the one framed by appellant's counsel should be given in lieu thereof. The instruction given by the court is substantially correct, and as no other was submitted to the court, by counsel for appellant, the latter is in no position to complain of the instruction given.
VI. It is contended by appellant that the information herein is insufficient, for the alleged reason that it fails to allege that the property was taken with an intent to steal, orInformation. deprive the owner of, such property. We are of the opinion that the above contention is without merit, and that the information is sufficient. [Section 3307, R.S. 1919; State v. Massey,
VII. Appellant insists, that the trial court erred in limiting his counsel to thirty minutes in presenting this case to the jury, when they should have been allowed an hour forLimiting that purpose. Questions of this character should beArgument. left largely to the discretion of the trial court. The issues in this case were simple and required no extended argument. We are of the opinion that the trial court was not guilty of an abuse of judicial discretion, in limiting defendant's counsel to thirty minutes in the argument of the cause before the jury. *172
VIII. Defendant complains of the action of the trial court in permitting counsel for the State, over his objection, on cross-examination, to compel appellant's wife, who was testifying as a witness in his behalf, to admit that she lived in adultery with her husband two years before they wereImpeachment. married, and which was about seven years before the date of trial. The evidence was undisputed that since her marriage she had been a good woman. The court committed error in admitting the above testimony. [Wright v. Kansas City, 187 Mo. l.c. 692-3; State v. Gesell, 124 Mo. l.c. 534-5-6; State v. Houx, 109 Mo. l.c. 663; 28 R.C.L. secs. 210-11, pp. 622-3-4.]
In Wright v. Kansas City, 187 Mo. l.c. 692-3, Fox, J., in discussing this subject, said:
"The immoral conduct of the plaintiff could only have been admissible for the purpose of affecting her credibility as a witness, and this could only be shown by her general reputation in the neighborhood in which she resided for chastity and virtue. `Evidence of specific and independent immoral acts were not admissible for the purpose of impeaching her character as a witness.'"
In State v. Gesell, 124 Mo. l.c. 535-6, where a female witness was subjected to a cross-examination similar to the one at bar, SHERWOOD, J., said:
"In the first place the credit of a witness cannot be impeached by inquiry into specific past delinquencies, but only by facts which go to show what the general moral character or reputation therefor are, and what the general moral character or reputation for truth and veracity. In the second place it will not be allowed in a court of justice to put a witness on the rack as to past transactions, to rake in the ashes of long forgotten scandals, and to uncover the scars of old wounds in order to discredit a witness or overthrow his moral character. [Wharton's Crim. Evid. (9 Ed.) sec. 472; State v. Parker,
In State v. Houx, 109 Mo. l.c. 663, where the mother of prosecutrix was being cross-examined, counsel for defendant inquired as to her past immoral conduct, etc. MACFARLANE, J., in considering this subject, at page 663, said:
"A witness should not be required to give such testimony, when it does not tend directly to prove some issue. `And the reason is that every man is entitled to such a measure of oblivion for the past as will protect him from having it ransacked by mere volunteers; and aside from this general sanction, if witnesses were to be compelled to answer fishing questions as to any scandals in their past lives, the witness-box would become itself a scandal, which no civilized community would tolerate.' [Wharton's Criminal Evidence, sec. 472.]"
The above authorities leave no room for doubt as to the erroneous admission of above testimony.
IX. Some other matters are complained of by appellant which, in all probability, will not be repeated in the re-trial of the case, and, hence, need not be considered here.
We have endeavored to give this case our careful and earnest consideration. On account of the errors heretofore pointed out, the cause is reversed and remanded for a new trial. White andReeves, CC., concur.
Addendum
The foregoing opinion of RAILEY, C., is hereby adopted as the opinion of the court. All of the judges concur.