THE STATE v. OLA LINDSEY, Appellant.
Division Two
June 24, 1933
62 S. W. (2d) 420
We hold, therefore, that the defendant is entitled to take the property given him by the second clause of the will. The judgment of the trial court must be reversed with instructions to enter a judgment in favor of defendant. It is so ordered. Cooley and Fitzsimmons, CC., concur.
PER CURIAM: - The foregoing opinion by WESTHUES, C., is adopted as the opinion of the court. All the judges concur.
Roy McKittrick, Attorney-General, and Franklin E. Reagan, Assistant Attorney-General, for respondent.
I. Appellant attributes error to the order of the court in overruling his motion to quash the panel from which the trial jury subsequently was chosen. The ground of the motion was that, on March 16, 1932, the day set for appellant‘s trial, Norris Stephens, one of the codefendants, was brought into court and he entered a
II. The second assignment of error is aimed at the ruling of the court upon an objection of appellant‘s counsel to parts of the prosecuting attorney‘s opening statement to the jury. The prosecuting attorney stated that appellant and his codefendant Brown discussed with a fellow prisoner named Roy Fite, several days before the assault upon Cook and their escape their scheme to break jail; that they said to Fite that Roy Stephens (a codefendant), was to bring them saws; that Omar Cook (the fellow prisoner who later was killed) was a snitch. At this point counsel for appellant objected to the prosecuting attorney further stating what purported to be a conversation between Fite and Brown and appellant for the reason that the prosecuting attorney, at the preliminary hearing upon the motion to quash the panel, had stated that Roy Fite would not be a witness. The prosecuting attorney retorted that he had stated a subpoena had not been served on Fite and that he was depending on getting him back to be a witness. The court informed the prosecuting attorney that he was bound by his statement and directed him to proceed. Without further objection, the prosecutor
Of this assignment of error, we may observe first, that counsel for appellant delayed making objection until the prosecuting attorney almost had completed that part of his statement. “We object to that statement,” said counsel. “We have let it go on quite awhile,” etc. Second, substantially the same facts which the prosecutor stated that he expected to prove by Roy Fite he elicited from the witness Norris Stephens. Third, the rule is well settled that the opening statement of the prosecuting attorney is not error if he acts in good faith and with reasonable grounds for supposing that he can prove the facts stated. The trial court has a wide discretion in determining whether the prosecuting attorney is acting in good faith. [16 C. J. 890; Dees v. Skrainka Construction Co., 320 Mo. 839, 8 S. W. (2d) 873; State v. Beaghler (Mo.), 18 S. W. (2d) 423.] We cannot find in the instant case that the court abused its discretion. This assignment therefore is ruled against appellant.
III. A third assignment of error, closely related to the preceding one, is based upon the refusal of the court to give the jury appellant‘s Instruction A which is as follows: “The court instructs the jury that you will not consider as evidence in this case any statement made by the prosecuting attorney in his opening statement to you. In this connection the court instructs that there is no evidence in this case as to any statements made by either the defendants Lindsey or Brown to one Roy Fite and you (should) wholly disregard statements made by the prosecuting attorney relating to such statements.”
The trial court well might have given Instruction A. But the instruction was not upon an essential question as to which the court should have informed the jury, whether requested or not, under its mandatory duty to properly advise the jury of the issues in the case. [State v. Starr, 244 Mo. 161, 148 S. W. 862;
IV. A statement of facts is now in order. The Boone County jail at Columbia at the times mentioned in evidence consisted of two structures, one of brick, the other of rock, adjoining each other and connected by a door. The brick building contained a cage, surrounded on four sides by a passageway about five or six feet wide. There was also a clearance of four or five feet between the top of the cage and the ceiling. The rock building contained four cells, two on a level with the floor of the brick building and two above. On the night of Sunday, November 29-30, 1931, there were a dozen prisoners in the jail. Of these, Brown and appellant Lindsey were locked in one of the upper cells of the rock building. Another prisoner was in one of the lower cells. The remaining inmates of the jail were in the brick building. They had the liberty of the passage way and slept upon cots, arranged along the walls. Appellant Lindsey was a prisoner for nearly three weeks before the assault upon Cook and the escape. For the first five days he had the privileges of the brick building. During that spell of partial freedom, Lindsey inquired of other prisoners what was the easiest way to get out and whether they would help him pry a bar. He climbed atop the cage in the brick building, and inspected a hole in the ceiling. Soon after, he was locked in the cell in the rock building with Brown as his companion. Their meals were carried to them and they were not allowed to leave the cell.
Norris Stephens was put in jail on the afternoon of Saturday, November 28, and soon Brown and Lindsey called him to the door of their cell. Brown said that he and Lindsey were going to escape that night. His words were: “We aim to get out of here and we may have to kill two or three.” He also said that Cook (for whose subsequent death appellant was indicted, tried and convicted) was a snitch, that he was the one who had had Lindsey put in the rock cell.
Other prisoners in the brick building told of the beating of Cook in the early morning of November 30. Dave Sims awoke to hear the sounds of blows, frequent and many, coming from the corner of the passage way where Cook had his cot. Cook was exclaiming “what was the matter” and “what they meant.” There was no answer but blows. Soon after, Cook staggered around a corner of the cage, his head bloody, and fell upon a cot. Arthur Vanes, a prisoner, awoke and saw two men scuffling with Cook beside the latter‘s cot. Cook sprang at one of them. It was dark and Vanes could not note details, but he saw the scuffling and heard the blows, and observed Cook fall upon a cot. After Cook had been beaten, Brown took post at the door to the sheriff‘s house, armed with the stove shaker. Appellant Lindsey stood upon a barrel and sawed an iron bar in one of the windows in the brick jail. Through the opening made, first Lindsey and then Brown escaped. Norris Stephens attempted to get out, but he was pulled back by other prisoners who also notified the sheriff. The sheriff arrived immediately after the escape and Cook said to him that Brown and Lindsey had knocked him on the head. The stove shaker which Brown had in his hands before he escaped was found on top of the barrel on which Lindsey had stood to saw the bar. A stick of wood was found, some prisoners testified, beside the barrel, but, Sheriff Ballew stated, in the window through which the escape was made. This stick was described as sixteen inches long, and triangular shaped with each face two or three inches wide. A doctor treated Cook as for superficial scalp wounds, but he was found dead on his cot a few hours later. The post mortem examination of the body of Cook revealed four wounds
V. Appellant assigns as error the giving on behalf of the State of Instruction 2, which is as follows: “The court instructs the jury that when two or more persons enter upon an unlawful undertaking with a common purpose to aid and assist each other in whatever may grow out of the undertaking, each is responsible for everything which may proximately result from such unlawful purpose, whether contemplated at the time the arrangement was made or not, and whether actually performed by all or any one of the participants or any one of the said persons.”
Appellant‘s criticism of this instruction is thus stated in his motion for a new trial. “The State attempted and undertook to prove two distinct conspiracies: One a conspiracy to kill Cook, and another to escape from the jail. This instruction authorized the jury to convict the defendant even though the jury might not have believed that there was a conspiracy to kill Cook, but only a conspiracy to escape from the jail. If there was only a conspiracy to escape from the jail Lindsey was only responsible for such acts of Brown in making such escape as might have been reasonably anticipated or foreseen, not for each and every act of Brown, as the jury were instructed.” In his assignments of error he states the further objection that the instruction assumes a conspiracy had been proved.
Of this instruction we may observe that it states an abstract proposition of law. This court has said of a somewhat similar conspiracy instruction: “It has been held no error to refuse instructions which state abstract propositions of law, but it is also usually not error to give them. . . . The instruction does not authorize a verdict. It simply attempts to place before the jury the law and the condi-
VI. For the better understanding of Instruction 2, it is well to examine at this point the question whether the trial court was warranted by the law and the evidence to submit to the jury the issue of appellant‘s guilt of murder in the first degree. Appellant contends that the jury should have been directed to decide only the issue of murder in the second degree. At common law there were no degrees of murder. If a person committed a homicide in the perpetration of an offense, he was guilty of murder in case the offense was a felony and of manslaughter if the offense was a misdemeanor. [Wharton on Homicide (3 Ed.) pp. 147, 174, 178, et seq.; State v. Robinett, 279 S. W. 696.] These rules of the common law have been modified by our statutes defining degrees of murder.
It is a felony for a prisoner to break jail after conviction for a criminal offense (
If support be necessary for the foregoing statement, we find it in the text-writers and the cases giving the reasons for imputing murder in the first or second degree to homicides committed in the perpetration of a felony. Wharton on Homicide (3 Ed.), page 174, in explaining the common-law rule that where a person is killed by some one in the perpetration of a felony the criminal act is murder, states: “In such case the turpitude of the criminal act supplies the place of deliberate and premeditated malice and is its legal equivalent.” And in 29 Corpus Juris, page 1097, we find the rule thus stated: “An unintentional homicide, committed by one who at the time is engaged in the commission of some other felony, is murder both at common law and under the statutes, even though the statute requires a premeditated design to effect death as the requisite of murder.” This court, in State v. Robinett, 279 S. W. 696, l. c. 700, summarizes the rule in Missouri in these words:
“Where two or more persons agree together to commit some felony not mentioned in Section 3230 (Sec. 3982, R. S. 1929), enter upon its commission, and, for the purpose of carrying it out, kill some person, although such homicide was not in contemplation when
“From the authorities quoted we get these distinctions: Where parties are engaged in the commission of one of the felonies enumerated in Section 3230 (Sec. 3982, R. S. 1929), if a homicide accompanies and is incidental to the enterprise, whether intended or not, it is murder in the first degree; if the intention is to commit some felony other than one of those enumerated in that section, such homicide, although unintentional, is murder in the second degree under Sec. 3231 (Sec. 3983, R. S. 1929), and if the unlawful act, which they are in the act of perpetrating, is a misdemeanor, and the homicide is incidental and not intentional, the offense would be manslaughter.” (Our italics.)
From the foregoing we see that the necessary elements of murder in the first or second degree are imported or transferred into the homicide case from the felony perpetrated only when those elements are not independently present in the record of the homicide. But if those elements are independently present, then, when the other felony committed is other than arson, rape, robbery, burglary or mayhem, the rule is as stated by this court in State v. Hayes, 262 S. W. 1034, l. c. 1037; “But if the common purpose is to commit some felony other than one of those enumerated in Section 3230 (Sec. 3982, R. S. 1929), the crime is murder in the first or second degree, depending upon circumstances attending the homicide.”
A case much in point here and which aptly illustrates the proposition that the crime is murder in the first or second degree depending upon circumstances, attending a homicide committed in the perpetration of a felony other than those mentioned in
Under the facts in evidence in the instant case and heretofore summarized we are of opinion that the court properly submitted to the jury the issue of appellant‘s guilt of murder in the first degree, regardless of the nature of the other offense which appellant consummated after the assault upon Cook. Appellant himself, we are
The State‘s given instructions make no reference whatever to the evidence of the escape and, therefore, do not predicate a verdict of guilty of murder in either degree upon the common design to perpetrate the felony of breaking jail. In this respect the instructions in the instant case differ from instructions in other murder cases in which the absence of evidence of wilfulness, deliberation, premeditation or malice on the part of the accused in the homicide obliged the State to invoke by instructions the aid of
VIII. We have examined appellant‘s other assignments of error. If, in fact they may be erroneous, they are not prejudicial. Therefore we affirm the judgment. Cooley and Westhues, CC., concur.
PER CURIAM: - The foregoing opinion by FITZSIMMONS, C., is adopted as the opinion of the court. All the judges concur.
