117 Mo. 389 | Mo. | 1893
— The defendant was convicted of murder in the second degree and her punishment assessed at ten years imprisonment in the penitentiary, and she appeals.
The indictment upon which this conviction was had charged that Caleb Brown and Celia A. Phillips did, “on purpose and of their malice aforethought, willfully, deliberately, premediately shoot and kill one ¥m. H. Phillips”; the second count, “that Caleb Brown did, on purpose and of his malice aforethought, willfully, deliberately, premediatedly shoot and kill said W. H. Phillips,” and “that Celia A. Phillips then and‘there feloniously, willfully, deliberately, premeditatedly and of her malice aforethought was present, aiding, helping, abetting, assisting, comforting and maintaining said Caleb Brown in the felony .and murder.” -
The parties charged were separately arraigned and tried, and it seems Brown, being first tried, was convicted of murder in the second degree and his punishment also assessed at ten years’ imprisonment in the penitentiary.
The defendant was, or had been, a married woman and had several children. About a month prior to the homicide, Brown came there and domesticated himself on the premises; • made himself at home. Deceased used to enjoy similar favors, and these, it seems, were
It is disclosed in evidence that the reputations of Brown, of defendant, and Phillips, the deceased, were bad. Hard feeling existed between Phillips and Brown and Phillips and defendant. Brown had made threats against Phillips, and vice versa, and Phillips had threatened, and made threats against, defendant.
On the previous day, Brown had ordered John Phillips, a son of deceased, to stop passing'on the road by the house. The next morning, the twelfth of March, the son having occasion to. go to the town of Golden to have some bolts repaired, and, mindful of the order given him the day before by Brown, took his shot gun along with him to town. Arrived there he found his father, who had gone there at an earlier hour in the day.
Phillips and his son, in the afternoon, proceeded homeward, their home being some two and a half miles from Golden, and a short distance beyond that of defendant. Their route lay past the house of defendant. The father, it seems, was considerably under the influence of liquor. The evidence discloses that Brown and defendant in the afternoon of that day went out to a little clearing close by the house ostensibly to cut and burn brush; but each of them was armed with á shot gun and they evidently anticipated trouble.
"When Phillips and his son came in sight of Brown and defendant, Brown lit a match and applied it to the leaves of a brush pile close by the road, and defendant threw on a handful of brush. "When Brown and defendant saw Phillips and his son coming, they picked up their guns, which were leaning against a small sapling a few feet distant, and defendant then got in
Meanwhile Brown had said something to Phillips which it would seem that neither he nor his son understood, for the former turned his horse around and asked, “what!” and started towards Brown, saying that “he did not want to have any trouble, that there was no use of having any trouble;” but when he got about even to where Brown was standing with his shot gun in both hands, the latter fired, instantly killing Phillips, who fell in the road, and his pistol was found in the road a few minutes afterwards close to the body of deceased; but the son had not seen the pistol until that time. The son, Jno. Phillips, at that time had his gun across his saddle in the usual way, and when defendant took her position and deceased rode towards Brown, defendant pointed her gun at the son, and told him if he touched his gun she would kill him. This is the story as told by the son of deceased.
That told by defendant is quite different. She testified that, knowing the threats made to and against her by Phillips, and fearing that Phillips would be drunk and raise a difficulty when he and his son returned from town, she and Brown took their guns out with them when they went to work, as she had looked for trouble all the while; that Phillips and his son came in sight, and when they got pretty close Phillips pulled off his hat, uttered some profane and obscene expression, and she picked up her gun and started for the house in order to look for her child who had been out there with her, but had disappeared, when Phillips charged on her with his horse, and she stepped behind a tree, and told John to take his father home. Thereupon Phillips said: “Ann, you have got
There was also testimony on the part of the state to the effect that, before the coroner’s jury, defendant had testified that the reason' she and Brown • took their guns out with them that afternoon, was that they allowed Phillips would come by there drinking, raise a fuss, and then if he did, they aimed to kill him. The foregoing is the substance of the evidence found in the record. Other points which arose during the trial will be mentioned hereafter.
I. The instructions given by the court, of its own motion, covered the theories of murder in the first and ■second degrees and of self-defense; those on the last-named theory were extremely favorable to defendant.
Defendant is not represented in this court by •counsel, but it is contended in the motion for a new trial that an instruction should have been given for a lower grade of homicide than murder in the second •degree.
It would have been error had the court so instructed, because the defendant was charged with aiding and abetting Brown in the murder of Phillips; and in such circumstances, if guilty at all, she could not have been guilty of any less degree of homicide than the crime of which she was convicted, as in manslaughter there can be no accessories. Hale says: “In manslaughter there can be no accessories before the fact, for it is presumed to be sudden, for if it were with advice, command, or deliberation, it is murder and
II. No error occurred in regard to the juror, Johnson, who was on the panel that tried defendant. It is true that affiant Harris makes oath that, prior to the trial, he heard Johnson express the view that defendant was guilty, etc.; but it nowhere appears but that this-fact was known to defendant or to her counsel prior to her trial. For all that appears, this was thus known, and if so, it was too late to raise the objection after the trial was over. See State v. Burns, 85 Mo. 47, where the point was expressly ruled.
III. On argument before the jury, one of the counsel for the prosecution made the statement “that Brown had been convicted and sent to the penitentiary for ten years.” Upon objection made to this statement the court reproved the attorney .and told the jury that they had nothing to do with the fact that Brown was-in the penitentiary. In such circumstances it should not be held that reversible error has occurred, especially so, as the fact of Brown’s conviction must have been well known in the community. Indeed, Brown’s name was frequently and of necessity mentioned during the trial as one of the co-indictee’s in the case, and mentioned also in the indictment and in the instructions.
IY. On the score of defendant being indicted as the aider' and abettor of Brown, and of the evidence supporting that charge, and that she and Brown were acting in concert, evidence of threats by Brown was-clearly admissible.
Finding no material error in the record, judgment affirmed.