276 Mo. 359 | Mo. | 1918
The appellant and one Harry Funk were tried on a joint information and convicted of burglary with explosives, and of larcenv. The defendants filed separate motions for new trials and prosecute separate appeals from that conviction, the companion case against Harry Funk being No. 20963.
The safe of the Farber Bank, located at Farber, Missouri, was blown open by explosives, and the bank robbed on the night of the thirteenth, or early in the
On the evening of November 13, the bank vault, containing money and other valuables, was closed with a combination time-lock set to open the following morning at seven o’clock. About one o’clock a. m., November 14th, several persons in the town of Farber heard five explosions occurring about ten minutes apart. Investigation showed that the bank had been entered and the safe wrecked. It appears that the knob of the combination lock was knocked off, the crevice around the closed door filled with soap to prevent the escape of gas, the hole in the door filled with explosives, and the door then blown open.
The next morning blood-hounds were brought to the scene but refused to take the trail, it was said on ac- ' count of gas which filled the room; $2965.46 was missing from the bank safe, of which $1500 was in currency and the remainder in silver, nickels and pennies. It was discovered the next morning that a wheat field about three-quarters of a mile from the bank had been entered, through a gap in a wire fence, by an automobile which drove in, turned around and drove out. It came from the north and drove out toward the north. A wet place where the radiator had leaked indicated that the car had been stopped for a time. The footprints of three men led from where the car had been stopped out toward the road and toward Farber, and the footprints of apparently the same three were found returning to the car. The ground was soft, the footprints and car tracks were fresh, indicating they had been made the previous night. One or two witnesses testified that the tracks of the car indicated it was a
About four o’clock in the afternoon of the 14th, Prunty and Funk drove into Peoria in a Ford car with smooth tires in front and non-skid tires behind. A motorcycle policeman stopped them, because therie was no license number on the car. The ■ men and the car were taken to the police station for the purpose of investigation. The men said that three miles back, where they had stopped to get water, they had had a Missouri license tag on their car. The car was dusty, the men were dusty, “their clothes were mussed and dusty and their faces grimy.” Funk was driving the car. They said they had bought the car for $150 from a man they met on the' street in Mexico, Missouri-: They made this statement to the officer who arrested them and repeated it to the chief of police at the police station in the presence of another officer. The chief asked them if they had a bill of sale. Prunty searched for such document in his pocket, but could not find it and said he guessed he must have lost it. The men then were released, the car was retained for further investigation, and the officer who arrested the men was ordered by the chief to take the ear over to the patrol house for that purpose. In doing so he discovered a grip in it. This grip was taken to the chief’s office and examined. It was found to contain a revolver, some
There was also in the grip $1085.46 in silver, nickels and pennies, the denominations of the silver beiiig dollars, half-dollars, quarters and dimes — the same kind of coins as were taken from the bank. Fifty dollars in currency was found on Prunty, three ten-dollar bills and four five-dollar bills. Some of these bills were torn — had parts burnt or torn off — and small fragments of torn bills were found in the grip. The money taken from the bank was in five and ten-dollar bills. Some of the nickels found in the grip were done up in packages and wrapped with blank checks of the Farber Bank. It was shown that the Farber Bank was accustomed to wrapping its nickels in that manner and had some so wrapped in the vault of the bank on the night of the robbery. The officers also found in the grip a code book, such as is used by banks to abbreviate telegrams, which was identified by the bank officials as belonging -to the Farber Bank. In the code book, as it was found in the grip, was an envelope containing a check drawn by one R. Christoferson, payable to one John F. Kaiser, for $10.20. This check thus placed in the envelope and in the code book, as was shown by the officers of the bank, had been left at the bank for the purpose of delivery to the owner when called for, and they were in the vault when the bank was closed the night of November 13th. There was also found in the grip the - screw-head of a bolt which, when tried, fitted the hole in the door of the safe in the Farber Bank, from which it is supposed to have been blown by an explosion. This would indicate that the burglars in their hurry swept into the grip, with
The Ford car in which the men arrived in Peoria was identified by N. E. McCoy, a minister of the Gospel, who swore that it was stolen from him at Slater,
Saline County, Missouri, November 10, 1917, four days before it appeared in Peoria.
After the discovery of the grip in the car the two. men were rearrested and examined separately by the officers as to where they got it. This was after they had had time to change their clothes. Prunty said as they were driving along the . road between Farming-ton and Peoria they overtook a man walking, carrying his grip. He asked for a ride and they took him in and brought him to Peoria. Farmington is about /
twenty-five miles west of Peoria. The grip, with its contents, weighed about sixty pounds, or more. Prunty was asked also about the currency found in his pocket and he said he didn’t know where he got it, that he just had it.
When Funk, separately, was asked about the grip he admitted that he owned it, and said the reason his collars and some of his effects were in it was that he had loaned it some time before to a man to take a trip.
He didn’t know the man well enough to know his name, and didn’t look in the grip to see what might be in it.
He said when they were driving through Ouincv on the 14th he saw the man to whom he had loaned the grip standing on the street and they picked him up and brought him to Peoria; Quincy was shown to be eighty or more miles from Peoria. It was not shown what Funk’s calling was, but Prunty had been a saloon-keeper and bartender, and a demonstrator for the Maxwell car.
In defense Prunty told a different story from either of those the two had related to the officers when arrested. The officer who intercepted them because of the absence of a license tag testified that at the time there was a third man on the hack seat of the Ford
Mrs. Funk testified for the defense that Mr. Funk stayed at home on the night of the 13th, left early in the morning, November 14th, and returned .about 4:20. in the afternoon of that day; that some ten days be
No attempt was made by the defense to corroborate the statement of Prunty relating to his alleged negotiations with the man Dalton, or his visit to Farmington on the day in question, nor was there any further attempt to identify Adams. The alibi offered in evidence depended entirely upon the testimony of Prunty and Mrs. Funk.
I. The defendant demurred to the evidence at the close of the State’s evidence, and again at the close of all the evidence. These demurrers were overruled and error is assigned here to those rulings. For that reason the evidence has been stated fully above. While the evidence is circumstantial it is quite convincing and sufficient to authorize a verdict of guilty. [State v. McGuire, 193 Mo. 215.]
The rule is that the presumption of guilt from possession of stolen chattels can arise only when the possession is exclusive. Therefore, it is held that where stolen property is found in a house, or in a trunk, or other place to which other persons have equal access with the defendant, the possession is not proven so as to warrant such presumption. [State v. Castor, 93 Mo. 242; State v. Belcher, 136 Mo. 135, l. c. 137; State v. Warford, 106 Mo. 55; State v. Drew, 179 Mo. 315.] Also where property recently stolen was found near the premises of defendant and not on the property under
However, it has been pointed out that the character of the possession is determined by the kind and character of the property. In order to raise the presumption it is not always necessary to show actual manual possession. Some things are not capable of being carried in one’s pocket. The traveling bag in question was not. In the case of State v. Burns, 263 Mo. l. c. 599, the defendant, and another person jointly indicted with him, sold several sacks of cowpeas, which at the time were in the barn of the defendant. Neither the defendant nor his associate were near the barn, but told the purchaser where to get the peas. It turned but that the peas had been stolen. The presumption of guilt attached from such .possession as was shown.
In the case of State v. Toohey, 203 Mo. l. c. 679-80, the defendant was charged with stealing certain brass fixtures from a Pullman car. He went with another person, named Carrigan, to a junk shop, for the purpose of selling the articles. The court said although the stolen property was partly or even exclusively in the possession of Carrigan at the time it was purchased from him and the defendant by the junk dealer, yet defendant’s presence and association with Carrigan made the evidence of such possession competent.
The case of State v. Baker, 264 Mo. 339, was where certain goslings had been stolen and were found in the possession of defendant’s wife on defendant’s premises. It was held the possession was sufficient to warrant the presumption of guilt in the defendant.
In the case of State v. Phelps, 91 Mo. 478, l. c. 483, the defendant was traveling with a woman whom he introduced as his wife; certain stolen goods were found
In the case of State v. Wohlman, 34 Mo. 482, a woman was convicted of larceny. The evidence showed that certain jewelry was stolen from a store and this jewelry was found on the person of defendant’s husband after she had joined him at some distance from the store; it was held that the presumption of her guilt obtained upon such possession. [See also Murphy v. State, 86 Wis. 626; Frazier v. State, 135 Ind. 38; Mass v. State, 81 S. W. (Tex.) 46; 17 R. C. L. p. 71, sec. 76.]
That the traveling bag taken from the automobile in which the defendant and his companion were driving contained the property taken from the burglarized bank, was hot disputed. Just here the appellant claims there was no exclusive possession of that traveling bag, because of the presence of the alleged Adams who, Prunty testified, owned the car.
The two men Punk and Prunty drove into Peoria in apparent exclusive control of the car. They were halted on account of having no license tag, made no, disclaimer of absolute control and possession of the car, went to the police station for the purpose of straightening out the matter without any other kind of a claim; explained that they had bought the car in Missouri a few days before and that they had lost the Missouri tag; so far as the facts and their state-, ments showed they were in exclusive possession of the car and its contents. The traveling bag belonged to Funk, as was admitted.
It was further shown by the tracks of three men that that number probably had been engaged in burglarizing the bank. The uncertain individual on the back seat of the car, whom the motorcycle officer thinks he saw when he started the car toward the police station, and whom nobody else saw in the car either then or afterwards, is the only evidence that any other person Avas in the car at the time the defendants were intercepted. In explaining the presence of the traveling
II. Appellant claims the instructions were not proper because his defense of alibi was not embodied in such a way as to place the burden of proving guilt beyond a reasonable doubt upon the State. The point is not well taken. The jury was instructed as to the defense of alibi and told that if they had a reasonable doubt of the presence of the defendants or either of them at the time and' place where the crime was committed, they should acquit them, or either of them. This was entirely sufficient for the purpose and gave defendants the full benefit of that defense and did not place the burden upon them. [State v. Howell,
It is always competent to prove preparations beforehand of means by which a contemplated crime may be committed and escape made, though such evidence tends to prove the commission of another and independent crime. [State v. Rider, 95 Mo. l. c. 485; State v. Sharp, 71 Mo. 218.]
The possession by defendants of the stolen automobile, their possession of the stolen money, and their carrying it away in the automobile, connected the two
The reference of the attorney to the failure of Prunty and Funk to explain, when arrested, cannot be regarded as a reference to the failure of Funk to testify in the case. [State v. Gordon, 253 Mo. l. c. 518; State v. Ruck, 194 Mo. 416; State v. Fields, 234 Mo. 625.]
The statements of a defendant when arrested on charge of committing a crime are always admissible aaainst him. [State v. Daly, 210 Mo. 664; State v. Wilkins, 221 Mo. 448.] Since the statements of defendants at the time they were arrested were properly admitted in evidence they were proper subjects of comment and argument by the prosecutor. If their statements were inconsistent, flimsy and improbable, it was
The failure of the defendants to produce evidence in support of their alibi by bringing witnesses from Farmington was a proper subject of comment. Prunty testified in his own behalf regarding the alibi by saying that he and Funk spent the day in Farmington. It is now the rule in this State that when a defendant takes the stand in his own behalf the prosecutor in his argument may make any legitimate comment .upon defendant’s testimony, and may call the attention of the jury to his failure to explain certain facts which would tend to aid his defense. [State v. Larkin and Harris, 250 Mo. 218; State v. Lewis, 264 Mo. l. c. 432; State v. Murray, 193 S. W. l. c. 833-4.] These eases overrule earlier cases upon this proposition. In the Larkin case the prosecutor called attention to the failure of the defendant, while he was on the stand, to deny certain statements attributed to him. Here the prosecutor called attention to the failure of Prunty to produce evidence in support of his alibi; that is, in support of Prunty’s own statement about his presence in Farmington on the dav in nuespon. Tt was nro-npr also, as against Funk, because it could not be regarded as a reference to his failure to testify any more than it would be to mention the failure of the defendants to produce evidence in support of any feature * of their defense. [State v. Hughes, 258 Mo. 271; State v. Parker, 172 Mo. 191; State v. Preston, 77 Mo. 294.]
The other remarks made by the prosecutor, detached from their context as they are, do not appear to be improper comments upon the evidence as presented.
The court, upon this objection being made, said in the presence of the jury: ‘ ‘ The court has not submitted the case to the jury. It is now the noon hour and the jury will be given their dinner before the case will be submitted to them.”
The jury could not have understood the ease was submitted to them, nor that they were at liberty to deliberate together upon their verdict; nor is it claimed that they did in fact deliberate upon the case for one moment before they were fully instructed, which was done at 1:15 when they returned to the court room. They were not released from the instructions usually given them regarding their behavior during the progress of the trial; it is not claimed there was a lack of such instruction.
Other errors are claimed which we do not find it necessary to consider.
The judgment is affirmed.
PER CURIAM: — The foregoing opinion by White, C., is adopted as the opinion of the court.