196 Mo. 73 | Mo. | 1906
At the August term, 1905, of the Ozark Circuit Court, the prosecuting attorney .within and for said county filed an information charging the defendant Walker' with murder, in the first degree, of one Guy T. Harrison, at the said county, on the 21st day of July, 1905. The defendant was arrested and duly arraigned, and at the same term was put upon his trial, and was convicted of murder in the second degree, and his punishment assessed at ten years in the state penitentiary. From the conviction and sentence he appeals to this court.
The evidence on behalf of the State tended to prove that the deceased, Guy T. Harrison, was a member of the bar, residing at Gainesville, Ozark coilnty, and about thirty-eight years of age, and weighed about 180 pounds, strong and vigorous, and the defendant is about forty-five years of age, small in size, and had for many years been crippled and deformed as the result of rheumatism. Mr. Harrison, the deceased, owned a farm near the town of Gainesville, but resided in the town. The defendant lived on a farm adjoining this farm of the deceased. Dr. White testified that on the 21st of July, 1905, he examined the body of Guy T. Harrison, who was dead at the time; he found a gun-shot wound about two inches and a half below the collar bone, on the right side and just to the right of the breast bone. The bullet seemed to have entered something like two and a half inches below the collar bone on the right side of the breast bone and ranged backwards and somewhat downwards to the left. The ball went directly through the body and the deceased was shot from the front and the ball entered into his front. The shot was neces
D. D. Turnbaugh testified that he resided in Gaines-ville and was publisher of the Ozark County Times on the 21st of July, 1905. He was acquainted with Guy Harrison in his lifetime; he examined the place where Harrison was killed on that day; it was located in a little plum thicket about thirty-five or fifty feet from the public road. There was a little open place in this thicket some four or five feet square in which the body was lying; this place was some four or five feet above the body of the branch which runs near there. He testified that a man standing in that little open place could not see a man going along the road, nor could a man going along the road see anyone in that open space without stooping down and looking under the grove; he testified that he made investigations for bullet marks on the timber and found bullet abrasions on three limbs, and he took a position to get in line with these abrasions; to have made the abrasions, in his opinion, a man would have had to get down on his right knee and used the left as a rest. They were not on a level, the bullet that made the abrasions was rising a little.
Mr. R. Q. Gilliland testified that he went to the scene of the killing on the day it occurred and looked for a trace of a bullet, but did not find it, but on the next Tuesday following the killing they found the course of the bullet; it had hit two limbs on some plum bushes; they were slightly ascending; he was of the opinion that a man would have to be down on his knees to have fired the ball in the direction it took.
Fait Hayes testified that he was working for the
Glennie Harrison, the son of the deceased, testified that he was fifteen years of age; that on the morning of the killing he was riding horseback and had a dog with him to run the hogs out of the field; there was
The defendant testified in his own behalf that he was forty-five years old; that he had been afflicted for the ]ast seventeen years with rheumatism, and for the last five years had been almost helpless; his shoulders were drawn and his hands were drawn out of shape; for two or three days before the killing, he had been
Mr. Conkin, the sheriff of the county, testified in behalf of the defendant that when he reached the place where the homicide occurred he found the defendant Walker, Glennie Harrison, George and Asa Scott there; the body of Mr. Harrison was lying on its back; the pistol was lying there beside him; he requested Hays to pick up the pistol, but the latter declined to do so, and the witness picked it up himself; he found that the hammer was hung, it would not work, the pistol was cocked; he testified that he noticed where the
William Luna testified that he was probate judge of Ozark county, and had been sheriff; he was well acquainted with Mr. Harrison in his lifetime. He testified that he undressed the body of Mr. Harrison after his death; he found powder stains on the shirt when he took it off of him; he also testified that the range of the bullet that cut the twigs was upward. He testified that the reputation of Mr. Harrison as a quarrelsome, turbulent man was bad.
Mr. J. S. Miller also testified that he was the constable of the township and had known Mr. Harrison all his life and that his reputation as a quarrelsome, turbulent, overbearing man was bad.
Tesley Luna testified that he was acquainted with Mr. Harrison; that sometime in the preceding summer he had a conversation with' Mr. Harrison, the deceased, about Walker, the defendant; that deceased said that he ought to or had a notion to get him a shot gun and go down there, it was something about hogs in the field, some of Walker’s hogs, and that he had a good notion to get him a shot gun and go down and kill him, that is about what he stated. This is the substance of all the testimony in the case.
1. We have given a full statement of all the material evidence for the reason that the propriety of the instructions can only be ascertained by a knowledge of the testimony.
That the evidence demanded an instruction on self-