196 Mo. 90 | Mo. | 1906
On the 31st day of May, 1904, the prosecuting attorney of St. Francois county filed an information charging the defendant with the crime of arson in the third degree for the burning of a saloon, the property of Z. B. Jennings, on the 20th of January, 1903. A change of venue was taken from the regular judge of said circuit, and Hon. E. M. Dearing, judge of the Twenty-First Judicial Circuit, was called as special judge to try the case.
I. The first question arising on this appeal is the propriety of the ruling of the circuit court in denying the defendant’s motion for his discharge on the ground that the State had failed to bring him to a trial at the end of the third term of the court after the information was filed. On the hearing of this motion, it appeared ■that another information, charging the defendant with this same offense, had been filed in the same court on the 30th day of July, 1903; that the defendant was admitted to bail on said first information, and at the August term, 1903, of said court said cause was continued on the application of. the State, and was again continued on the application of the State at the November term, 1903, of said court. At the May term, 1904, the prosecuting attorney entered a nolle prosequi to said first information, and on the same day filed another information charging the defendant with the same offense, the latter being the information in this cause upon which the defendant was tried and convicted. The record does not show on whose application the case was continued on the new information, further than that the defendant entered into a new recognizance for his appearance at the August term, 1904, of said court. At the August term, 1904, the case was continued on the application of the State until the 29th of August, 1904, and on the last-named date it was again continued for want of time to try the same until the next term of court. At the November term,1904, of said court, the defendant filed his motion for discharge, which was, as already said, overruled by the court and exceptions properly saved.
The contention of the defendant is that the two in-
It is therefore clear under the decisions of this court in the construction of sections 2641, 2642 and 2643, that terms of court which lapse under a prior indictment must be excluded. For this reason, the court properly overruled the motion for the discharge of the defendant.
II. It is earnestly insisted by counsel for the defendant that the evidence was insufficient to sustain a judgment of conviction, and that the court erred in re
In the month of January, 1903, Z. B. Jennings was living at a small place called Esther, in St. Francois county, and was there engaged in the saloon business. The defendant, George F. Wigger, and his son, were running a saloon at the same place, about three or four hundred yards to the north of the Jennings place of business. On the morning of the 20th of January, 1903, between three and four o’clock, Jennings’ saloon and its contents were destroyed by fire. Incendiarism was suspected and a reward of $500 was offered by Jennings for information as to the guilty party. It was shown in evidence that the defendant had refused to sign Jennings’ saloon petition, and that there was some ill feeling on the part of the defendant toward Jennings before the saloon was burned. Clarence Wigger, a nephew of the defendant, about twenty-three years of age, was living with the defendant at the time of the burning of the saloon. He appeared as a witness against the defendant at the trial, and testified that the defendant offered him $50 if he would burn Jennings’ saloon; that he agreed to do it, and that defendant got the oil and rags for that purpose; that they together, on the night of the 20th of January, 1903, went to the Jennings saloon, and that while defendant stood guard he, Clarence Wigger, set fire to the saloon. Sam Wigger, a distant relative of the defendant, testified that the defendant offered him $100 to burn Jennings’ saloon about three or four months before the same was burned. Cy Lore, a witness for the State, testified that prior to the burning of the saloon, the defendant had offered him all the whiskey he could drink if he would burn Jennings out. •
The defendant was a witness in his own behalf, and
It is urged that the State failed to prove by Clarence Wigger the name of the boy whom the witness Wigger stated the defendant hired to purchase the oil with which the building was burned, and failed to produce the boy, or account for his absence, and also failed to procure or account for the absence of the witness Sam Doss. It cannot be doubted, we think, that if the testimony of Clarence Wigger was believed by the jury, it was sufficient to establish that the defendant was the instigator of the crime of the burning of Jennings’ saloon building, and was present aiding, assisting and directing Clarence Wigger in perpetrating the crime. It follows then that Clarence Wigger, the witness, was an accomplice in the commission of that crime. If anything is settled in the law of this State, it is that the evidence of an accomplice who confesses his own guilty participation in a crime, is competent against his accomplice on trial for the same offense. And the credibility of such a witness is a matter for the consideration of the jury trying the case. [State v. Hill, 96 Mo. 357; State v. Williams, 149 Mo. 496; State v. Franke, 159 Mo. 535.] And it is also the accepted doctrine that the evidence of an accomplice, even though uncorroborated, is sufficient to sustain a conviction if believed by the jury. [State v. Williamson, 106 Mo. 162; State v. Black, 143 Mo. 166; State v. Tobie, 141 Mo. l. c. 561; State v. Marcks, 140 Mo. 656; State v. Harkins, 100 Mo. 666.] The failure of the State to produce the other witnesses to corroborate the testimony of the accomplice could have operated only against the State, and was a legitimate subject for discussion before the jury, but would not authorize this court, which has not the opportunity of seeing and hearing the witness testi
ITT. Error is predicated upon the action of the circuit court in permitting the prosecuting attorney to ask the witnesses for the defendant, Aubuchon, Ben-ham and Taylor, if they had not been charged with the crime of robbery, and if informations or indictments had not been preferred against them. Over the objections and exceptions of the defendant, the court permitted these questions and required the witnesses to answer the same. It is now insisted by the State in its brief that these questions were justified by the rulings of this court: In State v. Taylor, 118 Mo. 153, in which it was held that upon a cross-examination of the witness it was competent to ask him, After this thing occurred, were you not arrested for stealing billiard balls from Boulander’s saloon, and sent to jail?” and State v. Pratt, 121 Mo. l. c. 574, in which it was ruled that it was competent to ask the witness if he had been arrested and put in jail in Kansas City for stealing a pitch-fork, and State v. Martin, 124 Mo. 523, in which it was ruled that it was proper to ask a witness, on cross-examination, how many times he had been in the county jail on sentences for crime. As to all of these cases, and the case of State v. Miller, 100 Mo. 606, upon which they are all bottomed, the questions all implied a conviction for the offenses with which the witnesses were charged, and the objection went to the fact that the convictions were not shown by the record, but it will be observed that the question in this case goes simply to the fact that a charge either by indictment or information was pending against the witness and did not go to the fact of a conviction thereof, and the ques
IV. This brings us to the next assignment of error, to-wit, the impropriety and prejudicial character of the remarks of the prosecuting attorney in his closing argument to the jury as to certain statements made to the prosecuting attorney by the State’s witness, Clarence Wigger. The bill of exceptions recites that in his closing address to the jury, the prosecuting attorney stated to the jury as follows: “I will repeat that the confession made by Clarence Wigger to me in my office was in the closing days of July, 1903, near the end— July, has 31 days in it, and it showed to me that that confession made to me in that office not only involved this defendant on the charge for which he is now being tried, but involved Alex Robinett in the charge of robbery up there, ’ ’ to which counsel for the defendant objected. The prosecuting attorney continued: “ And upon that charge as made upon Alex Robinett the testimony of the witnesses in this case that was sworn on the stand here shows that Alex Robinett in the Washington County Circuit Court entered a plea of guilty there and is now in the Missouri penitentiary, as the testimony shows as sworn to here.” Counsel for the defendant: “I think that is going beyond all reason as to the confession against Eobinett, as that has never
There can be no question as to the impropriety and highly prejudicial character of the remarks of the prosecuting attorney as to what Clarence Wigger, the accomplice, had confessed in his office concerning the guilt
It is almost unnecessary to add that the mild rebuke of the judge in this case fell far short of curing this error.
V. There are other assignments of error, but as this case must be reversed and-remanded for the errors noted, they are such as can be readily avoided upon a