State v. Aguelera and Martinez

33 S.W.2d 901, 326 Mo. 1205, 1930 Mo. LEXIS 741
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedDecember 31, 1930
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 33 S.W.2d 901 (State v. Aguelera and Martinez) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Aguelera and Martinez, 33 S.W.2d 901, 326 Mo. 1205, 1930 Mo. LEXIS 741 (Mo. 1930).

Opinions

David Velasco and appellants Mike Aguelera and Joe Martinez were jointly indicted in the Circuit Court of the City of St. Louis for the killing of one Nathan Broddon, the indictment charging murder in the first degree. Upon arraignment each pleaded not guilty and thereafter a severance was granted to Velasco. *Page 1209 Aguelera and Martinez were tried jointly and both were found guilty of murder in the first degree, the jury assessing the punishment of each at death. Aguelera was sentenced in accordance with the verdict. The court reduced Martinez's punishment to life imprisonment in the penitentiary and so sentenced him. The two have jointly appealed to this court.

With some modification we adopt the statement of the facts shown by the State's evidence, as epitomized in the State's brief. Deceased, Nathan Broddon, a man sixty-two years old, and his wife conducted a small store at 2317 Cherokee Street in St. Louis. The rear part of the store was partitioned off and the Broddons occupied it as living quarters. The defendants are Mexicans and were living at the home of defendant Martinez in Madison, Illinois, at the time of the homicide.

On October 31, 1928, about 9:30 or ten o'clock in the morning, two men entered deceased's place of business and asked to buy a pair of shoes. When Broddon turned to the shoe rack to get the shoes one of the men hit him on the head with some sort of instrument, but did not knock him unconscious. As he turned around one of the men presented a pistol and told him to "stick them up." Instead, Broddon grabbed the pistol, whereupon he was immediately shot twice in the abdomen. The two men ran out of the store, one of them throwing the pistol at Broddon, who picked it up and gave chase, stopping outside in front of the store. Near-by police officers, hearing the screams of the wounded man and his wife, hurried to the scene and took up the chase. After a short pursuit Velasco was apprehended in the cellar of a bakery. Broddon was rushed to a hospital and placed on an operating table, where he died about twenty or twenty-five minutes after twelve o'clock that day. Before his death police officers brought Velasco to the operating room and he was identified by Broddon as one of the men who shot him during the attempted robbery.

Mrs. Broddon was not in the store when the robbers entered, having gone to another store to telephone. She returned while they were still there, but after her husband had been struck on the head and shot. She testified that when she entered the store her husband was lying or "kind of sitting down like" on the floor struggling with two men who appeared to be trying to get something out of his pockets; that there was blood on his face; that she started screaming and the men fled. She identified Velasco and defendant Aguelera as the two men whom she had thus seen.

Detectives of the St. Louis police force went to Martinez's home in Madison, Illinois, about 8:30 or nine o'clock on the evening of the day of the homicide, where they found defendant Aguelera, Martinez's son Frank, one Pedro Floris and a young woman by the name of Lillian Pellom. All were arrested and taken to the *Page 1210 Madison police station. Defendant Martinez and Velasco were not at the home at the time of that arrest. Aguelera voluntarily stated to detective Wren that he, Martinez and Velasco had planned the robbery of Broddon's store on the night before the homicide. Miss Pellom, who had stayed at the Martinez home for several days preceding the homicide, testified that Velasco, Aguelera and Martinez were at the latter's home, talking in Spanish, the night before the homicide; that a pistol was exhibited during their conference and that they left the house together in a Chevrolet car belonging to Martinez early in the morning of the day Broddon was killed. She did not know where they were going. Aguelera, in his statement to Wren, said that he and Velasco, who had the pistol, were the ones who went in Broddon's store and that Velasco shot Broddon. Martinez was arrested about three o'clock in the morning following the homicide. He was taken to the Madison police station where he made a voluntary statement. He admitted being the driver of the car, but denied that he knew there was to be a robbery committed. He said that he remained at the wheel of the car outside of Broddon's store while the other two went inside; that shortly thereafter he heard some shots fired and saw an old man come out on the sidewalk ahead of Velasco and Aguelera; that Aguelera ran west and he, Martinez, drove the car west to Jefferson Avenue when he picked up Aguelera and returned to his home in Madison. Aguelera, while still in the Madison police station, stated that all three men went to Broddon's store for the purpose of robbery, as they had planned the night before at Martinez's home.

Aguelera and Martinez, defendants herein, and Miss Pellom all waived extradition to the State of Missouri, whereupon they were brought to a police station in St. Louis. Aguelera and Martinez were confronted with Velasco. Aguelera again stated voluntarily that the three went to Broddon's store for the purpose of robbery and that he and Velasco had gone inside the store: that Velasco had the pistol "and that he hit Mr. Broddon on the head with it first and started behind a partition with Mr. Broddon, and that he remained inside at the front door, and right after Velasco took Mr. Broddon behind this partition he heard two shots fired and that Velasco came running towards him and the both of them went out of the store; he run west and Velasco run east." The pistol with which deceased was shot was identified as Velasco's.

Defendants called two witnesses from whom testimony was elicited, intended apparently to prove an alibi, but if true it did show that defendants were not at the Broddon store at the time the State's evidence shows the crime was committed.

I. The point chiefly stressed and relied upon by appellants for reversal is the refusal of the trial court to appoint an interpreter *Page 1211 for defendants. They contend that such refusal in effect prevented them from testifying in their own behalf.Interpreter. To a proper understanding of that question a statement of the facts relative thereto is necessary.

The native tongue of both defendants is Spanish. It is not shown how long either had been in this country. Two of the State's witnesses, police officers who participated in the arrests, testified at considerable length to conversations with each defendant separately and to conversations with these two defendants together and with these two and Velasco. In these conversations, which were carried on in English, many questions were asked and answered. Both officers testified that both defendants understood them and were understood by them clearly and without difficulty. According to their testimony not only was there no suggestion from either defendant that he could not understand English, but both said they could understand it though they could not read or write it and both answered all questions "distinctly and intelligently."

Miss Pellom's testimony was to the same effect. She had known both defendants, just how long is not shown, prior to the homicide, and occasionally met and talked with Martinez and had "kept company" with Aguelera for a short time. She testified: "I went with him for a while." She spent several days immediately preceding the day of the homicide in the Martinez home. She spoke and understood only English. She testified further that Velasco, Aguelera and Martinez all understood English and spoke it well enough to be understood; that she had no difficulty in conversing with them in English.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
33 S.W.2d 901, 326 Mo. 1205, 1930 Mo. LEXIS 741, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-aguelera-and-martinez-mo-1930.