State v. Baker

24 S.W.2d 1039, 324 Mo. 846, 1930 Mo. LEXIS 553
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedFebruary 19, 1930
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 24 S.W.2d 1039 (State v. Baker) 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. Baker, 24 S.W.2d 1039, 324 Mo. 846, 1930 Mo. LEXIS 553 (Mo. 1930).

Opinions

Defendant Ephraim Baker was charged by information in the Circuit Court of Reynolds County with the crime of murder in the first degree for the killing of one William Allison. Upon trial he was convicted on November 27, 1928, of murder in the second degree, and sentenced to twenty-five years' imprisonment in the penitentiary, and he appeals.

By the State's evidence the following facts are shown: Defendant, a man about fifty years of age, and deceased, who was sixty-nine, were neighboring farmers, their dwellings being about an eighth of a mile apart and fronting upon the same public road. R.L. Neely and William Walker were respectively road overseer and assistant road overseer for the road district which included the road running past the homes of defendant and deceased. The latter's son, Jesse Allison, lived with his father. Jesse owed poll tax which Neely and Walker had authorized him to pay by hauling and spreading gravel on the road at a point near defendant's house. On the day the trouble occurred, January 23, 1928, Jesse was engaged in this work, using a wagon and team, and his father was helping him. They were taking the gravel from a shallow creek or branch at the side of the road where it ran along defendant's land, and it appears defendant claimed that the place from which the gravel was being taken was upon his land, although it was very near, within a few *Page 849 feet at most, the traveled portion of the road and with no fence between it and the traveled roadway.

The Allisons were in the road, Jesse on the wagon driving and William walking behind the wagon, when defendant came down the road from his home to meet them. It developed that defendant, before starting to the point where the Allisons were, had armed himself with a pistol, which he had concealed upon his person. When about even with the team defendant asked Jesse what he was doing there. Jesse stopped the team and replied that he was working out his poll tax. Defendant asked him who gave him permission and Jesse said that Neely and Walker had done so. Defendant said they were not the road bosses and had nothing to do with it. Defendant then said that they, the Allisons, were trespassing. By that time deceased, William Allison, had come up to the wagon and stopped just behind it and hearing defendant's accusation of trespassing said that "he didn't see how we were trespassing when we were working on a public road." Defendant thereupon "took about two steps toward the back end of the wagon," and drew his pistol and shot William Allison and then fired a shot at Jesse, wounding him, but not seriously, in the arm and shoulder. Jesse's team started to run and for the moment he gave his attention to the team and while so engaged heard another shot and glancing back saw defendant "snapping" the pistol, apparently trying to shoot William again but the pistol failed to fire. Stopping his team, Jesse, as he testified, saw defendant following up his attack upon William with a knife, and he, Jesse, seized a shovel and ran to assist his father who was begging defendant not to cut him "as he had already killed him." Intervening, Jesse struck defendant with a shovel. A fight ensued between Jesse and defendant, the former testifying that defendant turned upon and attacked him with a knife. At the termination of this fight defendant was left lying, unconscious or nearly so, in the road, whence he was later assisted to his home by others.

William Allison was shot once, the bullet entering his body "three inches below the sternum on the left side," and lodging in the thoracic cavity. By probing the wound the physician concluded that the bullet ranged upward. It was not located. Allison died the next day as the result of that wound. Deceased's wife, who was at home, heard the shots fired and, her attention being thus attracted, stepped to the window and then to the porch and saw what followed, although she did not see the shooting. No one but William and Jesse and defendant was present when the trouble occurred or saw the shooting. Mrs. Allison's testimony corroborated Jesse's as to occurrences immediately following the firing of the shots. *Page 850

Defendant testified in substance that from his mail box he saw the Allisons at work and went to the place where they were; that they were taking gravel from the branch on his land; that he armed himself with a pistol, because the Allisons had made threats against him and he was afraid they would attack him; that he asked them if they knew they were trespassing, to which they replied in the negative, saying that they had a right there; asked who gave them the right, they said Neely and Walker; that following the latter statement there was a quarrel, but he could not remember what was said; that he started to go back to the house, whereupon "they took after me, Jesse and Bill did, with their shovels;" that the Allisons beat him about the head and body with their shovels until he was almost paralyzed, and that pretty soon he "started to go down," and then, "I tried to protect my life with a gun." He testified that he shot, but did not remember how many times, and that that was the last thing he remembered of the afternoon's occurrences; that he did not "come to himself so that he could remember anything" for over a week. Defendant proved a previous good character as a peaceable, law-abiding man.

There was evidence pro and con as to whether Mrs. Allison could have seen from the house what she claimed to have seen.

The court's instructions to the jury submitted the issues of murder in the first and second degrees, manslaughter and self-defense. Appropriate instructions were also given upon the subjects of good character, presumption of innocence and reasonable doubt.

I. Defendant's first contention is that the verdict is "against the evidence and against the weight of the evidence. . . . and there is no legal, substantial evidence to support the verdict of the jury in that the greater weight of evidence showedRange of that defendant shot deceased in self-defense."Bullet. Defendant seems to base this contention upon the argument that Jesse Allison's testimony is unworthy of belief, because the physician who probed deceased's wound said the bullet "ranged upward," and if so it could not have been fired when the defendant and deceased were both standing, hence defendant's testimony that he fired when he was falling or had fallen must be true. How much "upward" the bullet ranged and what may have caused it to do so are facts not shown by the evidence. Neither was there any effort made to show that a leaden bullet fired from a pistol may not be deflected somewhat from its course upon striking a human body. We cannot take judicial notice that it might not be so deflected nor can we tell from the evidence the exact position of deceased's body with reference to the course of the bullet at the moment the bullet struck deceased. That argument was a matter for the consideration of the jury, but can be of no avail here in the face of the positive testimony. Jesse Allison told a straightforward *Page 851 story and was not impeached. The credibility of the witnesses and the weight of their evidence were for the determination of the jury. It is clear that this contention of defendant's cannot be sustained.

II. Defendant's further contention that the evidence showed at most nothing more than manslaughter and that the court therefore erred in submitting murder in either degree, must likewise be disallowed. Judged from the standpoint of theManslaughter State's evidence the offense was clearly murder.Only.

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Related

State v. Coleman
460 S.W.2d 719 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1970)

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Bluebook (online)
24 S.W.2d 1039, 324 Mo. 846, 1930 Mo. LEXIS 553, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-baker-mo-1930.