State v. Ball

14 S.W.2d 638, 321 Mo. 1171, 1929 Mo. LEXIS 585
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMarch 2, 1929
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 14 S.W.2d 638 (State v. Ball) 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. Ball, 14 S.W.2d 638, 321 Mo. 1171, 1929 Mo. LEXIS 585 (Mo. 1929).

Opinions

An information was filed in the Circuit Court of Jefferson County by which defendant, Roy Schooley, F.L. Smith, Fred Weingaertner, and three other men, under the fictitious names of John Doe, Richard Roe and Henry Roe, were Jointly charged with the robbery of a bank, or robbery in the first degree. Defendant took a severance, and was granted a change of venue to the Circuit Court of Reynolds County. Upon trial in that court, he was found guilty, and sentenced to imprisonment in the penitentiary for eight years. From the judgment and sentence, he has perfected this appeal.

The statements of the evidence contained in the briefs of appellant and respondent are substantially the same. With some alterations, omissions and additions of our own, respondent's statement reads as follows:

"Evidence offered by the State tends to show that about 11:30 A.M., September 24, 1926, defendant went into the Citizens Bank of Festus, at Festus, Missouri, and inquired as to the residence of the Martin family, whom, he said, he wanted to see for the purpose of buying some second-hand Ford cars. He remained in the bank four or five minutes while the cashier made an unsuccessful attempt to reach the Martin residence by telephone. He gave the cashier a business card of one William Mack, an automobile salesman of St. Louis, but the cashier did not remember whether defendant said that Mack came to Festus with him.

"About 11:30 A.M., September 25, 1926, while several people were in the bank, three men came in and robbed the bank. When these three men came into the bank, one of them stopped in the lobby, and the other two went back through the lobby into the directors' room and back around into the banking room where the cashier was. One of the men told the cashier and his assistant to lie down on the floor, which order they immediately obeyed. The man who remained in the lobby compelled the people there to lie down on the floor. After the robbers, by the use of pistols, had caused the cashier and the assistant to lie down on the floor, they took about eight thousand dollars in money and eighteen thousand dollars in United States Government bonds, this being all the money in the bank except five hundred dollars in currency and twenty dollars in nickels. They also took a pistol which belonged to the cashier, and took money from the counter, among which were five new silver dollars. They also took a tin box with twelve hundred dollars worth of bonds in it, which bonds belonged to a customer of the bank. They put this money in a sack and jumped into an automobile, which was waiting for them near the bank, and left. These three men and another man, four in all, got into the automobile. The cashier then called the telephone operator and told her about the robbery, and she turned on the fire alarm. The cashier went to House Springs, which was about twenty miles *Page 1178 from Festus, about four o'clock the same afternoon; there he saw Roy Schooley, the defendant Ball, Fred Weingaertner, and F.L. Smith. All of the bonds and all of the money, except $4700, were later recovered and returned to the bank.

"Roger Elliott testified that he was in the bank at the time of the robbery; that he went to the cashier's window to get a check cashed, and the cashier took his check and started to cash it when three men came into the bank. One man went to the witness and the other two men went to the president's office and back behind the cages. The man who went to the witness held a revolver in his hands; he told Elliott to lie down. This man was Roy Schooley. The witness lay down on the floor, and in a little while the three men went out; two of them were carrying a sack. These men got in a green Nash car which had on it Ohio license plates. He saw four men get into the car, and the man whom he later identified as Schooley got into the back seat. The witness went to the defendant's club house, near House Springs, that evening after the robbery, and there saw Schooley. He also saw the Nash car that the robbers got in after the robbery. No license plates were on it; the eyelets of the license plates, however, were on the car.

"It further appeared that three men at Antonia, a short distance from Festus, were notified of the robbery, and they got into a car and started on the road from Antonia to House Springs. One of these men, Edward Staat, was a deputy sheriff. They saw a Nash car ahead of them. These men exchanged a few shots with the occupants of the Nash car. A few minutes later the Nash car had a collision with another car, and at this time a few more shots were exchanged. Roy Schooley, who was in the Nash car, was doing the shooting from that car. These men drove to the club house near House Springs, and saw there the defendant Francis T. Ball. Ball told them someone had left a car down there, and that `they took our skiff and crossed the river.' The car which had been left had bullet holes in it. Ball further told these men that when he saw some fellows taking his boat across the river he `hollowed' at them and they drew a gun on him and told him to go back into the house. The Nash car was found in a field near the club house. A Moon car was also found stuck in the road near the Nash car; the latter car belonged to the defendant Ball. When these men, who were following the Nash car, found it near the club house, the defendant Ball reached into the Nash car and took out a tin box and gave it to them. This box was found to contain the bonds which had been stolen from the customer at the bank. When these men got to the club house, they asked Schooley how he happened to be there, and he said he came down with Ball and Weingaertner Friday night before the robbery.

"On the morning after the robbery, some of the money which had been taken from the bank was found in a gunny sack about two *Page 1179 hundred yards from the club house. Three pistols and a sawed-off shotgun were also found near the club house. These pistols and this shotgun were exhibited at the trial and the cashier identified one of these pistols as his pistol, which was taken from the bank by the robbers.

"It was shown that on Thursday, the 23rd day of September, 1926, a garage man at House Springs, Missouri, had put a red patch on the tube of the left rear tire of a Nash car and that Roy Schooley was in this car. And there was further evidence to show that the Nash car which was found near the club house, after the robbery, had an inner tube in the left rear tire with a red patch on it.

"The Sheriff of Jefferson County and one of his deputies testified that, on the day of the robbery, they went to the club house near House Springs, and found there the defendant Ball, Roy Schooley, Fred Weingaertner, Mrs. Fred Weingaertner and Mrs. Francis Ball. When they got there they met Ball, who told them he had started to tell a Mr. Boemler that someone had stolen his boat and crossed the river, and he said that someone drove up in a Nash car, and that, when he heard a noise, he walked out of the club house on the porch, and a man said to him, `Get your head back or I'll blow your head off.' He also said that Schooley came out with him Friday night; later, however, after he was arrested, he said Schooley did not come with him Friday night.

"The cashier testified that, sometime after the robbery, he saw the man who held a pistol on him at the time of the robbery, and that his name is Harry Huffendieck.

"The Prosecuting Attorney of Jefferson County testified that the man who had been charged as John Doe in the information was in reality Harry Huffendieck.

"F.L. Smith, one of the defendants whose case was dismissed, testified that he lived in St.

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Bluebook (online)
14 S.W.2d 638, 321 Mo. 1171, 1929 Mo. LEXIS 585, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-ball-mo-1929.