State v. Barton

113 S.W. 1111, 214 Mo. 316, 1908 Mo. LEXIS 228
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedNovember 24, 1908
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 113 S.W. 1111 (State v. Barton) 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. Barton, 113 S.W. 1111, 214 Mo. 316, 1908 Mo. LEXIS 228 (Mo. 1908).

Opinion

GANTT, J.

This is a prosecution commenced on the 13th of November, 1905, by the prosecuting attorney of Reynolds county, Missouri, in which he charged the defendant with feloniously, willfully and maliciously killing a bull calf, the property of Belle Dunn, at said county of Reynolds on the 7th of November, 1905.

The defendant was tried before a jury on the 29th day of May, 1906, and found guilty, and his punishment assessed at a fine of fifty dollars. His motions for new trial and in arrest of judgment were overruled and he appealed to the St. Louis Court of'Appeals, and that court has transferred the cause to this court because the prosecution is for violation of sec[319]*319tion 1987, Revised Statutes 1899, which is a felony under said section. As it is the contention of the defendant that the evidence was wholly insufficient to sustain the verdict, it will he necessary to make a somewhat full statement of the testimony.

Mrs. Belle Dunn testified that she was the owner of the calf alleged to have heen shot and killed by the defendant. She was the step-mother of the wife of the defendant, and on the day that the calf was killed, she was occupying a portion of the same farm on which defendant was living. The defendant had leased the farm from her husband before he died in the previous spring. She testified that about a week before the calf was killed, the defendant said to her he would kill her calves if they were not taken out of his field. On November 8, 1905, the calf mentioned in the information was found dead in the field occupied by the defendant, having been shot with a shotgun.

Myers, a witness for the State, testified that on the evening of November 7, 1905, when the witness was about a quarter of a mile from the house of the defendant and traveling in the direction of the house, he heard the report of a gun, which he judged to be a shotgun, in the direction of the field of the defendant where the calf was found dead the following morning. The witness drove on up to the house of the defendant and stopped and talked to the defendant, and in that conversation, the defendant said he had been out in his field, the same in which the calf was killed, and had been driving Belle Dunn’s calves out of his corn, and had just returned. This was about sundown of that day.

H. L. Fitz, the officer who arrested the defendant, testified that when he arrested the defendant he said that he told the woman he would kill the calf if she did not take it out of the corn, and that he had taken [320]*320his calf out and wanted her to take hers out. At first he said he did not kill the calf, but he told her he would kill it if she did not take it out of his corn, that he had just told her that to give her a scare so she would take it out.

'William Turner, who kept a store near the farm of the defendant, testified that he purchased a fresh hide of a calf from Mrs. Dunn about the time the calf was alleged to have been killed, and it looked as if it had a hand full of shot scattered over it.

The defendant testified in his own behalf and denied the killing of the calf. Admitted that he had a conversation with the witness Myers at his home on the farm on the evening on which the calf is alleged to have beeen killed, and that Myers was at his house late that afternoon. He stated that he had returned to his home from his father’s about four o’clock in .the afternoon, and went down to Turner’s store for a little while, and then went over across the creek into the cornfield to get some fodder to feed his horses. He denied making the statement to the witness Myers to the effect that he had been down driving Mrs. Dunn’s calves out of his field. He testified further that if he made the statements attributed to him by Mrs. Dunn and Mr. Fitz, he had no recollection of them.

Mrs. Nora Barton, the wife of the defendant, testified that after their arrival at home that afternoon, the defendant was not out of her sight during the afternoon and was not away during the night, and that the defendant did not have his gun out of the house that afternoon; that she went with him to the field where they got the fodder and fed the team; that they did not take any gun with them, and she neither saw any calves or calf that afternoon, nor heard any shot fired.

There was evidence also on the part of the defend[321]*321ant tending to impeach the character of Mrs. Dnnn for chastity and veracity, but it would seem that the most of this unfavorable reputation had grown out of a suspicion that she had not been married to Mr. Dunn, but it further appeared that Mr. Turner had written to the recorder in St. Francois county and ascertained that the marriage certificate was duly recorded in said county. Practically all the evidence tended to show that there was no cause whatever to impeach her character after her marriage to Mr. Dunn. On the part of the State an attempt was also made to impeach the character of the defendant, but this resulted merely in showing a bad reputation for quarrelsomeness rather than for truth and veracity.

I. It was for the jury to pass upon the weight of the evidence, and this court will not disturb their finding unless there is entire failure of proof, or the evidence on the part of the State is of such a flimsy character as to authorize the inference that the finding was the result of passion, prejudice or mistake. That the calf was killed in the field of the appellant, and was shot with a shotgun, there is practically no dispute. There is not the least evidence tending to show that the owner herself had killed it, or any suggestion that any other person had a motive for killing the calf except the defendant. The evidence shows that the defendant had threatened to kill the calf if it was not taken out of his cornfield, and that he was at home on his premises that afternoon was established by his own evidence. The witness Myers testified that he heard a shot that afternoon down in the field where the calves were feeding, and soon thereafter he drove up to the defendant’s house, and the defendant stated to him that he had just been down in the field driving Mrs. Dunn’s calves out. It is'true the defendant denies the killing of the calf and his wife [322]*322testified that fie did not have the gun wfien fie was down in tfie field tfiat afternoon, hut tfie weigfit of this evidence on both sides.was a matter for tfie jury, and we think the jury were authorized, if they believed tfie evidence for tfie State, to> find tfiat tfie defendant killed, tfie calf.

II. Tfie court in its instructions, among others, gave the following:

“You are further instructed tfiat one of tfie defenses interposed by tfie defendant is what is known as an alibi, by which, is meant a claim on fiis part that fie was at another and different place than tfiat at which tfie alleged crime was committed, at tfie time wfien it was in fact committed.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
113 S.W. 1111, 214 Mo. 316, 1908 Mo. LEXIS 228, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-barton-mo-1908.