State v. Bauerle

46 S.W. 609, 145 Mo. 1, 1898 Mo. LEXIS 61
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJune 14, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 46 S.W. 609 (State v. Bauerle) 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. Bauerle, 46 S.W. 609, 145 Mo. 1, 1898 Mo. LEXIS 61 (Mo. 1898).

Opinion

Gantt, P. J.

On an indictment for murder in the first degree defendant was convicted of murder in the second degree and sentenced to imprisonment in the penitentiary for ten years by the criminal court of Lafayette county.

The controlling facts may be briefly summarized. Amelia Bauerle was the granddaughter of Louis Bauerle and the niece of the defendant, Otto Bauerle. A short time prior to the death of Amelia Bauerle, on April 26,1896, her parents had moved from Lexington [7]*7in this State to some place in the State of New York, and left the girl with her grandfather in Lexington. The old gentleman lived in the second story of a brick building on Main street which he owned. On Sunday morning April 26, 1896, a pistol was discharged in the apartments in which Amelia lived, and her uncle, John Bauerle, and his wife, who ran a restaurant in the west room on the ground floor of his father’s said building, and others in the neighborhood, ran up stairs and found Amelia lying on the floor and a pistol lying by her side. Dr. P. S. Fulkerson was summoned at once by the defendant, Otto Bauerle, and found Amelia lying on the floor very pale and pulse-less. She lived about thirty minutes after he reached her. He found a gun shot wound in the pit of her stomach. Dr. Emmett. Fulkerson was coroner at that time. They made a post mortem examination and found the ball resting on the spinal column. It had entered about the center of the pit of the stomach and ranged a little upwards and to the left. They removed the ball and found some large blood vessel had been cut and a large hemorrhage had ensued. Dr. Fulkerson testified she never spoke but once after he reached her, and that was simply to say very indistinctly, “Turn me over.” The wound and copious hemorrhage caused her death. Her clothing was powder-burnt.

The doctor testified that defendant was greatly alarmed or excited when he came for him and asked the doctor to hurry. Dr. Fulkerson reached the wounded woman in five minutes after defendant summoned him. His office was near. He did not recollect that the defendant was in the room after he arrived until she died. Mat Boldridge was in the room either when he got there or came in while he was there. On the Saturday evening previous to the homicide next morning, James Misner, a witness, testified [8]*8he saw the defendant and the deceased in the alley in the rear of the Bauerle building. Deceased had just inquired of witness where defendant was, and about that time or soon after they passed the witness, and as-they did so defendant said to deceased “I’ll soon.get rid of you.” He seemed very angry. On the same day another witness, Vinegar, testified that he saw defendant and deceased together at the back gate of the Bauerle lot. Defendant took hold of deceased and they went into the back yard. On Sunday morning Vinegar was in the alley and heard the shot fired which killed Amelia. He testified he went at once to the Bauerle house. When he reached there he saw John Bauerle, the uncle of deceased and brother of defendant, ^oing up the steps out of his restaurant, and saw defendant go out of the hall into the kitchen and sit down by the window. He saw Mr. Clark, the city marshal, and Mr. Dickerson up there. Misner also testified that he was employed to clean up a saloon near by and that on Sunday morning after cleaning the saloon he came down the alley and went in back of Mr. Hearle’s and - into the yard to a water-closet. Hearle’s lot joins Bauerle’s, and is separated by a fence. There is a back porch to Bauerle’s house seven or eight feet from the ground. He says from where he stood in the back yard nothing prevented his seeing on Bauerle’s porch. He then details what he saw and heard in these words: ‘ ‘When I went out of the back yard of Mr. Hearle’s, Mr. Bauerle, the defendant, was sitting on the back porch and had a pistol in his hand. I thought he was loading or greasing it, I don’t know which. He was sitting on the southwest corner of the porch; he had the pistol in his left hand; with the other hand he was doing something, I don’t know whether he was loading it or greasing it. . He was sitting down when I first saw him. A little while after that this girl came [9]*9out with, something in her hand, I don’t know whether it was a rag or what; this girl was Amelia Bauerle; she came out of the house; she came out of a hallway on to the porch, and when she came out she said something to him, I don’t know exactly what she said, and he jumped up and they got to scuffling and I heard her say, ‘You are a liar’ to him, and he went up to her on the porch, I could not see exactly what he did with the pistol. She pulled loose from him and went back into the house; he went on in behind her. I could not see which hand he held the pistol in as he went in. I did not see the pistol while they were scuffling; he went right in after her as quick as she went in; I did not know exactly where the pistol was fired, but 1 thought it was fired in the direction of the house or over that way. I was not certain, and I looked over in the yard and I did not see anybody in the yard, so I went to go out the back way and look in the gate, and I seen everybody going along coming to that yard, and I turned round and went to the back up there and the gate was locked. It was about three or four minutes after defendant went into the room or house that I heard the pistol shot; I saw no one come down and enter the bach yard from the house after the young lady went in.”

Mat Boldridge testified that he was a barber. His shop was located directly east of and adjoining the Bauerle house. A fence separated his lot from the Bauerle yard. There is a porch back of his building and one back of-the Bauerle building, about ten feet from the ground. He says: “Amelia Bauerle was killed on Sunday morning. I heard a pistol shot that morning about 9 o’clock; I was down in the barber shop. Just before that I heard a rumbling upstairs, and I thought it was my boys fighting and I grabbed up my rawhide and ran upstairs. Just after I heard that [10]*10rumbling I heard the pistol shot, or about the same time. I then looked at once over the Bauerle back fence and I saw Mr. John Bauerle and the ladies belonging to the house, Mrs. Bauerle and Mrs. Moore and Mrs. Bauerle again. A man by the name of Davis from Oklahoma was with me and he got over the back fence and went over there and I went around to the gate and up the steps behind him. He was just a few feet ahead of me when he went into the house. From the time I heard the pistol shot to the time I was in the house was about two minutes and a half, and in the room 1 found Mrs. John Bauerle and Mr. John Bauerle and the old lady Bauerle and this man Davis and myself and the girl lying on the floor.. All I heard the girl say was to tell Dr. Fulkerson not to go to cutting on her. I remained there until she began to die. It was four or five minutes before Dr. Fulkerson got there. The defendant, Otto Bauerle, came in just before the doctor did. The defendant came áround to the girl’s head and took hold of her head. Dr. Fulkerson asked, ‘What did she do it with!’ and the young man reached up in the window and says, ‘Here’s what she did it with,’ and that is the only time I saw the pistol and the last time. About this time Mr. Clark and Mr. Dickerson and a whole drove of other people came in.”

Victor Dickerson: This shooting occurred one Sunday morning. I was standing on the corner of Main street when I heard the shot, and I went to Mr. Bauerle’s house with Mr. Clark and Mr. Otto Bauerle, defendant. Dr.

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Bluebook (online)
46 S.W. 609, 145 Mo. 1, 1898 Mo. LEXIS 61, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-bauerle-mo-1898.