State v. Beard

29 S.W. 592, 126 Mo. 548, 1895 Mo. LEXIS 199
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedFebruary 12, 1895
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 29 S.W. 592 (State v. Beard) 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. Beard, 29 S.W. 592, 126 Mo. 548, 1895 Mo. LEXIS 199 (Mo. 1895).

Opinion

Gantt, P. J.

— The defendant was indicted at the October term, 1891, of the St. Louis criminal court, for [549]*549the murder of Ashley Jones, on September 11, 1891. He was duly arraigned at said term and entered his plea of not guilty; was allowed a separate trial at the January term, 1892, and, after a number of continuances of the cause, he was put upon his trial at the October term, 1893, when he was convicted of manslaughter in the third degree, and his punishment assessed at three years’ imprisonment in the penitentiary. Motions for new trial and in arrest were successively overruled, sentence pronounced, appeal allowed, and appellant admit, ted to bail, pending same, in the sum of $3,000.

Notwithstanding appellant’s ability to give bail and employ counsel in the criminal court, he hhs filed no brief nor submitted any sort of argument in this case, and, under the statute, we have been compelled to read the entire transcript to ascertain if material or prejudicial error was committed against him.

The testimony on the part of the state tended to prove substantially the .following: Early on the morning of the eleventh day of September, 1891, about 5 o’clock, deceased (who lived in Arkansas and was on a visit to the city), in company with three others, encountered the appellant and his codefendant on a public street. There had been no previous acquaintance between the two parties, and the conversation that ensued upon the encounter related entirely to drinking, and resulted in Beard and Bernard inviting the other four to drink with them. The invitation was accepted, and Beard and Brown conducted the other four to a saloon kept by one Brady, of which saloon they were habitues.

The party ranged in front of the bar, but nothing was said for a minute or so. Bernard stood first, nest to him Beard, and then deceased. One of the invited party then remarked: “Who said come and take a drink?” and, there being no reply, continued: “Well, [550]*550let’s have a drink,” and put some money on the counter, adding: “I think it is a nice way, though, to ask a man to take a drink and then have to pay for it yourself.” As he'made that remark, the appellant struck deceased on the side of the head with a baseball bat, felling him to the floor, raised the bat and struck another, when the three companions of deceased ran out of the saloon. After an ineffectual attempt to get an ' officer, they got a cab driver to go to the saloon and bring out the deceased; the latter at the time was unconscious and “limber as a rag,” was driven to the city dispensary and thence to the city hospital. He never regained consciousness, but died on the thirteenth (two days later) at the hospital from compression of the brain, following a fracture of the base of the skull. Appellant and Bernard were arrested on the twelfth day of September (the day after the occurrence) at St. Charles.

At the close of the state’s case, appellant “offered an instruction in the nature of a demurrer to the evidence,” which was overruled, and exception saved. This instruction, however, does not appear in the record.

On behalf of the appellant there was testimony tending to show that his reputation for peace and quiet was good; that his occupation, when, he had any, was that of a bartender; that on the morning of September 11 deceased and his three companions were standing on the corner of the street drinking from a bottle, and, as appellant and Bernard came by, invited the latter to join them in drinking from the bottle, which was declined, as they “were not drinking whisky.” An invitation was then extended to Beard and Bernard to come round the “corner and drink anything you want,” and the whole party went to Brady’s saloon; drinks were ordered, and then a question arose as to who [551]*551should pay for them; deceased said to the appellant: “You ordered them,” and appellant answered: “I did not order them and I don’t intend to pay for them;” with that deceased called him a liar and struck him full in the face; that deceased and his companions were all drunk and noisy, and indulged in talk of being “a hell of a man from Arkansas,” and about “cleaning out places;” that Bernard got the bat to defend himself, and appellant took it away from him and struck one of the companions of deceased on the arm; that deceased tripped over a spittoon and fell on the floor, while the others ran out; that Brady, the proprietor of the saloon, came in and then caught hold of the deceased, put him out of the saloon and beat him, and threw him violently down upon some stone steps.

The court instructed the jury that, if upon consideration of all the evidence, they should entertain a reasonable doubt of the commission of the homicide by appellant, Beard, it was their duty without proceeding farther to acquit him; alsG, upon murder in the second degree, manslaughter in the third and fourth degrees, self-defense, good character, credibility of witnesses, reasonable doubt; and also that if they believed and found from the evidence that the injuries inflicted upon deceased, and from which he died, were caused by the deceased’s head being violently and forcibly thrown against the stone steps or curbing by one Brady, or any person other than defendant, they should acquit appellant.

The following instruction was asked by appellant and refused: “The court instructs the jury that if they believe and find from the evidence in the case that the injuries inflicted upon the deceased, and from which he subsequently died, were caused by the deceased’s head being forcibly and violently thrown [552]*552against the stone steps or curbing and his skull fractured by one John Thomas Brady, or any other person than this defendant (or if the jury have a reasonable doubt whether the injuries were inflicted by the said Brady), then they must acquit the defendant.”

This is the instruction given by the court, with the exception of the part in parenthesis.

One of the grounds for new trial was that of newly discovered evidence since the trial; and affidavits were filed in support of this ground: the first (of one Samuel Jungling) is. simply cumulative of the testimony given for the appellant on the trial, and also tending to impeach one Lulu Coburn (a witness for the state); the second (of one Henry C. Baker) purports to give a statement made by one Mrs. Brady in his* hearing, in which she claims to have seen the affair in the saloon; that her husband Brady struck deceased twice on the head with a beer mallet and he fell on the stone steps, and that Beard had nothing to do with it; the third (of one Mamie Graham) corroborates the second; the fourth (of one C. P. Tooley) corroborates the second also; the fifth (of one James R. Walsh), to the effect that Brady had admitted to him that he (Brady) had broken the skull of deceased with the beer mallet and thrown his head against the stone steps, and also to the effect that Lulu Coburn (a state’s witness) had admitted to him that she knew Beard was innocent, but swore against him because she was afraid of Brady. The appellant did not file his own affidavit, alleging that he knew nothing of the purported evidence when he went to trial.

I. The record contains various exceptions to evidence, but they were all without merit. The attempt to prove by the officer defendant’s own statements made two days after the assault was so clearly self-serving and incompetent that no sort of doubt can [553]*553exist as to the propriety of excluding them.

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Related

State v. Punshon
34 S.W. 25 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1896)

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Bluebook (online)
29 S.W. 592, 126 Mo. 548, 1895 Mo. LEXIS 199, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-beard-mo-1895.