State v. Biswell

179 S.W.2d 61, 352 Mo. 698, 1944 Mo. LEXIS 536
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedApril 3, 1944
DocketNo. 38551.
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 179 S.W.2d 61 (State v. Biswell) 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. Biswell, 179 S.W.2d 61, 352 Mo. 698, 1944 Mo. LEXIS 536 (Mo. 1944).

Opinion

*702 LEEDY, J.’

'Defendant, Joe Biswell, was charged with murder" in the first degree in having shot and killed Leo Linneman. He' was convicted of murder in the second degree, and sentenced *703 in accordance with the verdict to 40 years’ imprisonment, and he appeals.

The deceased, Linneman, and defendant lived on adjoining farms in the vicinity of Armstrong in Howard County. They had so resided from the time, 19 years before the homicide, defendant moved to his said farm. During the intervening years the two men had not always been on good terms. On the contrary, it appears that they had had numerous difficulties and misunderstandings as will hereinafter more fully appear. The homicide occurred on Monday, June 22, 1942, in the barn lot of the Linneman (deceased’s) farm. The defendant, admitting the killing, defended on the ground of insanity, and also as having been done in self-defense. Defendant was 47 years of age; Linneman several years older. It appears that defendant is quite deaf, his evidence tending to show an impairment in his hearing of 87%.

There is no dispute as to the fact that in the early evening of the day in question, the deceased and his wife, Susie, were engaged in milking their cows — he milking one,' and she the other — when the fatal difficulty arose. According to the state’s version of the killing, as testified to by Susie, the following occurred: “He [the deceased] was sitting on the milk stool with his head up against the cow milking his cow, and I was on one knee milking the other, and not knowing anyone was present. Fern [Biswell, defendant’s wife] came up and hollered to Mr. Linneman and he said ‘Yes.’ And then Joe Biswell hollered to him and asked him if he was still mad and he said ‘Hell, yes.’ And then she hollered to Joe Biswell and said to him that he had said ‘Hell, yes.’ And Joe had his gun under his arm and he fired three shots into the back of Leo Linneman. And my husband tried to get up from the milk stool but he never could get up at all — he got up but he got up in a crouch and faced me and then turned back to the corner of the barn and went there in a crouch and fell dead at the corner of the barn. And while he was going to the corner of the barn Joe Biswell fired three more shots — anyway seven shots were fired; and he said, ‘That is what I came for.’ And he told Fern Biswell to call the law. And when she had gone Joe Biswell walked up to Leo and shot Leo in the head and said,.‘That is what I have been wanting to do for a long time.’ Then he backed up a couple of steps and pointed at me and said he was going to lay me by the side of him, and I hit at the gun with a stick —I hit at him or the gun one — I hit at him — and I walked up by the side of the barn — I thought I would be the next one; and he reached down and took the hat off of Leo and pulled the pipe out of his mouth and threw the pipe over in the potato patch.”

The witness further testified she tried to get away — “jumped the gate and two fences” — but defendant brought her back and detained her until “the law came.” One of the officers who responded to Mrs. *704 Biswell’s call testified that, en route to the county seat following the shooting, defendant made the statement he had often wondered how a man would feel after having killed another man, but that he felt no different than he would if he had killed a rabbit or a dog. As a part of the same conversation, defendant’s wife said she tried to keep her husband from going down to Linneman’s, “but that it was the first time that Joe ever was so mad that she could not do anything with him.”

The testimony on the part of defendant tended to show the following: That he and deceased had quarreled from time to time ever since they had lived in the neighborhood, the first of such quarrels having occurred the very year defendant moved on his farm. It concerned the acreage of defendant’s wheat crop. Subsequently— at times not definitely shown by the record — they quarreled over a line fence, and had trouble growing out of deceased’s ducks being on defendant’s pond; also over deceased going through defendant’s farm, and over deceased’s livestock getting on defendant’s premises and destroying his property. During the course of some of these dis- ■ turbances, the deceased cursed and threatened defendant and members of his family. Defendant’s wife testified that on the morning after she and defendant were married (about 16 years prior to the killing), and while they were getting up and -were quite scantily clad, they discovered deceased about their bedroom, and that he stood in the door and laughed until ordered by defendant to leave. Defendant’s wife also testified that in the latter part of-March or the first of April, 1942, the deceased made an indecent proposal to her, which .was communicated to defendant. Notwithstanding the foregoing it appears that the relations between the two families were not entirely unfriendly because it was admitted by defendant’s wife that on Friday preceding the homicide she had received from the wife of deceased some articles from the latter’s garden, which she,.with defendant’s knowledge, put on the table and used. Moreover, the undisputed fact is that the fatal difficulty arose out of the circumstance that a few days prior to the homicide, deceased had borrowed a male hog from defendant for breeding purposes. The deceased returned said hog on Saturday, June 20th, at which time he was angry, and complained about the hog’s inability or unwillingness to perform as a breeding animal, saying it “wasn’t a damned bit account, and didn’t know what a sow was made for.” We infer that on that occasion the conversation was between defendant’s sons and the deceased, this because of the reason assigned by defendant for going down to the Linneman farm later that day, his testimony in that connection being as follows: ‘ ‘ Tell the jury what that trouble was. A. Mr. Linneman brought that male hog home and whs mad about it. and I thought I would go and see what he was §o mad about and I told my wife that I would take Anthony down there to see what was *705 the matter, and so after supper we went and I asked Mr. Linneman what he was so mad about and he picked up a cow-bell and said, ‘You God-damned son-of-a-bitch, I will knock your damned head off,’ and he kept talking at the top of his voice and waving the cow-bell around .and he pulled out a knife and said, ‘You God-damned son-of-a-bitch, I am going to cut your damned guts out, ’ and I never said a word to him, only to ask two or three times what he was so mad about. I was shocked; I didn’t know what was the matter with him. He didn’t look like a human but more like a devil to me, and he hollowed and cursed me and Anthony got scared and got close to me and we started home, and Susie came from behind the barn — that was Mrs. Linneman, I mean ... ” The defendant testifiéd that he thereupon returned to his home, and then “went over to Armstrong to see about having him arrested.” At Armstrong he learned it would be necessary to go to Fayette, the county seat, to get a warrant, and as there was ‘ ‘ a big cloud coming up, we went on and never did get to have him arrested.”

With reference to the fatal shooting, the defendant testified as follows: “ Q. When you got down there to Leo Linneman’s lot, whom did you see ? A. I seen Mr. Linneman and Mrs. Linneman.

“Q. What were they doing? A. Milking.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
179 S.W.2d 61, 352 Mo. 698, 1944 Mo. LEXIS 536, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-biswell-mo-1944.