State v. Blackmore and Godsey

38 S.W.2d 32, 327 Mo. 708, 1931 Mo. LEXIS 632
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedApril 14, 1931
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 38 S.W.2d 32 (State v. Blackmore and Godsey) 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. Blackmore and Godsey, 38 S.W.2d 32, 327 Mo. 708, 1931 Mo. LEXIS 632 (Mo. 1931).

Opinions

By an information filed in the Circuit Court of Johnson County appellants and one Charley Jones were jointly charged with robbery in the first degree, the information charging that they had robbed the Bank of Knobnoster on March 15, 1928. They were granted a change of venue to Cooper County. Jones pleaded guilty. Appellants Blackmore and Godsey were tried jointly in March, 1929, and convicted, and each was sentenced to ten years' imprisonment in the penitentiary. They have perfected a joint appeal to this court.

Numerous alleged errors are set forth in appellants' motion for a new trial, of which, however, their counsel in their brief filed here frankly say they are now urging but three, viz., that the evidence was insufficient to sustain a conviction; the action of the prosecuting attorney in propounding certain questions in the cross-examination of some of defendants' character witnesses; and certain remarks of the prosecutor in his closing argument to the jury. The claimed insufficiency of the evidence is in the identification of appellants as participants in the robbery.

In the forenoon of March 15, 1928, the time being estimated at about 9:30 to 9:45, a large automobile, described by some witnesses as a Gardner "straight eight," containing four men, stopped in front of the bank. One remained in the car behind the steering wheel. The other three entered the bank. One at least of those three exhibited a gun. The cashier and assistant cashier, who seem to have been the only persons in the bank, were ordered to "stick 'em up quick," which they did, and were then compelled to lie on the floor while the robbers proceeded to ransack the bank, securing $4450.25. They left the bank, re-entered the waiting car and drove rapidly out of town, going east.

The cashier, Mr. Kendrick, testified that he got a general view of the men who came into the bank; that they were masked; that only in a general way could he describe the appearance of the man who ordered him to lie down; that he was a broad shouldered, tall man, of normal build, walked "kind of swingy," and had dark eyes: he had a gun pointed at witness; that defendant Godsey looked very much like that man, but he could not identify him positively.

Frank Shepherd, assistant cashier, described one of the men who entered the bank as of medium build and with dark, keen eyes. Asked if he had seen him since he answered: "I couldn't positively swear that I have." He also testified: "His shoulders were kinder *Page 712 stooped a little, I believe." He was not permitted to state whether or not he had since seen a man he believed to be that man.

Robert Caldwell, a colored man twenty-one years of age who lived at Knobnoster, saw the man who waited in the car while the robbery was in progress. He walked by the car, within four or five feet of it, and "kinda slacked up" and looked at the car and the man in it. He testified that the man was not masked, had on a big overcoat and had a little moustache, he couldn't exactly tell what color; the man was smoking a cigarette "and he raised up." He further testified that he thought he saw that man again at Warrensburg, where defendants' preliminary hearing was held several weeks after the robbery.

"Q. Do you know the man you saw at Knobnoster that day? A. Yes, sir, I think so.

"Q. Do you see him here? A. I think so.

"Q. Can you point him out? A. That looks like him there. (Indicating defendant Blackmore.) . . .

"Q. Do you know this man's name? A. No, sir.

"Q. You know his face, but don't know his name? A. Yes, sir."

On cross-examination he said he had seen a man at Warrensburg that he thought was the same man, but didn't tell any one there; that he had rumors that he would be killed if he told — it was talked "around town," not by defendants.

"Q. You did tell Sheriff Lane (at Warrensburg) that you didn't know either one of these boys? A. I didn't tell him exactly that . . . I told him I didn't know exactly and he never put me on the stand . . .

"Q. You never saw Mr. Blackmore? A. I saw him one time in Warrensburg and one time here, and I saw him in the car out there.

"Q. You don't know whether he was in the car or not, do you? A. I said I thought he looked like the fellow that was in the car."

A witness for defendants testified that Caldwell told him after the preliminary that he had been at Warrensburg, but couldn't identify defendants, "or words to that effect." That witness and the (then) sheriff testified that Caldwell seemed frightened at the time of the preliminary.

Ira Michael, night watchman at Knobnoster, saw the Gardner car standing in front of the bank and noticed the man behind the steering wheel. The engine was running. He pointed out Blackmore as the man he thought he had so seen. He admitted that at the time of the preliminary he had not identified Blackmore. He further testified in substance, quoting from appellants' brief: "I next saw him here today. When I saw him here this morning I first made up my mind I could identify him. I didn't say I could identify him for a certainty. I think he is the man." *Page 713

About the time of the robbery, Frank Pickett was driving a truck eastward on Highway No. 50. About three miles east of Knobnoster he was passed by a Gardner "eight" automobile going at a high rate of speed. There were "four or five" men in it. As it passed witness it swerved sharply to the right in order to avoid collision with another car, nearly turning over. Pickett testified that that motion of the Gardner car threw the occupants of the rear seat "over into a sideway position" and he got a view of one of them through the rear window of the Gardner; that the man "turned his head kinda sideways more than the car threw him" and remained thus for probably three seconds; that he, witness, believed defendant Godsey, whom he pointed out, was the man he had thus seen; that he remembered him particularly by his high cheekbone; that he wore a gray hat and an overcoat.

It is apparent from the evidence that the Gardner car which passed Pickett was the one used by the robbers as they left the scene of the robbery. About six miles southeast of Knobnoster, a "big car," evidently the same one, going rapidly, was seen by witness Croll to drive up behind a Ford coupe which was travelling slowly in the same direction. As the big car approached it the coupe "sped up" and both went on about a quarter of a mile and stopped at a cross-roads. One man was in the Ford coupe. When the cars stopped one man got out of the big car and into the Ford, which would leave three in the big car, as there were four in it when it left Knobnoster, and then the Ford went north and the big car went south. Croll estimated the time as about ten A.M. Some distance south of that cross-roads the Gardner car which had been used by the robbers was abandoned, and shortly thereafter, that same morning, was found and brought to Knobnoster. The sheriff immediately on learning where it had been abandoned, went to that point and found tracks of another car going south therefrom, which tracks he followed southward three or four miles until he "lost the trail" because of falling snow.

Farther south a Ford car stopped that day at the farmhouse of John Goring. It was not on a main highway. Mrs. Goring testified that it was about thirteen miles from Knobnoster, and estimated the time at about 10:30 A.M. There were three men in the car. They stopped to get water for the radiator which was leaking. Two of them got out of the car and one borrowed a bucket to carry water to the radiator, while the other borrowed a tire pump and pumped up a tire. They seemed to be in a hurry, attracted Mrs. Goring's attention. They also inquired about the road. Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
38 S.W.2d 32, 327 Mo. 708, 1931 Mo. LEXIS 632, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-blackmore-and-godsey-mo-1931.