State v. Bongard

51 S.W.2d 84, 330 Mo. 805, 1932 Mo. LEXIS 481
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJune 10, 1932
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 51 S.W.2d 84 (State v. Bongard) 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. Bongard, 51 S.W.2d 84, 330 Mo. 805, 1932 Mo. LEXIS 481 (Mo. 1932).

Opinion

*807 ELLISON, J.

The appellant was convicted by a jury in the St. Louis City Circuit Court of assault with intent to kill with málice aforethought, under Section 4014, Revised Statutes 1929, and liis punishment assessed at imprisonment in the State penitentiary for twenty-five years. He shot the prosecuting witness, James Squires, in the jaw and neck with a .45 caliber revolver, the wound not proving fatal. His defense was self-defense. The assignments raised in the motion for new trial and on this appeal complain of the admission of certain testimony on behalf of the State, and the refusal of the trial court to withdraw it from the consideration of the jury; of the failure to give instruction on all the law of the case, particularly felonious assault without malice; of certain remarks made by the assistant circuit attorney during his closing argument; and that the heavy punishment assessed by the jury conclusively indicates passion and prejudice.

*808 Tlie appellant, age thirty, was a plasterer laborer, and the prose-cnting witness, ■ thirty-nine years old, was a plasterer and had also engag’ed in business intermittently for some time as a plasterer contractor. They had been acquainted about a year and a half, and after November, 1929, this acquaintance ripened into a friendly intimacy. In tlxe latter part of January, 1930, the prosecuting witness, Squires, resided at 4361 Loughboro Avenue, St. Louis, in a residence which had two sleeping rooms on the second floor, living quarters on the first floor, and a basement. Squires had purchased the property in July, 1928, and taken title in the name of himself and his wife. The purchase price was $4,900 and they owed thereon about $3,200 secured by a deed of trust.

After Squires had testified to the foregoing facts without objection in answer to numerous questions, the (then) counsel for appellant interposed: “At this time I want to introduce an objection on the theory that'up until this time all the questions and answers be stricken from the record as wholly and solely immaterial and irrelevant. ” Counsel went on to elaborate that the information specifically charged a-felonious assault on February 27, 1930, and anything occurring before that had nothing to do with the ease. The court overruled the objection for the time being, awaiting to see whether the evidence would be connected with the crime charged.

The ’ complaining witness Squires proceeded to state that about January 30, 1930, the appellant came to him with a proposition to go into business together and, by the use of capital which the appellant said he could obtain, to bujr material in carload lots and handle bigger jobs. They entered into a verbal agreement and about February 4 or 5 the appellant moved into Squire’s home with him. At that time Squires was living alone, a divorce suit between him and his wife being then pending. Shortly thereafter the appellant put up $500 which was turned over, to one of the attorneys in tlie divorce case. Appellant’s counsel made strenuous objection to this testimony, and renewed his motion to strike out all evidence concerning matters -occurring before the date of the alleged assault, especially the divorce- case. The objection and motion were overruled.

Squires, testifying, went on to say that about 6:30 in the mornim’-of February 27 ivhile sleeping in one of the bedrooms on the second floor, he was awakened by the appellant and told to put on his jeans and slippers and go downstairs to the front door; that someone wanted to see him. He did so but found no one there. As he faced about to ask where the caller was the appellant confronted him .with a .45 caliber automatic pistol and compelled him to go into the dining room, sit down at a table, and write a paper which the appellant dictated assigning' to the latter all his business property and equip *809 ment, ■ valued at about $1225, wbieli was itemized in the instrument. The writing paper was obtained from a desk in the corner of the room and the appellant produced an indelible pencil from his pocket. The paper was not introduced in evidence.

Following that, the appellant directed him to go down to the basement and threatened to shoot him if he refused. Squires obeyed and the appellant compelled him to sit in a chair and put his hands behind his back. The appellant then said “now you-I am going to kill you.” Squires protested but the appellant-nevertheless fired one shot from a distance of six to nine feet, the bullet striking him in the jaw and coming out the back of his neck.

Squires says he threw himself on the floor as if dead, whereupon the appellant went back upstairs to the kitchen, leaving him lying on the basement floor. He got up, fled out a side door and along a driveway to the street, and across the street to the home of officer Oester-reieher of the St. Louis police force. There he hammered on the door but no one responded. Presently, however, another officer, named Wynn, came down the street in an automobile and Squires went out to him. He was taken to the City Hospital.

On cross-examination of Squires the fact was elicited that at the time of the shooting the appellant was wearing his work clothes; and he was asked if breakfast was not in course of preparation, the coffee on the stove, etc. These facts the witness denied in part and in part could not remember. He was also closely cross-examined about writing the assignment, or bill of sale, and as to what became of it; about the arrangement of the rooms, stairway and basement of the house, and the location of the tables and chairs which figured in his story; about the circumstances of the shooting, and his movements thereafter; about his conferences with the circuit attorney’s office, and concerning his failure to appear on some former occasion when the case was set for trial, which resulted in the court’s issuing an attachment for him.

In particular, appellant’s counsel pressed Squires to answer whether a certain butcher knife produced in evidence was not one of the kitchen utensils in his home; and whether or not just before the shooting he had not said to appellant “you dirty •-how long are you going to stay on that job,” and then, with the knife in his hand, pursued the appellant from the kitchen to the basement where the shot was fired. The witness admitted the knife belonged in his home, but denied he had seen or used it that morning, and denied emphatically that he had provoked the assault or used the language attributed to him.

Officer Oesterreicher testified that he lived across the street' from Squires, and that about 6:80 in the morning while he was taking a bath his wife called to him and told him Squires was at the front *810 door and that he had been shot. The officer called police headquarters and the Mounted District and hurriedly dressed and went out. When he reached the street another policeman was already there and had charge of Squires. Officer Oesterreicher went over to the Squires home at once. He saw no evidence that breakfast had been in course of preparation.

. - Officer Wynn, who, as stated, was the first policeman to reach the scene, said that while standing- on Kingshighway about a half mile west, he was notified of the shooting by a passing motorist.

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Bluebook (online)
51 S.W.2d 84, 330 Mo. 805, 1932 Mo. LEXIS 481, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-bongard-mo-1932.