State v. Branstetter

65 Mo. 149
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedApril 15, 1877
StatusPublished
Cited by48 cases

This text of 65 Mo. 149 (State v. Branstetter) 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. Branstetter, 65 Mo. 149 (Mo. 1877).

Opinion

Henry, J.

At the January term, 1877, of the Audrain Circuit Court, the defendant was indicted for .murder in the first degree, charged with killing Jefferson D. Lowry. At an adjourned term of said court, held in February, 1877, the defendant was tried, convicted of murder in the second degree, and his punishment assessed by the jury at imprisonment in the penitentiary for a term of eighty-three years, but the court commuted it to sixty years and sentenced him for that term. From this judgment of the Circuit Court he has appealed to this court. The grounds upon which it is urged that the judgment should be reversed are, that the court did not instruct the jury in regard to manslaughter, but confined its instructions to murder in the first and second degree and excusable homicide; that the court refused to permit Glasscock, a witness for the State, after he had testified to a part, to detail all of a conversation he had with defendant in relation to the killing of Lowry; that the jury were guilty of misconduct, in first agreeing that each should set down on a slip of paper the term for which he thought defendant should be confined in the penitentiary, and then divide the aggregate of these figures by twelve and make the quotient their verdict; that this agreement was carried out, and the result was the verdict returned into court. On a motion for a new trial the defense offered to prove this by a member of the jury, but the court refused to permit the juror to testify. The evidence tended to prove the following facts : On the day that the homicide occurred, the defendant and the deceased, with others, were at a saloon in the town of Vandalia, when defendant and one Hampton quarreled over a game of cards, each claiming the game, [153]*153and in the course of the controversy, defendant boastfully remarked that he “was the best man in Vandalia.” Deceased then pulled off his overcoat and approached defendant, who said: “"Why, Jeff', I did not know you were here,” and soon after left the saloon, and in company with his brother and another person went to Ery’s store. Deceased soon after followed, accompanied by several persons. He approached Pry’s store, but the door was closed and locked. It seems that deceased remained in front of Pry’s store a little while, and then went off' a short distance, when the door was unlocked and defendant again went out, and deceased approached him, laid his hand on him, or took him by the collar, and said to defendant, “You drew a pistol on me.” Defendant said, “No, I didn’t.” Lowry said, “ Yes, you did.” By this time defendant was against the wall of the building, deceased still having his hand on him, and as he, the second time, denied having drawn a pistol on deceased, discharged his pistol with fatal effect. Two witnesses for the State thought he did not take the pistol out but fired it from his pocket, but another witness for the State testified that he drew his pistol, that he saw the pistol and the flash, but all agree that it was not elevated above the pocket in which it was carried. The ball entered the stomach of the deceased, who lingered a few days and died. There was no evidence of any previous difficulty between the parties or of any unfriendly feeling on the part of defendant toward the deceased. They had both been drinking, and defendant after he left the dram-shop was boisterous, and spoke of Sam Harris, Lawson Henry, Myers and others, who, he said, had been imposing upon him long enough, and “he’d be d-d if he didn’t intend to sell out,” but in none of his conversations in that connection did he mention the name of deceased.

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[153]*153The court instructed the jury as to what constitutes murder in the first and second degree and excusable homicide, but did no"fc give> n.or did defendant’s [154]*154counsel ask, any instructions in regard to manslaughter in any degree, but the counsel now contends that it was the duty of the court to instruct the jury as to manslaughter, because under the indictment and evidence they might with propriety have found defendant guilty of manslaughter ' in the second or fourth degree, if they found him guilty of any crime at all. We are satisfied from the evidence, that an instruction declaring what constitutes manslaughter in the fourth degree, would have been proper. In The State v. Starr, 38 Mo. 277, the court held that “where there is a lawful provocation, the law, out of indulgence to human frailty, will reduce the crime of killing from that of murder to manslaughter, but neither words of reproach, how grievous soever, nor indecent, provoking actions or gestures, however much calculated to excite indignation or arouse the passions, are sufficient to free the party from the guilt of murder. To have the effect to reduce the guilt of killing to the lower grade, the provocation must consist of personal violence. There must be an assault upon the person, as where the provocation was by pulling the nose, purposely jostling the slayer aside in the highway, or other direct and actual battery.” See Greenleaf on Evidence, vol. 2, sec. 122. “ The killing has been held to be only manslaughter, though a deadly weapon was used, where the provocation was by pulling the nose, purposely jostling the slayer aside in the highway, or other actual battery.” This doctrine is too well settled for controversy, but as no instructions were asked by defendant in relation to the crime of manslaughter, was it incumbent on the court, of its own motion, to give instructions in relation to these crimes, of either of which the defendant might have been found guilty on the evidence ? This court seems to have so held in several cases, and recently in the State v. Ware, 62 Mo. 597; State v. Jones, 61 Mo. 232. In most, if not all of the cases, except that of State v. Ware, counsel for defense had asked, and the court refused, instructions which, if unobjectionable in [155]*155their phraseology, should have been given, and.it was held that the court should not, therefore, have neglected to give such as the law of the case required. In the State v. Ware, it does not appear that any were asked, and the court, citing the case of State v. Mathews, 20 Mo. 50, observes that, “ aside from this being binding authority, we think it sustained by good reason. Juries should not be allowed to guess at the law m such cases.” It seems to be the settled law of this State that the court, in criminal cases, commits error if it fails to declare the law to the jury applicable to the case made by the evidence, whether proper- instructions or any are asked by the defendant or not; and it was especially the duty of the court in the ease at bar. The court of its own motion gave several instructions, defining murder in both degrees, and we think it should have defined all of the crimes to which the evidence was applicable. The court must have been -prompted to give instructions, on its own motion, by a conviction that those already given were insufficient, and when, dissatisfied with those given, the court undertook to instruct the jury, it should have declared the whole law applicable to the ease made by the evidence.

criminal law: evidence.

On the trial the State introduced H. Glasscock, the sheriff, who testified as follows : Defendant came into my custody about five minutes after the shooting, I asked him why he had shot Lowry.

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Bluebook (online)
65 Mo. 149, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-branstetter-mo-1877.