State v. Brown

56 S.W.2d 405, 331 Mo. 556, 1932 Mo. LEXIS 452
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedDecember 14, 1932
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 56 S.W.2d 405 (State v. Brown) 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. Brown, 56 S.W.2d 405, 331 Mo. 556, 1932 Mo. LEXIS 452 (Mo. 1932).

Opinions

Defendant was convicted in the Circuit Court of Greene County of unlawful possession of intoxicating liquor, viz., corn whisky, and pursuant to the verdict was sentenced to six months imprisonment in jail and to pay a fine of $500. His appeal was properly granted to this court because of a constitutional question raised at the trial and preserved in the motion for new trial.

Defendant and his wife were first charged jointly by information with a felony, viz., transportation of one gallon of hootch, moonshine, corn whisky. Upon trial on that information Mrs. Brown was acquitted and this defendant was found guilty and the jury assessed his punishment at two years' imprisonment in the penitentiary. He filed a motion for new trial which the court sustained. Thereafter the prosecuting attorney, by leave of court, filed an amended information charging that at the time and place named in the original information this defendant unlawfully had in his possession one gallon *Page 558 of hootch, moonshine, corn whisky. Defendant was again tried upon the latter information, resulting in the conviction from which this appeal was taken. Defendant has filed no brief in this court. The question presented by his motion for new trial which chiefly requires notice is the admissibility of certain evidence introduced by the State. The point is also made that defendant's demurrer to the evidence should have been sustained.

The State's evidence disclosed the following: About eight or nine o'clock on the evening of May 5, 1931, Sheriff Marcell Hendrix and two deputies, Wiley Mashburn and R.E. Hodge, were driving south in a Model A Ford sedan in a street in Springfield, Missouri, in response to a previous call. In passing the home of Mr. and Mrs. Ed Belongey, parents of defendant's wife, they noticed defendant sitting in a car, a Chevrolet coupe, referred to in the evidence as defendant's car, parked in front of the Belongey home. As the officers drove slowly by they saw defendant's wife on the porch, an outside light being turned on. She was carrying something in a paper bag under her arm. Watching, they saw her go to the car in which defendant sat, hand the paper bag with its content into the car and get in, seating herself behind the steering wheel. They turned and followed the Chevrolet which had driven rapidly away. The officers drove as fast as they could but the Chevrolet drew somewhat away from them. After a chase of five minutes or so defendant's car turned into Kennedy Street, an unpaved and unlighted street. Following, the officers saw the Chevrolet which had stopped ten or twelve feet from a certain telephone pole. Defendant, who had got out of the car before the officers turned into the street, was just getting back into the car. Defendant's car started again and the officers continued the pursuit. As they passed the telephone pole they observed the paper bag sitting by the pole. They overtook defendant and his wife about two blocks from that point, stopped them and placed them under arrest. Nothing was found in defendant's car. Sending Mashburn with the prisoners to the police station Hendrix and Hodge hastened back to the place where they had observed the paper bag by the telephone pole. Finding it still there they took charge of it. It was found to contain a gallon jug full of liquor which proved to be corn whisky. The paper bag was identified at the trial by the testimony of Hodge and Hendrix as the same one they had seen defendant's wife carry from the porch of the Belongey home and hand into the Chevrolet car. Defendant offered no evidence.

At the first trial, under the original information, Sheriff Hendrix and Deputy Sheriffs Mashburn and Hodge had testified for the State. When the subsequent trial under the amended information was held *Page 559 Hendrix and Mashburn were dead. The State offered in evidence their testimony given at the first trial. Defendant objected on the ground that the case in which the testimony had been given was a different case from the one then on trial, defendant having been on trial for a felony when the testimony was given while the instant trial was on a misdemeanor charge, and that to admit said evidence would deny defendant his constitutional right to meet the witnesses against him face to face. The court overruled the objection and admitted the evidence. That ruling presents the most serious question involved in this appeal.

[1] I. As above stated, the defendant has not favored us with a brief. The Attorney-General cites four cases in support of his contention that defendant's constitutional right was not violated, viz. State v. McO'Blenis, 24 Mo. 402; State v. Moore,156 Mo. 204, 56 S.W. 883; State v. Barnes, 274 Mo. 625, 204 S.W. 267; State v. Harp, 320 Mo. 1, 6 S.W.2d 562. None of those cases deal with the exact question here presented. The McO'Blenis case decided that the testimony of a witness taken and preserved at a preliminary hearing may be given in evidence upon a subsequent trial of the defendant on the charge on which the preliminary hearing was held, the witness being shown to be dead at the time of the trial. That case and the Moore case which approved and followed it were homicide cases. The McO'Blenis case has been consistently adhered to by this court and may be considered the settled law of the State on similar facts. It is in line with the general trend of authority where the witness is dead when his testimony previously given is offered. It was followed and applied in State v. Barnes, supra, which was a prosecution for burglary and larceny in which the testimony of a witness, dead at the time of trial, had been taken by a stenographer at the preliminary hearing and was read from the stenographer's notes at the trial. In State v. Harp, supra, the principle of the McO'Blenis case and cases following it was extended to admit, on a second trial under the same information, the testimony of a witness given on the first trial and which had been preserved in a bill of exceptions, the witness, though living, being a nonresident of the State and his whereabouts, after diligent search and inquiry, being undiscoverable at the time of the second trial. Under the foregoing authorities there can be no doubt of the admissibility of the testimony in question unless, as seems to have been defendant's contention at the trial, it is rendered inadmissible because of lack of identity of the charge on which defendant was first tried and at which the testimony was given with that on which the second trial was had and the testimony of the deceased witness was offered. *Page 560

[2] In State v. Wilson, 24 Kan. 189, the defendant had assaulted one Ball. He was arrested and given a preliminary hearing on a charge of assault with intent to kill Ball and at that hearing Ball's testimony was taken. Ball died and the defendant was then charged with his murder. Ball's testimony given at the preliminary hearing on the assault charge was introduced at the trial on the murder charge. Concerning the competency of that testimony the court, through BREWER, J., said:

"Of the general doctrine concerning the competency of the testimony of a deceased witness given in a former action between the same parties, counsel make no question, but they suggest three things which, as they claim, remove this from the operation of the general rule. The charge was not the same; the defendant was not present; and there was no trial, but only a preliminary examination. But we do not think that these matters affect the question.

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Bluebook (online)
56 S.W.2d 405, 331 Mo. 556, 1932 Mo. LEXIS 452, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-brown-mo-1932.