State v. Burks

484 S.W.2d 302, 1972 Mo. LEXIS 1025
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJuly 17, 1972
DocketNo. 56909
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 484 S.W.2d 302 (State v. Burks) 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. Burks, 484 S.W.2d 302, 1972 Mo. LEXIS 1025 (Mo. 1972).

Opinion

RICHARD C. JENSEN, Special Judge.

Defendant Calvin Burks was found guilty by a jury of murder in the first degree and his punishment assessed at life imprisonment. In his appeal from the judgment he urges and relies on two points:

First, the court erred in refusing to give defendant’s requested Instruction A, which is as follows: “An accomplice is one who, [303]*303with knowledge of his illegal conduct, participates in a crime or aids and abets its commission. If you find and believe from the evidence that the witness Ronald Gunn is an accomplice, then the court instructs the jury that such witness’ testimony should be received by them with care and weighed with great caution.”

Second, defendant urges the court erred in admitting into evidence the spent bullet taken from the body of deceased.

In order to consider defendant’s first point, it will be necessary to set out the evidentiary facts in some detail.

The victim, Lynda Walker, was employed as a nurse by Firmin Desloge Hospital in the City of St. Louis. At about four o’clock p. m. on February 6, 1970, she left work, leaving the hospital by the north door on Rutger Street. Mrs. Walker was next found lying face down in the middle of the intersection of Rutger and Motard Streets. She had, along with cuts and scrapes, a small puncture wound in the back of her neck. She was pronounced dead upon arrival at City Hospital. An autopsy was performed by the coroner who testified that the cause of death was a gunshot wound of the spinal cord, laceration of the right jugular vein, and aspiration of blood into the lungs. A .22 caliber spent bullet was removed from the body of deceased. Witness Gunn read about the murder in the newspaper and subsequently called the police, telling them who was involved and identified himself. Gunn was also under indictment, charged with decedent’s murder at the time of this trial. Gunn, testifying on behalf of the state, stated that he was eighteen years of age and on February 6, 1970, he was sitting on the passenger side of an automobile with Melvin Vincent in front of a restaurant. Defendant Burks, in the company of Jerome Pruitt, approached the automobile and asked Vincent to take him to Firmin Desloge Hospital to pick up a check. The four young men who had known each other for a number of years then proceeded in Vincent’s automobile to the hospital area with Vincent driving. The car was stopped approximately one half block west of the hospital when Pruitt and Burks alighted from the automobile. At that time Gunn noticed that Pruitt had a .22 caliber revolver stuck in the waistband of his trousers. He had seen Pruitt carrying this revolver before this time. Vincent and Gunn proceeded in the car in a westerly direction on Vista Street to Spring Street, turning north on Spring where they were stopped by a truck. They then proceeded north and turned east on Rutger, at which time Gunn observed a 1971 Cutlass automobile coming off of Motard turning from south to west on Rutger. As the automobile made the turn, he saw a body come out of the passenger side and land in the intersection. Defendant Burks was driving this automobile and Jerome Pruitt was in the back seat as it proceeded west passing the Vincent vehicle. Vincent and Gunn continued traveling east and stopped at the intersection, at which time Vincent asked a uniformed officer from the hospital “what had gone on there”. Vincent and Gunn then went downtown to a clothing store. Later that same evening Gunn saw defendant, at which time the defendant stated to Gunn that Pruitt had shot the victim. Gunn and defendant chanced to meet on the street the following morning, at which time defendant repeated his statements of the prior evening and asked Gunn what he should do, also stating that as he and Pruitt were walking through the parking lot of the hospital, and after leaving the Vincent automobile, Pruitt suggested they should snatch a purse. Defendant further told him that they forced the victim to get into her car, Pruitt getting into the rear seat and defendant getting behind the wheel. Pruitt took the victim’s rings and defendant took the victim’s purse, after which Pruitt shot the victim and pushed her out of the automobile. Gunn further testified that he saw the victim’s car parked on the street the same evening of the murder and, along with three differ[304]*304ent men, attempted to steal the tires from it, but they were not successful and fled when a police car approached. Gunn had entered the car to look for a screwdriver. Fingerprints of witness Gunn were found on the rearview mirror and fingerprints of the defendant were found on the left front door glass on the driver’s side of the victim’s car. Luggage tags bearing the maiden name of the victim and automobile keys of the victim’s car were later found at the home of Jerome Pruitt. The state’s evidence also showed that this defendant was a former employee of Firmin Desloge Hospital.

In arguing his first point, defendant urges that witness Gunn was an accomplice and, therefore, defendant’s Instruction A should have been given, citing: State v. Woolard, 111 Mo. 248, 20 S.W. 27; State v. Meysenburg, 171 Mo. 1, 71 S.W. 229; State v. Sprague, 149 Mo. 409, 50 S.W. 901; State v. Donnelly, 130 Mo. 642, 32 S.W. 1124; and State v. Williams, Mo.App., 266 S.W. 484.

The state takes the position that witness Gunn was not an accomplice and further, that even if there had been evidence of his complicity, no such instruction was necessary since his testimony was corroborated by other evidence.

It has been the settled law of Missouri since before the turn of the century that the juries are at liberty to convict on the uncorroborated testimony of an accomplice, and it is equally well settled that such evidence ought to be received with great caution by the jury and they ought to be fully satisfied of its truth before they convict upon such evidence alone and the trial court must instruct the jury accordingly, State v. Donnelly, supra, and other cases set out above. Neither party here takes any issue with the law in this regard.

In ruling this question, it must be determined just what is an accomplice at law. In 21 Am.Jur.2d 118, p. 196, an accomplice is described: “An accomplice is said to be one who knowingly, voluntarily, and with a common interest with others participates in the commission of a crime either as a principal or as an accessory before the fact.” Also, Vol. 1A Words and Phrases, p. 186: “An ‘accomplice’ is one who knowingly, voluntarily, and with common intent with the principal offender unites in the commission of a crime.”

These clear definitions have been adopted and are solidly woven into the law of this state by decisions whenever the accomplice issue has been raised.

However, a careful examination of the evidence fails to reveal any fact from which it is a fair inference that Gunn participated or united in the commission of this crime, State v. Martin, Mo.Sup., 428 S.W.2d 489.

Gunn’s testimony puts him in the Vincent automobile as a passenger showing no other knowledge as to any purpose other than to ride to Firmin Desloge Hospital for Pruitt to pick up acheck, and does not involve him with Pruitt and defendant in any manner with the perpetration of the crime itself after Pruitt and Burks left the automobile.

Defendant in his own testimony does not put Gunn any closer to the crime and does not implicate Gunn in any manner as a participant, aider and abetter, or with any knowledge as to the robbery and murder until after the crimes had been committed.

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Related

State v. Murphy
610 S.W.2d 382 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1980)
Burks v. State
559 S.W.2d 32 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1977)
State v. Lewis
539 S.W.2d 451 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1975)
State v. Flauaus
515 S.W.2d 873 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1974)
State v. Brooks
513 S.W.2d 168 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1973)

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Bluebook (online)
484 S.W.2d 302, 1972 Mo. LEXIS 1025, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-burks-mo-1972.