State v. Carey Kerr

282 S.W. 22, 313 Mo. 436, 1926 Mo. LEXIS 657
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMarch 20, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 282 S.W. 22 (State v. Carey Kerr) 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. Carey Kerr, 282 S.W. 22, 313 Mo. 436, 1926 Mo. LEXIS 657 (Mo. 1926).

Opinion

*440 BLAIE, J. —

Appellants were convicted of murder in the second degree for the killing of one George McCormick. They were sentenced upon the verdict to imprisonment in the penitentiary for fifteen years and have appealed.

This is a companion case to State v. Harry Knight, 312 Mo. 411, 278 S. W. 1036. The homicide occurred at Holden, in Johnson County, on June 23, 1923. The information charged murder in the first degree and alleged that Harry Knight killed McCormick by striking him upon the head and body with a pistol, and that Guy Knight and appellants were present aiding, abetting, assisting, etc., said Harry Knight in the commission of said homicide. A change of venue was granted to Henry County. A severan.ee was asked and awarded, and appellants were tried together, but separately from the Knights.

The facts are quite similar to those stated by Judge Eailbv in the case of State v. Harry Knight, supra. George McCormick and his family and Ben Knight and *441 Ills family were neighbors living upon adjoining lots or tracts in Holden. Sio far as shown by the record, the family of George McCormick, to whom we will refer as the deceased, consisted of himself, his wife Buth, his son Lowell and his daughters Odessa and Elsie. Ben Knight had a wife, Mollie, and at least three sons and a daughter. The sons were Harry, Guy, Ben, Jr., and the daughter was Eunice. It is not entirely clear that Guy and Ben, Jr., lived at home, but they apparently did. Harry lived in' Kansas City, Missouri. He had formerly lived at Holden.

Both families seemed to have engaged, to some extent, in agricultural pursuits, and Ben Knight, or his son Guy, owned some hogs whose frequent depredations had interfered with the garden of the deceased. The hogs had escaped several times and had wrought havoc in the McCormick garden. Deceased had caused the death of at least two of the hogs which he found thus trespassing. The killing of these hogs, caused trouble and threats of personal violence. It appears that deceased was not satisfied with killing the hogs, for he caused the arrest of Guy Knight because he failed to dispose of the carcass, or carcasses to the satisfaction of deceased.

Such was the status of affairs on June 23, 1923. On that day Guy Knight was in Kansas City. It seems that he had some checks outstanding and it was necessary for him to raise money to meet them. He also had several criminal charges pending against him requiring that he give bail to retain his liberty. Guy Knight claimed that he went to Kansas City to secure the aid of his brother Harry in these matters.

The State’s theory appears to be that Guy went to Kansas City to get Harry to assist in handling in a satisfactory manner the difficulty in which he and his father were involved with the deceased. Some color is furnished to this theory, by reason of the admission of Guy himself that he and the deceased had an argument and almost a physical encounter at the division fence on Thursday before the occurrence of the homicide on Saturday evening.

*442 At any rate, Harry and Guy Knight were preparing to drive from Kansas City to Holden shortly after noon on Saturday. They saw the appellants at that time and agreed to- take them to Holden with them. They drove rapidly. Harry was at the wheel, according to appellant’s witnesses. There is some testimony that appellant Carey, who disclaimed ability to drive an automobile, was at least driving part of the time and bought and paid for gasoline en route.

In Kingsville, about six miles west of Holden, the automobile party encountered Ben Knight, who had ridden there on horseback and who had spent several hours in that village. They took Ben Knight in the automobile with them, and the party drove rapidly toward Holden and arrived in Holden about six o’clock. The automobile was driven a little past deceased’s house and was stopped in front of his lot. There is no substantial dispute about the foregoing facts. From that point there is a wide divergence in the testimony.

The evidence offered by the State tended to prove that Harry Knight got out of the automobile at that point and called to the deceased, who was on the back porch of his house. Deceased came out at once and walked to the sidewalk. Harry asked him! something about the killing of the hogs a-nd made a move as though reaching for his pistol. Deceased promptly knocked Harry down. Guy then got out of the automobile and took up the fight with the deceased in aid of his brother Harry. Appellants then got out of the automobile and went to the assistance of Harry and Guy Knight. The combatants struggled around the yard and into the edge of deceased’s potato patch. One T. D. Smith, who was present at the deceased’s home when he was first called out by Harry Knight, picked up a poker and attempted to intervene, when Harry Knight threatened him with his pistol. Smith retired to the porch and picked up a hammer and again sought to come to the aid of deceased. He was again threatened by Harry Knight. In the meantime deceased’s *443 son Lowell had hurried home from a neighbor’s. By this time deceased’s assailants, including appellants,.had succeeded in tripping him and in getting him down and were kicking and beating him. Harry Knight then struck deceased over the head with his pistol. This was the fatal blow. Lowell McCormick seized his father’s shotgun and inserted the only shell he could find and went to the door just as Ben Knight started from the automobile with a Stilson wrench in his hands, saying in substance, ‘If you cannot finish him, I will. ” As Ben Knight approached deceased lying on or near the sidewalk, Lowell fired at him and struck his body near the hips. Harry and Guy Knight helped their father either into the automobile or upon the running board, and the two Knights and the appellants got into the car and drove in. front of Ben Knight’s home. They then assisted him out of the automobile and laid him on the grass and drove rapidly away. Guy Knight shortly afterwards returned and was arrested in Holden.

The evidence offered by appellants tended to show that the automobile was being driven toward the Knight home when Mrs. Knight and Eunice were seen out in the street endeavoring to prevent the escape of several young hogs which had escaped from the hog lot. Harry stopped the automobile and got out to help head off the hogs. As he did so he saw deceased and spoke to him, and deceased declared he was about to “clean up” or “mop up” the Knights. Harry had not called him from the house. Deceased immediately struck Harry and knocked him down and rendered him unconscious. Hlarry Knight did not draw any pistol and had no pistol in his hands at any time. Guy Knight then got out and entered the fight with deceased. Ben Knight got out of the automobile with the wrench and ran Smith away. He then struck deceased over the head with the wrench, thus inflicting the fatal blow. Ben Knight was then shot by Smith, not by Lowell McCormick, as the State’s evidence tended to prove. Carey and Kerr, the appellants, did not get out of the *444 automobile at any time or take any part in the fight. They never had any trouble with deceased, bore him no ill-will and did not know of any plans on the part oí the Knights to have trouble with the deceased.

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Bluebook (online)
282 S.W. 22, 313 Mo. 436, 1926 Mo. LEXIS 657, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-carey-kerr-mo-1926.