State v. Carroll

62 S.W.2d 863, 333 Mo. 558, 1933 Mo. LEXIS 643
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedAugust 12, 1933
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 62 S.W.2d 863 (State v. Carroll) 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. Carroll, 62 S.W.2d 863, 333 Mo. 558, 1933 Mo. LEXIS 643 (Mo. 1933).

Opinion

ELLISON, P. J.

The defendant was indicted for murder in the city of St. Louis, the charge being that he shot with a pistol and killed Roy Clark. On a trial the jury found him guilty of murder in the first degree and fixed the punishment at death. He has appealed as a poor person, filing no brief in this court. It appears from the record all the parties figuring in the homicidal event were negroes. There are two motions for a new trial, one filed within four days after the verdict by the attorneys who represented the defendant in his trial; and another filed seven days after the verdict by a new attorney. The assignments in these will be taken up in the course of the opinion.

The evidence for the State was that about seven-thirty o’clock in the evening of May 12, 1930, the defendant went to the home of his cousin, Ida Griffin and sought to borrow her “gun” until nine o ’clock. It was a pistol which she and her husband had had for fourteen years. She customarily kept'it under her pillow and it was there that morning when she made the bed. The defendant often called on her. She asked him what was the matter. He inquired if she had any coffee — the defendant was a great coffee drinker. She, the witness, said she would go to the kitchen and see. When she returned the defendant was gone and so was the pistol. The pillow had been turned back. When she had left the room it was “straight.” Later that evening some policemen brought the pistol to her and asked her if it was hers. She identified it then as she did at the trial. She could recognize it by the handle and a little dark place on the top part.

Jesse Condrey testified that between seven and seven-thirty in the evening on the date of the homicide, May 12, he and his wife were sitting on the front steps of the house at 1022-A North Nineteenth Street in St. Louis, where they had their home upstairs. It was about dusk. A man came out of the alley, crossed the street, and walked up the front steps at No. 1020 where the deceased Clark lived, which was twelve or fifteen feet away from where the witness was sitting. The man had a revolver up his shirt sleeve, with the barrel projecting down into his left hand and a short string “pulled out that way. ’ ’ He knocked at the door and it was opened by someone. In about half a minute he fired three shots while he was standing on the threshold or -just inside, so the flashes of fire could not be seen by the witness. In crossing the street the man had walked a little obliquely but still was facing the witness, with left arm toward him, and Condrey identified the defendant as being the man whose movements he had described, though he had never seen him before *561 the homicide. The defendant came back out the door right after the shooting as the snxoke from the pistol was floating out.

In a few minutes a crowd congregated and the police arrived. They took Condrey, the witness, ixito the Clark home where the deceased was lying on his back with his feet close to the door. Thence, the witness testified, he was taken to the police station where he made a statement substantially the same as the testimony he gave at the trial.

Mozella .Condrey, wife of the previous witness, Jesse Condrey, described the shooting substantially as her husband had done, except she did not see the defendant come out the door thereafter. She thought he might have left by the back way. When the shooting occurred she began “hollering.” She identified the defendant as the killer. On cross-examination she said the defendant was standing on the steps when he shot, and that she saw the flashes of fire; also she thought the defendant had the handle of the pistol, not the'barrel, down in his hand.

. Landa Merritt was the common-law wife or housekeeper of the deceased Roy Clark. She had been living with him about two weeks. At the time of the shooting she was in the kitchen. She heard the shots but didn’t see who fired them.

Dee Rankin was in the rpom with Clark. Someone knocked and Clark opened the door. The defendant stepped in the doorway and said “Roy, you aixx’t going to pay me,” or, as the witness put it a little later the defendant asked “whether he was going to pay him.” Clark answered, “Yes, what is the matter, come on in the house.” -The defendant responded “No, yoxx ain’t going to pay me,” and commenced shooting. The witness did not see the pistol-until the shooting began. He saw Clark fall, from where he stood holding to the door, to a position with his' feet toward the door. These questions and answers then appear in the transcript: .

“Q. .Can you tell the jury whether or not he had any weapons in his hands? A. Whether he had anything or not, I don’t know, I didn’t see anything. ,
“Q. Did you see his hands? A. Sir?
“Q. Did yoxx see Roy Clark’s hands? A. Yes sir, I saw him when, that time on the dresser, he didn’t have nothing that I know of, what he did I don’t know.
“Q. Tell the jxxry whether or not you saw his hands before he went over to the door? A. Oh no, I didn’t.
“Q. Did you see his hands then? A. Only, what you mean, I saw him when he left the dresser, he had a pistol when he left the dresser. . . ' i ?: !lf| j
“Q. When he left the dresser he had a pistol; did he do anything with the pistol before he went to the door? A.' No sir.
*562 “Q. Did lie have that pistol in his hand when he went to the door? A. I reckon he did, I don’t know.
“Q. Did you see it or did you not see it? A. I saw it when he went to the door.
“Q. Did you see his hands at the time he threw his hands up to his head as you have indicated? A. Sure he had his hands when he done that, what he had in it, I didn’t see anything in it at all.
“Q. You could see his hands? A. Why sure.
“Q. You didn’t see anything in his hand? A. I didn’t see anything in his hand.
“Q. Then would you say he didn’t have anything in his hand? A. He didn’t have anything in his hand.”

The testimony of the three police officers who went to the scene of the homicide and later arrested the defendant added nothing material to the facts as already stated, except this. The defendant having disappeared, the police went to the home of his counsin, Ida Griffin, the State’s first witness, where he had got the pistol, and found the weapon in the hallway. From there they went to an address on Olive Street, apparently some distance away, and found the defendant. He told the officer his name was Williams. The officer threatened to take him to the place where he worked and find out his true name, whereupon the defendant admitted his name was Amos Carroll. The officer further asked the defendant “if he shot that man,” and the defendant countered, “Is the man dead?” The officer questioned, “What man?” and the defendant replied, “Well I hope he dies, because I meant to bill him.”

The body of the deceased Clark was taken to City Hospital No. 2 in’ St. Louis. Dr. Weathers, a physician and surgeon there made a superficial examination and found death apparently had been caused by a “gun shot wound below the tip of the left ear.”

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Bluebook (online)
62 S.W.2d 863, 333 Mo. 558, 1933 Mo. LEXIS 643, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-carroll-mo-1933.