State v. Chesser

293 S.W.2d 935, 1956 Mo. LEXIS 777
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedOctober 8, 1956
DocketNo. 45088
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 293 S.W.2d 935 (State v. Chesser) 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. Chesser, 293 S.W.2d 935, 1956 Mo. LEXIS 777 (Mo. 1956).

Opinion

COIL, Commissioner.

Defendant, A. J. Chesser, charged with murder in the first degree, was found guilty of murder in the second degree and his punishment fixed at IS years in the state penitentiary. He has appealed from the ensuing judgment.

The state’s evidence tended to show that in the afternoon of August 7, 1954, defendant, Chesser, entered a tavern located in St. Louis and told one Joseph Burton that he was looking for “Fats” McGee so that he could demand the money which he claimed McGee owed him. Shortly thereafter McGee entered and Burton said to him, if you owe Chesser money, why don’t you pay him. McGee replied that he didn’t owe the (describing Chesser by vile words) any money and, while walking toward Chesser, continued his reply to Burton’s question by stating that he had left his money at home and would have to return there for it. Immediately following that statement and with no further words, threats, or threatening gestures on the part of McGee, Chesser, from three feet away, shot and killed the unarmed McGee with a 38-caliber revolver.

Defendant’s version of the events leading up to and culminating in McGee’s death was that during the morning of August 7 he gave McGee $2 with which to obtain whiskey; that a short time thereafter McGee returned to the shoeshine parlor where defendant had waited, informed him that he, McGee, did not get the whiskey and was keeping the money and cursed defendant. Defendant told McGee to keep the money. Later defendant went to the mentioned tavern and McGee entered. McGee suggested that defendant probably was mad about the $2 and called defendant “a lot of bad names” and said “he would bust my teeth out.” Defendant told McGee that he could have the $2 and defendant left the tavern. About 3 o’clock that afternoon defendant returned to the tavern and was talking with Joseph Burton when McGee came in and stood in front of defendant. Burton asked McGee why he did not give defendant the money if he owed it. McGee turned toward defendant and yelled, “That black (vile name),” and struck defendant on the shoulder, whereupon the two “clinched.” During an ensuing tussle McGee reached for his pocket where defendant thought there was a knife. Defendant thereupon removed his (defendant’s) gun from his right pants pocket. McGee grabbed the gun or defendant’s hand which held the gun. Thereafter, while defendant [937]*937and McGee were still scuffling, the gun was discharged and McGee was shot. Defendant testified that he did not know whether his finger or deceased’s finger pulled the trigger. He said, “I just heard the shot. I didn’t know who was shot, me or him * * * I don’t know whether I fired it or whether it accidentally discharged or he fired it.”

The trial court instructed on first and second degree murder, manslaughter, accident, and justifiable homicide.

In the absence of a defendant’s brief, we examine the three allegations of error contained in defendant’s new trial motion.

Defendant contends that the trial court erred in giving instruction 3 on manslaughter for the stated reason that the instruction limited the hypothesis upon which defendant could be found guilty of manslaughter to a finding that a sufficient provocation had been given defendant to cause him to shoot and kill deceased when defendant was under the influence of a suddenly aroused passion so as to make defendant “incapable of thinking coolly of the natural consequences of his act”; thus, says defendant, preventing the jury from convicting him of manslaughter “under any other circumstances” than those hypothesized. Defendant has failed in that assignment of error to point to “any other circumstances” shown in evidence which would justify a manslaughter instruction on any theory other than the one submitted. Aside from the fact that such failure to so particularize the “other circumstances”, under which defendant might contend that he could have been convicted of manslaughter, probably made the assignment insufficient to preserve the point for our review, Section 547.030 RSMo 1949, V.A.M.S.; S.C. Rule 27.20, 42 V.A.M.S., our examination of the record fails to disclose any “other circumstances” or state of facts which could have been hypothesized, a finding of which would have reduced the hypothesized homicide to manslaughter. While it is true that man-slaughter as defined by Section 559.070 RSMo 1949, V.A.M.S., does contemplate other varieties of homicide than that hypothesized by instruction 3, still in the absence of evidence justifying the submission of another “variety” defendant could not have been prejudiced by the instruction in the respect in which the instruction has been attacked. State v. Davis, Mo., 34 S.W.2d 133, 135 [3-5], And this, even though instant instruction 3 did not define manslaughter in accord with Section 559.070 RSMo 1949, V.A.M.S. We do not approve instruction 3 as a proper manslaughter instruction. See State v. Foster, 355 Mo. 577, 589 [7], 197 S.W.2d 313, 319 [12], and State v. Gore, 292 Mo. 173, 188, 237 S.W. 993, 997. For the reason heretofore stated, however, defendant was not prejudiced by the instruction in the respect stated in his new trial assignment of error.

Defendant says that instruction 3 was erroneous for the further reason that it “assumed that the defendant had killed the deceased under circumstances which would be murder unless the jury should find that a provocation had occurred giving rise to a passion within the defendant thereby reducing the crime to manslaughter.” In so far as the above language may present a different contention than that heretofore ruled, we are of the view that the instruction is not subject to the criticism made. It made no assumptions but, on the contrary, hypothesized the essential facts which satisfied the statutory definition of manslaughter. State v. Foster, supra.

Defendant’s further contention contained in his first assignment of error, that the instruction was “argumentative” without specifying wherein the instruction was so, is too general to have preserved the point for appellate review. State v. Kaner. 338 Mo. 972, 976 [3], 93 S.W.2d 671, 673 [5-7].

Defendant in his second new trial assignment contends that the trial court [938]*938erred in giving instruction 4 for the stated reason that it assumed and directed that the defendant shot and killed the deceased. Instruction 4, while perhaps defying an exact label, may be best described as an instruction, the main purpose of which was to define and explain what would constitute a sufficient “provocation” to defendant to reduce the charged homicide from murder in the first or second degree to manslaughter. There is no doubt, as defendant contends, that there are phrases in the instruction which do assume and direct that defendant did shoot and kill deceased. The instruction told the jury that the danger of personal violence must have been apparent and imminent or have so appeared to defendant "at the time he shot and, killed the deceased before the defendant can claim in this case that he had reasonable cause or provocation to use upon the deceased a deadly weapon, such as was used by the defendant in this case,” and that if deceased assaulted defendant “before the defendant shot the deceased”. And the language noted in the foregoing italicized phrases was not preceded (in instruction 4) by any requirement for the jury to find that defendant shot and killed deceased, nor were those italicized phrases immediately followed by any such requirement.

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Bluebook (online)
293 S.W.2d 935, 1956 Mo. LEXIS 777, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-chesser-mo-1956.