State v. Cochran

203 S.W.2d 707, 356 Mo. 778, 1947 Mo. LEXIS 624
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJuly 14, 1947
DocketNo. 40256.
StatusPublished
Cited by39 cases

This text of 203 S.W.2d 707 (State v. Cochran) 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. Cochran, 203 S.W.2d 707, 356 Mo. 778, 1947 Mo. LEXIS 624 (Mo. 1947).

Opinion

*781 HYDE, J.

Defendant was convicted of murder in the first degree. He was sentenced to death, and has appealed.

Defendant was found guilty of the murder of Marylou Jenkins by strangling her, by tying an electric light cord tightly around her neck, after raping her in her home on February 5, 1946. She was found dead by her mother when she returned to her home on the morning of February 6th. Defendant confessed to this-murder on February 26th, when he told the officers who were questioning him that he could show them how he did it better than he could tell them. He was taken to the Jenkins’ home where he reenacted the crime.

At the trial, defendant attempted to prove alibi and insanity and also to exclude this and other later confessions as involuntary. All of these issues were submitted to the jury on comprehensive instructions' and no claim of error therein is made. The principal evidence of defendant’s guilt consisted of these confessions although there was evidence of certain corroborating circumstances. The trial court held a preliminary hearing, with the jury excluded, before admitting any evidence of confessions, and, thereafter, overruled defendant’s motion to exclude them. Defendant contends that these confessions were inadmissible as a matter of law, claiming they were obtained after long and continuous questioning of defendant, who was a person of low mental calibre, held incommunicado and without the advice of counsel. A conviction based on confessions must be reversed if the evidence conclusively shows they were involuntary; and this question should be decided on. this appeal upon consideration of all of the evidence, both at the preliminary hearing and before the jury. [State v. Ramsey, 355 Mo. 720, 197 S. W. (2d) 949 and cases therein cited.] If the evidence is conflicting on this issue it is a question for the jury. [State v. Ellis, 354 Mo. 998, 193 S. W. (2d) 31, 193 S. W. (2d) 37.] Under such circumstances, when this issue is sub *782 mitted to them on proper instructions, their decision should be held final.

Defendant was taken to the county jail on Saturday, February 23rd about 3:30 p. m. The officers were called because he had attempted to drink lye water. Dr. A. W. Kampschmidt was called by the sheriff to treat him. He said he could not get anything out of him; that he gave his name as Ellis Cochran (his brother’s name); that he ‘ ‘ could not make out what was the matter with him, whether he was crazy or whether he was getting over a binge or whether it was something else”; and that he “thought the proper thing to do was to incarcerate him until he could determine what the trouble was.” Thereafter, defendant’s wife was found dead, from a gun shot wound, in their home; apparently by defendant’s sister and brother who went there after Dr. Kampschmidt told them about examining defendant. (Defendant later plead guilty to the murder of his wife.) So far as the record ¡j¡¡hows he was not questioned by any officers until 10:00 p. m. on Sunday, February 24th, when he was brought to the city jail and'questioned until about 3:00 a. m. Defendant’s brother, Turner Cochran, was allowed to visit him at the county jail on Sunday afternoon, and he said he talked to him for 30 or 40 minutes. He said defendant told him that “he was playing like he was going to take some lye water and she (his wife) called the law on him.” Turner went back later for another visit but' was not permitted to see him until after he had confessed.

During the questioning on Sunday night, defendant admitted shooting the gun in his house but claimed his wife was not dead and he was taken to the undertaking parlors to view his wife’s body. The officers said that he was given food and coffee during this period; that the questioning was at intervals; and that “he was allowed at different times to be without anyone talking to him.” Some of the questioning Sunday night was about the Jenkins case.' Defendant was not questioned about it again until about 8:00 p. m. the next night, Monday, February 25th. On Monday afternoon about 2:00 p. M. he was taken out to his home, where “he reenacted the scene of his wife’s murder.” Defendant was returned to the city jail about 4:30 p. m. and brought back clean clothes and his shaving kit. He was allowed to take a bath, shave, rest and have his evening meal. The officers who were present at the questioning on Sunday and Monday nights were the sheriff and one of his deputies, the chief of police of Columbia and two or three officers of the State Patrol.

Shortly after midnight, they said that defendant told them he could show them how he did it and he was taken to the Jenkins’ home. They said he showed them how he knocked at the front door and called for Mrs. Jenkins, between 10:00 and 11:00 p. m. on February 5th, and told them that when Marylou asked who was there, he gave his name and said “Mrs. Jenkins owes me eighty cents for *783 hauling garbage and I have come to collect the money.” (Defendant had hauled garbage and trash for several years; and Mr. Jenkins had asked him to do some hauling from his place two or three months previously.) He said that Marylou told him Mrs. Jenkins was not at home and he asked her to pay him. He said she opened the door and then unlocked the screen door. He immediately pushed inside and pushed her back, causing her to fall over the arm of a divan. (Body bruises found at the autopsy corroborated this.) She screamed and he threw her on the floor, putting a blanket over her head to stifle her screams, |Until she quit struggling, and then raped, her.1 Because he knew he was recognized, although he said she was “out”, he got a long electric light cord (after first breaking off pieces from a lamp which he said were not long enough) from another room and tied it tightly around her neck. He demonstrated how he did this by tying' it around a patrolman’s arm. He also said that he tore a rag from her body and carried it with him until he entered the woods at the end of the street. (The state suggests that he might have used this to turn off the porch light over the door, which he said he did when-he left the house.) He said there were lights in neighboring houses and he thought they might see him leave. He took the officers to these woods and pointed out the place where he said he threw it away, which ivas within four or five feet of the place where the officers had found a used sanitary napkin with a piece of a sanitary belt attached. There was testimony that, by comparison with a piece of belt and pad taken from the body of the dead girl, this was found to be the part missing from it. Defendant’s statements were later reduced to writing in Columbia and again two,days later in the office of the Superintendent of the State Patrol in Jefferson City, where he told the same story. However, these written statements were not offered in evidence.

Defendant’s sister and his brother Ellis testified that they tried to see him after his brother Turner had told them he had visited him. Ellis said he went Sunday night and again on Monday. His sister said she went three times on and after Monday. They were refused permission to see him until after he had been taken to Jefferson City, which was done on the morning of his confession, and did not see him until about two weeks after he was arrested. Defendant' did not testify at the preliminary hearing on the confession but took the stand before the jury. He did hot then testify concerning his confession or his questioning.

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Bluebook (online)
203 S.W.2d 707, 356 Mo. 778, 1947 Mo. LEXIS 624, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-cochran-mo-1947.