State v. Cole

188 S.W.2d 43, 354 Mo. 181, 1945 Mo. LEXIS 578
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJune 11, 1945
DocketNo. 39327.
StatusPublished
Cited by40 cases

This text of 188 S.W.2d 43 (State v. Cole) 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. Cole, 188 S.W.2d 43, 354 Mo. 181, 1945 Mo. LEXIS 578 (Mo. 1945).

Opinions

*183 ELLISON, P. J.

The appellant, 29 years old, was convicted in the circuit court of the City of St. Louis of murder in the first degree and his punishment assessed by the jury at death, for the killing of a seven year old girl by strangulation in the attempted commission of a rape upon her. Both parties were negroes. On a former appeal the case was reversed and remanded for the giving of an erroneous instruction. State v. Cole (Mo., Div. 2), 174 S. W. (2d) 172. On this second appeal he has filed no brief. We shall *184 take up the assignments of error in his motion for new trial after stating the facts.

The mother and father of the murdered child were separated. The mother worked away from home during the day. The child sold newspapers after school in the neighborhood of her home. On December 19, 1941, she left home after the supper hour to resume her work and had not returned by 11 p. m. A search was instituted, and the child.’s absence reported to the police about 1 a. m. Her corpse was found between 5 and 6 A. M. in the corner of a fence in the alley at the rear of 2624 Lawton Avenue by a negro Silas Millan, who notified the police. He had died since the first trial and his testimony at that trial was read in evidence. .The corpse was lying on an ásh pile with one leg extending through a hole in the fence. A sick woman in a nearby house heard a child screaming between 10 and 11 p. m. that night.

An autopsy early the next morning indicated death had occurred four to twelve hours earlier. The coat and panties on the corpse were torn and there were blood stains on the crotch of the latter garment together with microscopic evidence of vegetable fiber and gray hair — whether human or. not it was impossible to determine. The vagina and hymen were lacerated and vaginal swabs disclosed seminal fluid. Contusions, finger and thumb nail marks were found on the throat.

The thumb nail mark was on the right side of the neck. Appellant’s counsel sought to show on cross-examination of Dr. Connor that such marks must have been made by the thumb of the left hand of the person who inflicted them; and that appellant could not have been the guilty party because, admittedly, his thumb on that hand had been amputated at the base. Indeed, if that hand had been used there would be no thumb nail mark at all. But, even otherwise,' it seems counsel’s theory is incorrect. When two persons face each other the right side of the body of each is opposite the left side of the other. And if one in that position seize with his right hand the threat of the other, his thumb would be on the inside or left of that hand and would mark the right side of the other’s throat. Furthermore, appellant’s confession stated he used his left hand in holding the girl’s throat; his counsel in cross-examining witness McCreary argued the appellant’s hand would have gripped clear around the small throat'of the girl; and this witness quoted the appellant as telling him he was behind the girl and struck her, she screamed, and he seized her neck and face with both hands. There is nothing in this evidence excluding the appellant as the possible perpetrator of the homicide.

Silas Millan, who discovered the corpse, was first held by the police for the crime about ten days. He was 61 years old, gray-haired and feeble. He was porter at a hotel in the same block, and *185 stored junk and slept in the summertime in a shed at the rear of 2612 Lawton Avenue, just twelve doors from where, the body was found. But he testified that on that night he had slept at a house in the 2700 block where a woman friend lived.' He regularly went to and from work through the alley to pick up empty bottles, which he sold for junk. When he passed that way the evening before about 7 p. m. the corpse was not there. The particular reason that suspicion had attached to him was that small blood spots were found on the front and upper part of his coveralls, shirt, underwear and overcoat. There was a small bottle of vaseline in the overcoat pocket. MillaU accounted for the blood spots by the fact that he had had a tooth extracted on December 11, because of which the gum had bled for three days up to December 14 (five days before the homicide) during which time he had expectorated on his clothes, including the shirt and underwear- he wore at night.

Bearing on this point, laboratory blood tests showed that fresh blood obtained from the appellant was in group ON; blood taken from the panties of the corpse was in group O; and blood scraped from the spots on the clothes of Silas Millan also was in group 0. Thus it appeared the blood on the garments of the deceased and of Millan were in the same group 0, the commonest group, whereas the fresh blood taken from the appellant was in group ON. But the bacteriologist, Dr. Gradwohl, explained that blood types -M or N might be found in combination with any of the four groups designated A, B, O and AB if the blood were fresh, but could not be identified if the blood had dried. As a matter of fact blood taken from stains on the knee of the appellant’s white trousers (of which later) also was in group 0; whereas the blood stains on Millan’s clothes were up around the shoulders and chest. Furthermore, the particular type of appellant’s blood does not seem important since there was no blood letting from him; and the question was whether it was the little girl’s blood on his pants.

As stated earlier, the police abandoned the theory of Millan’s connection with the crime and began to investigate the appellant. The first clue pointing to him apparently came from the secretary and a cook named Inez Jones at the Eailroad Y. M. C. A., 20th and Eugenia Streets, St. Louis. Both of them testified at the trial. This address, appellant’s room at 23 A. North Jefferson Avenue, and the scene of the crime all were in the same general neighborhood west of 'Union Station. Appellant had worked as a bus boy at the Y. M. C. A. cafeteria for about three weeks before the date of the homicide, in which employment he wore a white jacket and pants. His working hours ordinarily ended at 3 p. m., but that night about 11:45 p. M. he came to the kitchen and asked the cook for a sandwich. Presently he attempted to depart by the back door, which was locked and not used by the kitchen help. Where he went next the cook didn’t know, *186 but the following morning before 9 o ’clock he left his • employment without explanation, although he had $2 or $3 wages due and owed the secretary $5.

Appellant’s father and brother lived in St. Louis and his wife and child on a farm near Sikeston, Missouri. He did not explain to the former his sudden departure; or go to the place where he roomed although he had clothes there; and he could not be located at Sikeston. He also had relatives in Crockett County; Tennessee, as was disclosed by his prison record, he having completed a two year Sentence for felonious assault in the Missouri penitentiary in 1936. Being advised of these facts, or many of them, sergeant Middle-brooks of the St. Louis police communicated with the sheriff in Tennessee. The latter apprehended appellant and sergeant Middle-brooks went there and brought him back to St. Louis on the train. Witness McCreary, who was a newspaper reporter on the St. Louis World also went on that trip.

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Bluebook (online)
188 S.W.2d 43, 354 Mo. 181, 1945 Mo. LEXIS 578, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-cole-mo-1945.