State v. Davis

126 S.W. 470, 226 Mo. 493, 1910 Mo. LEXIS 73
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMarch 15, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 126 S.W. 470 (State v. Davis) 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. Davis, 126 S.W. 470, 226 Mo. 493, 1910 Mo. LEXIS 73 (Mo. 1910).

Opinion

GANTT, P. J.

On December 8,1908, an information duly verified was filed in the criminal court of Jackson county, charging the defendant with murder in the first degree of Harry H. Evans on November 14, 1908. The information was in due and approved form and it is therefore unnecessary to set it forth at length.

Afterwards on the 12th of December, 1908, the defendant, being in custody, was duly arraigned and entered his plea of not guilty, the court at the same time having assigned him counsel. The cause was then continued from time to time until the 28th of December, 1908, when it came on for trial before a jury and resulted in a verdict of guilty of murder in the first degree and assessing the punishment at death. A motion for new trial was duly filed, heard and overruled, and the defendant sentenced in accordance with the verdict. Prom that judgment he has appealed to this court. The defendant is not represented in this court by counsel. The facts disclosed by the record are substantially these:

Harry H. Evans, the deceased, was a boy just past seventeen years of age, at the date of his death, and lived with his father at number 2923 Mersington street, Kansas City. The father of the deceased was engaged in the stone-quarry business in Kansas City, and Harry drove a team for his father and made collections for him. On Saturday evening, November 14, 1908, at [497]*497about seven o ’clock, the deceased, and a brother by the name of John, left their home and went to a number of stores in the neighborhood. At one of the stores John paid a small bill that he owed for tobacco. When the deceased left home that evening he was wearing a pair of overalls over his' dress trousers, and a heavy coat of corduroy or ducking, and a pair of heavy shoes. He and his brother met the defendant, Davis, at Twenty-seventh and Cleveland streets at 9:30 o’clock that evening. The boys informed the defendant that they were going down town to have their shoes mended, whereupon the defendant, who had a bucket of beer, invited them to go with him to his home and he would go with them after leaving the heer. Deceased accepted the invitation, but John, his brother, declined it. This was the last time the deceased was seen alive by any member of his family. The evidence tends to show that the defendant and the Evans family were on' friendly terms and that he often visited the Evans brothers. Defendant is a young man, about twenty-' three years of age at the time of the trial. The body of the deceased was found in a manhole, on the following Sunday morning about nine o’clock, at Twenty-ninth and Monroe streets, with his skull crushed and one of the main arteries of his neck severed by a knife. He had on his gloves which were strapped around his wrists. His pocket knife was found in the pocket of his under trousers. Several pools of blood were found, some three blocks away, some two and some one from where the body was found. Appellant was arrested on the day the body of the deceased was found, and thereafter made three written statements. The first statement was as follows:

First Statement.
“Metropolitan Police Department.
“Kansas City, Missouri, November 18, 1908.
“My name is Robert Davis. I live at 1919 Myrtle. [498]*498I live with my mother, father and brother and sisters. I am twenty-two years old. The last work I done was for Mr. John Crow in his rock quarry at Twenty-eighth and Cleveland. Saturday night, November 14, him (Harry Evans) and his brother John was up on Twenty-seventh and Cleveland, and I came along and met them. John, he first said to me, he said; Your going to town? Yes, when I take this beer home, I said, well then, I said, rim down with me it won't take long, then John he complained of being tired and says I’ll wait here you go down with him, Harry. Harry he went on with me back to my house and waited there a few minutes till I changed clothes then we started talking about going down on Third and Broadway, we was going to meet John. Harry he did not want to go down on the Row but wanted to go to a chitilin supper upon Twenty-eighth and Jackson at Mrs. Colley’s and I wanted to go down there, he objected to going down there, and one word brought on another and so he j erked out his knife and I slapped him in the face I didn’t hit him with my fist for if I had I would have knocked him unconscious for I got strength you know. When I hit him I knocked him down he got up with the knife and tried to open it as he got up and I jumped back to let him open it and then I run in to him and clinched him and took the knife away from him then I cut at him from right to left then I jabbed back at him from left to right and cut him about the neck somewhere, I don’t know exactly where. I don’t remember of cutting him more than once, but I might have cut him the first time I swung at him. When I jahbed at him the second time and cut him he screamed and the people next door came out on the porch that is the white people in that little white house with green trimming on it, come out on their porch. When he screamed he fell down and I pulled him over there in. the weeds and then I walked down the road north a little ways and come back and [499]*499got a rock and knocked him in the head. When I walked away after cutting him I throwed the knife in the creek, right after I hit him in the head with the rock I throwed' the rock over towards that box elder tree on the side of the branch. I then went north on Myrtle to Twenty-ninth and went angling across to Twenty-eighth and Cleveland and then north on Cleveland to Twenty-seventh, then I walked west on Twenty-seventh to Indiana avenue and took the Indiana avenue car north and came down to Eighteenth and Paseo I got off then and went to the Chicago Loan Office and got my overcoat which I had pawned there for two dollars. I paid him two dollars and fifty cents then I walked west on Eighteenth to Troost and got a Yine street or Minnesota car and rode to Fifth and Main and went to Costello’s saloon then I went to Third and Broadway then I went up and got on Indiana avenue car at Fifth and Deleware and rode to Twenty-seventh- and Indiana and transferred to Twenty-seventh car and rode to Jackson avenue the end of the line and then I went to Mrs. Colley’s, I stayed there until about 1:25 then I went home I went south on Jackson to Twenty-ninth west on Twenty-ninth to Myrtle and on down Myrtle home. I went home and pulled off my overcoat and came down and went to where Harry was and tried to hide him to keep any one from seeing him, that is, I carried him west across the pasture to' the manhole at Twenty-ninth and Monroe and threw him in there. I only stopped once on the wav and that was in the pasture qbout Mersington. After I dumped him in the manhole I went home and took off all of my clothes except my underclothes and laid down beside John and slept some. When I got home after dumping the body in the sewer I laid down and then got up and went to the toilet and then came back and laid down and went to sleep then when I woke up I looked out the window I thought it had snowed, then I laid down and [500]*500pretty soon I looked ont again I thought I heard some one whistle, then I laid down again John asked me both times I looked out the window what I was looking for and I told! him what I told you. I didn’t sleep any more after that and pretty soon I got up and went down stairs and got some water and brought it up stairs and put it on the stove and then I started a fire in the stove.

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Related

State v. Davis
400 S.W.2d 141 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1966)
State v. McCracken
108 S.W.2d 372 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1937)
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State v. Hershon
45 S.W.2d 60 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1932)
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State v. Garrett
207 S.W. 784 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1918)
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195 S.W. 999 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1917)
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190 S.W. 257 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1916)
Norwood v. State
192 S.W.2d 248 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas, 1916)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
126 S.W. 470, 226 Mo. 493, 1910 Mo. LEXIS 73, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-davis-mo-1910.