State v. Dunn

77 S.W. 848, 179 Mo. 95, 1903 Mo. LEXIS 395
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedDecember 23, 1903
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 77 S.W. 848 (State v. Dunn) 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. Dunn, 77 S.W. 848, 179 Mo. 95, 1903 Mo. LEXIS 395 (Mo. 1903).

Opinion

GANTT, P. J.

— This is an appeal from a conviction of murder in the first degree. q

The defendant was indicted in the criminal court of Buchanan county for the murder of Alfred M. Fen-ton on the 20th day of July, 1902.

The indictment is sufficient and in the ordinary form. 1't is not questioned by defendant. The facts out of which this prosecution grew are in substance as follows:

On the night of the homicide the defendant was in Rushville, a town in Buchanan county. About eight o ’clock he was in conversation with Hally Conrad, Wez Yazel, Hally Chitwood, Luther Moberly and perhaps other young men of that town about thirty or forty feet from Dr. Culver’s drugstore, in said village. Jeff Fenton, a brother of the deceased, was walking along the street, and as he approached the above mentioned group of young men, the defendant was swinging a 38 Colt’s revolver on his finger, and turning to Jeff Fenton said, “Hold on a minute; wait a minute and take a drink with me.” Fenton replied he didn’t care to take a drink, but the defendant insisted, and to prevent trouble Fen-ton drank with him.

After so doing, defendant pulled Jeff Fenton by the shoulder and told him he liked him and his brother Alf and would die for them; that although they had once had hard words he had since worked for them and was friendly to them now and expected to remain so. Soon, however, this friendly tone changed and he demanded to know of Jeff Fenton where his brother Alf was. Jeff attempted to excuse himself, saying he must go and take his wife and child home, to which defendant replied, “No you won’t g — d d — n you, you will never take them home again,” and placed his hand in his shirt bosom and started to draw his pistol, but Moberly, a deputy sheriff, stepped in and said, “Consider yourself under arrest;” and at the same time took defendant’s pistol [100]*100from him. He resisted the officer and the latter called on Conrad to assist in arresting him.

In attempting to subdne defendant Moberly struck him with the revolver. They took him to a justice of the peace, Esquire Allison. The justice ordered him under arrest, and directed the officer to go after Jeff Fenton to make the complaint against defendant for disturbing the peace, and placed defendant in charge of Conrad and Merritt. They, however, released the defendant, who threatened to go home and get his gun and lull both Moberly and Jeff Fenton; that he would kill Moberly if it took him a thousand years. During the time they were at the house of Allison the justice, defendant was very violent and abusive. Mrs. Allison begged him not to use such language, as her mother was old and infirm,' and it would frighten her.

At this time defendant had his trunk at the house of Mrs. Mary Stanton, where he stayed a portion of his time, and when Conrad released him he went to Mrs. Stanton’s and got his shotgun and left her house.

Returning towards the business portion of the town and carrying his gun in both hands, he met Charles Webb and Robert Page and drew the gun on them and asked who they were, and when they told him he said, “All right; go on.” Further on he halted Rev. Mr. Chapman and demanded to know who he was, and when he ascertained said, “Oh, it’s the preacher, is it.?” and asking to be excused, passed on down the street.

After this he stopped Virgil Morrison about opposite the home of Luther Moberly and thrust his gun in his face, but when he discovered who it was, released him, saying, “I am hunting Luther Moberly or Jeff Fenton; I don’t give a damn which one it is. I shall go and get them. I have got it in for them, and by g — d, I am going to kill them,” and then started down the street. He also stopped other citizens in the same manner, and when he found out who they were, said he was looldng for Moberly or Jeff Fenton.

[101]*101Finally lie came to where Jeff Fenton, Holly Chit1 wood, A. F. Shane and others were standing. He went np to Jeff Fenton, working his gun, and said who is that ? Fenton replied, “ It is me, Mr. Dunn. ’ ’ Defendant then asked “Jeff, have you got anything against me?” to which Fenton answered, “Nothing in the world, Mr. Dunn.”

After turning to the others, and finding out who they were, he said, ‘ ‘ That is all right. ’ ’ About this time Alf Fenton, the deceased, Charles Sampson and Cy Fisher, drove up in a buggy. The defendant inquired of Jeff Fenton if that was not Alf’s buggy, and-Jeff said it looked like it. The defendant thereupon stepped out from the shade of the trees in which he was stand-' ing, and stopped the horse. He asked, is that you Alf, and Alf answered,' “No,” and started the horse, but the defendant stopped him again, whereupon Fisher and Sampson got out of the buggy.

The defendant asked Alf Fenton who the parties were who had jumped out of the buggy, and he told him Fisher and Sampson. He then told them to get back and Alf also requested them to do so and they did so.

The defendant then pointed bis gun at Alf Fenton, placing the muzzle near to his face. And the latter caught the gun and attempted to push it away, whereupon defendant shot him twice, and Alf Fenton fell out of the buggy and was heard to say, “Oh, you have killed me. What did you do it for?” Fisher had jumped from the buggy, and he knocked Dunn, the defendant, down.

To his brother, Alf Fenton said, “Mark Dunn killed me and I don’t know what he done it for; let me kill him before I die.” The deputy sheriff, Moberly, came up, arrested defendant and took him away.

The defendant was not hurt, but implored those around him not to kill him, saying he had killed Alf Fenton, but that Moberly was the cause of it. The deceased was unarmed at the time he was shot.

[102]*102There was an unloaded gun in the bottom of the buggy in which he, Fisher and Sampson, were riding. This gun had been obtained a little while before at the house of George Sanders, who testified it was not loaded at the time they got it and Sampson testified they had not loaded it afterwards. The body of the deceased was searched immediately after the shooting in the presence of a number of persons and no weapons found on him. The post-mortem disclosed two gunshot wounds on the body of deceased, one on the right side about an inch below the navel, from which the surgeon took ten shot. The other was in the left leg, and contained eleven shot. There was- evidence tending to prove defendant was intoxicated on the evening of the homicide. Different witnesses testified to seeing him drink. Morgan says he staggered. Rev. Mr. Chapman says he was ‘ ‘ decidedly intoxicated.”

The evidence tends to show there had been a former difficulty between the Fentons and defendant. • In January, 1902, which was six months prior to the killing, while on a hunt in Arkansas, he told Fred Franklin that if Alf or Jeff Fenton ever crossed his path he would Id 11 them, and two years before he had told one Herman Yazel, in a conversation which took place in an old brick building in the village of Rushville, that if he and Alf or Jeff Fenton ever came together, he would “git him.’’ At another time while the defendant and "William Stigers were painting on the Christian church in Rush-ville, he told Stigers that he had had trouble with the Fentons and "never wanted them to cross his path.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
77 S.W. 848, 179 Mo. 95, 1903 Mo. LEXIS 395, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-dunn-mo-1903.