State v. Eaton

302 S.W.2d 866
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMay 13, 1957
Docket45606
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 302 S.W.2d 866 (State v. Eaton) 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. Eaton, 302 S.W.2d 866 (Mo. 1957).

Opinion

*868 LEEDY, Justice.

At the May Term, 1945, of the Circuit Court of Buchanan County, James G. Eaton was convicted of murder in the second degree in having killed Willie Van Ross on February 10, 1945. He was sentenced to imprisonment in the penitentiary for a term of 18 years, which judgment was affirmed June 10, 1946. State v. Eaton, 355 Mo. 164, 195 S.W.2d 457.

About a year after such affirmance — May 28, 1947, to be exact, Eaton, then incarcerated in the penitentiary under the judgment above mentioned, applied to the Circuit Court of Cole County for habeas corpus to effect his release from such custody. In the meantime, Joseph Sherman, the Buchanan County prosecutor, had died (1946). The prisoner’s application for ha-beas corpus was based upon the charge that his conviction resulted: (1) from perjured testimony given by Albert “Cotton” Jones, which perjured testimony was knowingly used by the prosecuting attorney; and (2) from the suppression by said prosecutor of evidence favorable to the accused and corroborative of his defense of self-defense. Those charges were thoroughly explored in an extensive hearing before the Circuit Court of Cole County at which the prisoner was produced, and he and numerous other witnesses, on both sides, testified. That hearing resulted in a finding adverse to the prisoner, and he was remanded to the custody of the warden. Because of the intimate connection or interrelationship between the record and proceedings in that case and the one at bar, it will be necessary to make frequent reference to such former proceeding, and, for brevity, this will sometimes be done by referring to it simply as the habeas corpus case or proceeding without further identifying it. Eaton twice applied in this (the Supreme) court for writs of habeas corpus (1948 and 1951), but his applications were denied for failure to state claims upon which relief could be granted. These two unsuccessful attempts on his part have no bearing whatever on the present appeal except as background material, and will not be hereinafter referred to.

The present proceeding was instituted' July 23, 1953, by the filing in the Buchanan Circuit Court of what was captioned as Eaton’s “Motion in the Nature of a Writ of Error Coram Nobis.” By leave of court this motion was, on September 2, 1954, supplanted by an amended motion bearing the same title, and praying the same relief, i. e., that the judgment and sentence be vacated and set aside, the grounds of which motion were the same as those asserted in the previous Cole County habeas corpus proceeding. The trial court, without hearing evidence, dismissed the motion, as requested by the state, for the reason that a writ of error coram nobis was not a proper remedy. On appeal to this court, it was held that the motion was not to be determined by the name given it, but rather by the facts alleged and the relief sought; that the facts alleged, if proven, deprived defendant of due process of law, rendering his conviction unconstitutional, and that his allegations entitled him to a hearing under 42 V.A.M.S.Supreme Court Rules, Rule 27.26. The judgment was accordingly reversed, and the cause remanded for further proceedings not inconsistent with the opinion. State v. Eaton, Mo., 280 S.W. 2d 63.

On remand, the motion was heard before Judge James S. Rooney, of the 7th Circuit, who had been temporarily transferred for such purpose by order of this court upon notice from the judge who had previously ruled the motion that he had disqualified himself. Such hearing resulted in an order or judgment denying the motion, and refusing to set aside or vacate the judgment, and the present appeal by defendant followed.

The killing in question occurred at a place in St. Joseph called the Harlem Club, located at 211-215 Francis Street, the facilities of which included hotel rooms, a card room, a bar and a restaurant. The proprietors were Albert “Cotton” Jones and *869 Gus Williams, colored men; defendant and his companion, Harold “Firpo” Sim-monds, are white men. Following a period of after-hours drinking and gambling in the place, an altercation arose between these two white men and a Negro, Andrew Hawkins, who had won $40 of their money at cards. As a result of that altercation, Albert “Cotton” Jones induced defendant to take his companion, “Firpo” Simmonds, and leave the premises. They returned a short time later, and the killing ensued, as thus described in the opinion on the appeal in the original case (355 Mo. 164, 165-166, 195 S.W.2d 457-458): “After visiting other places and taking several drinks of whiskey, they went back [to the Harlem Club]. According to the State’s evidence, Simmonds said: T am looking for that nigger Hawkins * * * him or any other nigger’; and defendant said: ‘yes, we came after a nigger’. (Another witness testified that Simmonds said: ‘We came to kill him. * * * If we can’t find him any nigger will do’; and that defendant said: ‘That is right’.) Deceased, a discharged negro veteran still in uniform, was at the tavern bar. He said: T can’t stand that; you don’t want to use them words in here’; and ran over, grabbed Simmonds as he was putting his hand in his pocket, and pinned his arms down by his side. Deceased was facing Simmonds with his back toward defendant who was about eight feet away. (One witness said 15 or 20 feet.) Defendant drew a pistol and shot several times. The first shots went into the wall but two bullets went into deceased’s back. The State’s witnesses saw no weapon of any kind in deceased’s hand and there is no evidence that any was found after he was killed. One witness said that defendant told deceased to turn Simmonds loose and said: ‘If you don’t turn him loose I am going to shoot you’. * * *

“Defendant’s evidence (defendant and Simmonds) was that deceased struck at defendant with a knife; that defendant slid down the bar away from him; that deceased was about to strike again when Simmonds seized his right hand with his left; that Simmonds put his right hand in his pocket to get his knife and deceased grabbed his right hand holding it in his pocket. While they were thus holding each other and Simmonds was yelling and screaming, defendant shot to scare deceased and cause him to let go of Sim-monds, but that when he would not do so he shot him. Defendant was crippled and walked with a cane. He said he thought he had no chance if deceased got the best of Simmonds, and ‘was scared to death, afraid he was going to cut my head off or something.’ Simmonds made a statement to the police on the day of the shooting in which he said he did not know that deceased had a knife and that he did not see anything in his hand. However, at the trial Simmonds explained this statement by saying that he made it while under the influence of liquor and did not know what he said.”

The supposed perjury on the part of the witness Albert “Cotton” Jones when testifying for the state at the original trial is charged to have arisen from, and to be comprised of his denial that he saw deceased draw a knife on defendant, or that he saw any knife or weapon in deceased’s hands. The suppression of evidence charge grows out of the circumstance that the state failed to call as a witness in its behalf at the original trial one Julia Hollins, an employe of the Harlem Club, who is said to have been present at the time of, and witnessed the homicide.

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Bluebook (online)
302 S.W.2d 866, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-eaton-mo-1957.