State v. Elkins

63 Mo. 159
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedOctober 15, 1876
StatusPublished
Cited by50 cases

This text of 63 Mo. 159 (State v. Elkins) 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. Elkins, 63 Mo. 159 (Mo. 1876).

Opinion

Wagner, Judge,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The defendant was convicted of murder in the second degree, and has assigned for error in this court various rulings upon the trial in reference to the admission and rejection of testimony, and also in regard to the giving and refusing of instructions.

Before we proceed, however, to notice these points, a preliminary question is raised relating to the action of the court in determining defendant’s application for a change of venue, which may be considered. The indictment was found, in Taney county, and a change of venue was awarded to the defendant to the circuit court of Barry county, on the ground that the inhabitants of Taney county were so prejudiced against him that he could not have a fair trial in that county. When this petition was filed and the change of venue was ordered, it does not appear that the defendant was in court. Subsequently it is shown that the defendant appeared by attorney and presented his petition to the judge of the Barry county circuit court at Chambers, praying for a change of venue, because the judge was so prejudiced against him, that he could not have a fair and impartial trial. In this last petition it was averred that the judge of the fourteenth judicial circuit was so prejudiced against the defendant, that he could not [163]*163obtain before him a fair and impartial trial, and therefore the prayer was that the cause be sent to some other circuit than the fourteenth ; but the judge awarded the change to Webster county in the fourteenth circuit. Before the case was called for trial in this last county, defendant filed his motion to remove the case to the circuit court of Barry county, or remove the same to some other court where no prejudice existed against him, which motion was by the court overruled.

No error is perceived in the action of the court in its decision upon this subject. It was discretionary with the judge of the Barry circuit court as to what circuit he would send the cause, and when it was duly awarded and transmitted to the Webster county circuit, full jurisdiction was obtained in this last circuit, and hence the court did right in refusing to remand the case or strike it from the docket.

But it is insisted that all the proceedings in regard to a change of venue were nullities, because the defendant appeared by attorney, and the record does not show that he was personally present when any of them were had. In answer to this it is sufficient to say that the personal presence of the accused is only required during the trial. The application for the change of venue was made and granted previous to the trial. It was a favor to him, constituted no step in the progress of the trial, and it was not necessary that he should be personally present.

On the^trial defendant offered to prove that about ten days before the killing took place, and on that very day, and at other times within ten days, the deceased swore that he would kill the defendant — that defendant could not live in the country. The court refused to permit the defendant to prove these threats, because he could not prove that they were communicated to him previous to the killing.

When threats by the person killed should be admitted in evidence or rejected, is a question involved in a great deal of doubt and uncertainty. If they have been made a long time antecedent to the commission of the act, they may be not only valueless but entirely inadmissible. The relations of the parties may have since entirely changed, and in the intervening [164]*164time the person making them may have wholly abandoned any previously conceived intention of harming the person against whom they were uttered. It is impossible to laydown any general rule on the subject. Their relevancy, admission or rejection, depends materially upon the circumstances surrounding each particular case. If the accused was the aggressor, then evidence of threats by the deceased can he of no importance in furnishing exculpatory evidence in his favor, for it is only when an attempt is made to carry out or put in execution a threat by the person making it that it becomes material and furnishes grounds of justification for the action of the defendant. If the threats are so recent as to afford a presumption that danger may be apprehended, they are calculated to put the party against whom they are made on his guard, and will frequently authorize a line of conduct by him that would otherwise be unjustifiable. In some instances uncommunicated threats are not only admissible, but they become of the greatest importance in characterizing the offense. Where the deceased seeks the encounter and has made threats, it is a reasonable inference to suppose that he intended to execute those threats, and thus they would have a direct tendency to characterize his conduct towards the prisoner at the time of their meeting. In doubtful cases they may be admissible as throwing light upon the action of the deceased at the time of the affray or encounter, and have a direct bearing upon the reasonableness of the grounds on which the defendant acted. In the present case the defense introduced evidence tending to prove that the deceased, some time prior to his death, called at defendant’s house when he was absent from home, and abused the female members of his family, applying to them opprobrious and scurrilous epithets, and stated that he intended to kill the defendant; that when he was intoxicated he was a violent, desperate and dangerous man, and that on the day that he was killed he was under the influence of liquor, and started on his way home, and that he deviated from his road in order to go by defendant’s house ; that on approaching the house, and when close to it, he was violent in his manner, using all kinds of threatening and abusive language, and declaring his determination to kill the defendant, and that he [165]*165raised his hand towards his bosom as if he was going to get a pistol, when the defendant shot him. Now, the proof of the defendant’s hostile temper, whether it consisted of preparations or declarations, was pertinent to show that the attack or a demonstration towards the attack, was first made by the deceased. Therefore, upon this principle, I think the evidence was admissible. In cases of doubt, for the purpose of showing that the deceased made the attack, and if so, with what motive, his prior declarations, un communicated to the defendant, are clearly evidence.

It was proved, without objection, that the deceased when intoxicated or under the influence of liquor, was quarrelsome, violent and dangerous. But the defendant sought to go further and show particular traits in the character of the deceased, and that if he made threats he would endeavor to carry them out.

This evidence the court refused to admit, and of the correctness of its ruling in this respect we entertain no doubt. Where a homicide occurs under such circumstances that it is doubtful whether the act was committed maliciously or from a well grounded apprehension of danger, testimony showing that the deceased was turbulent, violent and desperate, is proper, in order to determine whether the accused had reasonable cause to apprehend great personal injury to himself. This proof extends to the general character and reputation of the deceased, but it cannot be made to include particular acts, or what, in the opinion of witnesses, he would he liable to do under certain circumstances.

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Bluebook (online)
63 Mo. 159, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-elkins-mo-1876.