State v. Emmons

225 S.W. 894, 285 Mo. 54, 1920 Mo. LEXIS 150
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedDecember 1, 1920
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 225 S.W. 894 (State v. Emmons) 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. Emmons, 225 S.W. 894, 285 Mo. 54, 1920 Mo. LEXIS 150 (Mo. 1920).

Opinion

WILLIAMS, J.

Upon an information charging 'him with robbery in the first degree appellant was tried in the Circuit Court of Butler County, found guilty and his punishment assessed at twenty years’ imprisonment. Defendant has duly perfected an appeal

A fair and concise summary of the testimony is found in the brief of the learned Attorney-General, from which we quote as follows:

“About eleven o’clock on the 13th day of June, 1919. the State Bank of Neelyville, a banking corporation, was robbed. Neelyville is a.small town located in Butler County, Missouri, near the Arkansas line. At the time the robbery took place, Arthur W. Moore, cashier, H. W. McMullen, president, and E. W. Graves, a stockholder, were in the bank, where they had just completed, a stockholders’ audit of the bank. Moore, as cashier, was in charge of the bank and its funds.
“When the robber came in the front door, Moore, thinking he was a customer, started towards the front of the building to wait upon him. As Moore looked up he saw two big guns in the hands of the robber pointed at him. Ho made Mr. Graves get the money out of the cash drawer; and Mr. Moore was forced to open the safe. He took all the paper money in the bank, stuffing it around his waist beneath his. shirt. About this time E. M. Abernathy came in the bank and he, too, was covered with the guns and told to take his position with the othe,r men against the wall. The robber made his escape out of the back door and thence through a field into the woods about a half mile way. By auditing the books again, it was found that- the robber had taken $2823.
“On June 19,1919, six.days later, the defendant was arrested in the City of St. Louis, and it was found that *58 he was going under the assumed name of "William Harding. On his person were found two bank books. One was a bank book of the Baden Bank, where he had on deposit $1360, and the other was a bank book of Broadway Trust Company, where he had on deposite $800. The money in both banks the defendant admitted he deposited under the name of Jones A. Brenton. He had made the deposit on Monday, June 16th, 1919, just three days after the bank robbery. There was also found upon defendant about $100 in currency. The defendant was positively identified as the robber by witnesses, Moore, Abernathy, McMullen, and Graves.
The defense was an alibi. A short time before the trial the appellant had been discharged from the army. On Thursday preceding the robbery on Friday, appellant came from St. Louis to his mother’s home, which was a few miles south of Neelyville, in the State of Arkansas. His mother, his younger brother, and a hired farm-hand who was working for his mother, testified that he was home all d^y Friday, the day of the robbery. His mother testified on cross-examination that the. appellant had left with her a money belt containing a large sum of money on Saturday, the day after the robbery, while he went to Reyno. Appellant testified that he won'this money by gambling in St. Louis. He further explained that he went under assumed names, because it had been reported to him that he was wanted in Arkansas for horse-stealing, and for this reason his mother had written him under assumed names. On Sunday, about midnight, appellant testified, ■ he took the train from Neeleyville for St. Louis. Witnesses were introduced showing that appellant’s reputation was good, but this was based largely upon knowledge that the witnesses had prior to the time appellant went to the army.”

Cross-Examination. I. Defendant’s mother testified on behalf of defendant. Upon her direct examination she testified that her son was at her home the entire day upon which the bank robbery occurred and that he left her home two days later for St. Louis. *59 During the cross-examination of this witness the State was permitted to show by her that four days after the robbery she wrote a letter to her son (then in St. Louis) under the name of William Harding in which she said: “I met Gosh arn when I went to Mo arle and he was asking about Claud [the appellant] and I told him he had went to the Kansas wheat fields. ’ ’

It is contended by appellant that the court erred in permitting the cross-examination to take such a wide range and erred more particularly in permitting the-State to prove that in the letter she had made the contradictory statement about her son’s whereabouts shortly after the robbery.

We are unable to agree with appellant in his present contention. It is difficult to lay down a hard-and-fast rule concerning the proper scope of cross-examination. In the case of State v. Decker, 161 Mo. App. 396, l. c. 398, the general rule is stated as follows: “A wide-range of cross-examination should be allowed to show motive, interest or animus of the witness.”

In the instant case, the letter written by the mother and sent to her son under an assumed name disclosed a rather clever device for the accomplishment of one of-two things, viz., either to convey information to her son whom she knew to be then in hiding or else to mislead the authorities who might intercept the mail. .In either event it shows an attempt to aid the flight of the defendant -and throws necessary light upon the interest taken by the witness in protecting the defendant. It was therefore clearly admissible upon the question of the interest of the witness. Whether it was admissible for additional reasons it becomes unnecessary to inquire, because if admissible for any reason its introduction did not constitute' error.

*60 Circumstantial Evidence. *59 II. It is contended that the - court erred in giving an instruction on circumstantial evidence. In this behalf it is contended that, since there was direct evidence *60 of the offense, it was error to instruct on circumstantial evidence, and in support of this contention cases are cited which hold that it is not 'necessary to instruct on circumstantial evidence where there is direct evidence of the defendant’s guilt.

In the case at bar there was both direct and circumstantial evidence of the defendant’s guilt and while under such circumstances it would not have been error had the court refused an instruction on circumstantial evidence (State v. Crone, 209 Mo. 316, l. c. 331) we are at a loss to see how appellant could in any manner have been injured by the giving of such an instruction. ' ”

We are not cited to a case holding the giving of such an instruction, under the situation here involved, to be error, but on the other hand the only case cited by appellant which may be said to be in any manner in point expressly holds that the .giving of such an instruction will not cause a reversal of the case. [State v. Fairlamb, 121 Mo. 137, l. c. 147.]

We therefore disallow this contention.'

Putting in Fear. III. The information charged that H. W. McMullen, E. W. Graves and Arthur Moore were by the conduct of the defendant put in fear of some immediate injury to their persons, etc.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

State v. Hawkins
418 S.W.2d 921 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1967)
State v. Sandoe
289 S.W. 890 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1926)
State v. Hadlock
289 S.W. 945 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1926)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
225 S.W. 894, 285 Mo. 54, 1920 Mo. LEXIS 150, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-emmons-mo-1920.