State v. Ferrell

152 S.W. 33, 246 Mo. 322, 1912 Mo. LEXIS 187
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedDecember 10, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 152 S.W. 33 (State v. Ferrell) 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. Ferrell, 152 S.W. 33, 246 Mo. 322, 1912 Mo. LEXIS 187 (Mo. 1912).

Opinion

BROWN, P. J.

Defendant appeals from a judgment of the circuit court of Callaway county, sentencing him to serve a term of ten years in the penitentiary for the alleged murder of one William Moore. TMs is the second conviction and second appeal in this case. [233 Mo. 452.]

An indictment charging defendant and four other persons, to-wit, J. L. Dunn, J. F. Liggett, Mollie Lig-gett and Charles Ferrell, with murder in the first degree, by shooting and killing William Moore, was returned by the grand jury of Callaway county. The State elected to prosecute only for the crime of murder in the second degree. J. F. Liggett was tried and acquitted, and defendant was separately tried and convicted.

The defendant and his coindictees are farmers, and at the time of the homicide lived within a few hundred yards of each other and maintained intimate so[327]*327cial relations. ‘Within.’ a short distance of these parties also resided one William M. Crider, who was heartily hated by defendant and his coindictees.

The evidence on the part of the State tends to prove that on June 17, 1909, said William M. G-rider started on horseback to Jefferson City and after he had passed 1670 feet beyond defendant’s honse, met the deceased (Moore) walking along the public road. Crider stopped his horse to talk with deceased, turning his horse somewhat crosswise of the road. While in this position, a shot was fired from the direction of defendant’s house and the bullet which produced the tragedy first struck Crider’s horse and then passed into the body of Moore, producing his death within an hour. The evidence does not indicate that any enmity existed between defendant Ferrell and deceased; and the theory of the State is that as deceased was standing behind Crider’s horse and the view somewhat obstructed, defendant did not see deceased, but fired the fatal shot intending to kill Crider.

From observations made by a surveyor and other parties, by placing a man on horseback in the place where Crider’s horse stood at the time of the tragedy, and another man by the side of the horse, together with the wound on the horse’s hip, the indications were that the shot which killed Moore was fired either from defendant’s house or from some point in the direction of his house.

There was further testimony that, a person at or in defendant’s house could see Crider as he sat on his horse at the place where Moore was killed.

John Dunn, one of the parties indicted with defendant, testified on ^ the part of the State to a conspiracy formed on December 17, 1908, whereby he and his coindictees agreed to lie in wait and shoot Crider on that night as he returned from a near-by town. Dunn did not perform his part of the conspiracy and [328]*328Grider was not killed or assaulted at the time agreed upon.

Dunn further testified that when he met defendant a few days later, he (Dunn) pleaded the sickness of his wife as an excuse for failing to perform his part of the criminal compact. It was thereupon agreed that they would have to “set some other time to get him” (Grider). There is no evidence that any other date was ever agreed upon for the killing of Grider,, but there is evidence of continued malice on the part of defendant and his coindictees against Grider, accompanied by frequent threats up.to the day of the homicide.

We find nothing in the record to indicate that defendant abandoned the conspiracy, if he ever entered into such a conspiracy to kill Grider, as testified to by Dunn.

It is clearly proven that intimate social relations between defendant and his coindictees continued up to the day that Moore was killed, and that the defendant and at least three of his coindictees were together near the place from which the fatal shot was fired less than an hour before the tragedy.

The State’s evidence further tended to prove that the defendant came to Jefferson City on May 22, 1909, and purchased a Springfield army rifle, caliber .45-70, and a box containing six cartridges, from one Lohman, a merchant. Defendant did not pay for the gun then, but promised to do so if it suited him. He stated that he wanted to take the gun to Arkansas with him if he found it satisfactory.

The night after Moore was killed, defendant’s house was searched. In the loft thereof, a cartridge box with some blank cartridges were discovered. The army rifle was not found. Lohman, the merchant who sold defendant the cartridges, identified the'cartridge box by a private mark placed on same' while it was in his store.

[329]*329There was evidence on the part of the State that “the bnllet which killed Moore and which was fonnd lodged in his clothing was of the same make and size as those used in a .45-70 caliber Springfield army rifle, and also evidence on the part of defendant that the Tbnllet so fonnd was smaller than those usually fired from a rifle of that make and caliber.

When arrested, defendant first told the sheriff “that he never owned or had in his possession a larger rifle than a .32 caliber; but when his attention was •called to his purchase from Lohman of the army rifle, he stated to the sheriff that he purchased that gun for & man named Kesser who was going to Arkansas; that while in Jefferson City he sold it to Kesser on credit and that Kesser sent the purchase money by post office or express money order from Springfield, Missouri, to Mrs. Francis Waters, a stepdaughter of defendant, who turned it over to him. Mrs. Waters was sworn-and testified that she never received any •such money order and did not know that defendant had the gun. Kesser was not called as a witness.

W. H. Parks, a second-hand dealer of Jefferson City, testified that about two months before May 22, 1909, he sold defendant a .32 caliber Winchester rifle, and that on said May 22, 1909, .defendant came to his store and asked to trade the .32 Winchester for a larger gun, stating that hawks were bothering him and he wanted a larger gun to kill them with.

J. E. Liggett (jointly indicted with defendant) testified that he came to Jefferson City with defendant in a wagon on May 22, 1909 (the day the army rifle was purchased), .and that defendant did not take the army rifle home with him. Liggett further testified that he knew nothing of the alleged conspiracy to kill G-rider, but had heard witness Dunn make many "threats against the life of Grider. He also testified that he did not hear the shot fired which killed Moore, though the evidence all tends to show that he was [330]*330within less than 300 yards of the place where Moore was killed.

Fonr witnesses who were working on farms from a quarter to a half-mile from the scene of the homicide, testified that they distinctly heard a gun discharged about the time that Moore was killed, and that the report or sound of said gun came from the' direction of defendant’s house.

Defendant was sworn and testified that he did not fire the shot which killed Moore; that he was at home at the time of the killing, but did not hear any shot, fired. He failed to testify in regard to other facts in the case.

Other fácts necessary to a full understanding of the case, will be noted in connection with our opinion.

I. Defendant assigns error in the trial court’s action in admitting criminating statements made to witnesses Dunn and "Westbrook by.J- F. Liggett (a coconspirator) after the conspiracy was formed and before the killing of Moore.

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Bluebook (online)
152 S.W. 33, 246 Mo. 322, 1912 Mo. LEXIS 187, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-ferrell-mo-1912.