State v. Fike

24 S.W.2d 1027, 324 Mo. 801, 1930 Mo. LEXIS 551
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedFebruary 19, 1930
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 24 S.W.2d 1027 (State v. Fike) 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. Fike, 24 S.W.2d 1027, 324 Mo. 801, 1930 Mo. LEXIS 551 (Mo. 1930).

Opinions

The defendant was charged with burglary and larceny, in the Circuit Court of Laclede County. The venue was changed to Texas County, where he was tried and found guilty of grand larceny and his punishment assessed at imprisonment in the penitentiary for two years. He was sentenced accordingly, and appealed.

The chief witness for the State was Joe McBride, the alleged accomplice of the defendant, who pleaded guilty and was sentenced to imprisonment in the penitentiary. According to his testimony, he and the defendant had been friends for several years. They met in Joplin, Missouri, during the latter part of April, 1927, and drove in an automobile to Carthage, Missouri; Ft. Scott, Kansas; Kansas City, Missouri, and then back to Springfield, Missouri. On the afternoon of April 28, 1927, the day of the alleged offense, they drove in the defendant's Master-Six Buick touring automobile from Springfield to Lebanon, Missouri, in Laclede County, and then on to Rolla, Missouri. They returned to Lebanon about 1:30 or two o'clock that night, and there stopped the automobile in front of Nelson's gasoline filling station. With a tire tool, taken from the automobile, he pried open a rear window of the building used in connection with the filling station and entered the building through the open window, while the defendant stayed in the automobile, with the engine running. He opened the front door of the building from the inside and took from the building and placed in the automobile a number of automobile tire-casings and tubes. They drove to Carthage, then to Ft. Scott, and then on to a point near Yates Center, Kansas, where they met his brother, Homer McBride, about eleven o'clock in the morning. Shortly before, they stopped in that vicinity and the defendant telephoned his brother to meet them. They offered to exchange the casings, or a part of them, with his brother for the defendant's check in the sum of $100, which the defendant had given his brother a few days before in an automobile trade. The defendant told his brother that they got the casings from the "Tracey boys." His brother declined to make the deal and he and the defendant drove back to Sedalia, Missouri, reaching there about 6:30 *Page 805 that afternoon. They left the automobile, with the casings and tubes in it, at a garage in Sedalia and engaged a room in a rooming house. The next morning, they took the casings and tubes from the automobile and put them in their room in the rooming house. A day or two later, they were arrested in Sedalia on another charge, and, while they were confined in jail, the officers removed the casings and tires from the rooming house to the prosecuting attorney's office. On cross-examination, he admitted that, after he and the defendant were arrested in Sedalia, he told Judge Couey, Prosecuting Attorney of Pettis County, that the defendant was not with him when he got the casings and tubes; and that he took the defendant's car from its parking place in front of defendant's rooming house in Springfield, and drove to Lebanon and got the casings and tubes, without the defendant's knowledge.

According to the testimony of the other witnesses for the State, the defendant and Joe McBride traded a Chevrolet automobile to Homer McBride for the Master-Six Buick at Iola, Kansas, near Yates Center, about a week or ten days before the casings and tubes in question were taken. As a part of the consideration for the trade, the defendant gave Homer McBride his check for $100, and requested him to hold the check for a while. Thereafter, when the defendant and Joe McBride returned to Kansas and offered to exchange the casings and tubes, or a part of them, for this check, the defendant told Homer McBride they got the casings and tubes from "Tracey at Plato." The defendant was seen in Rolla on the evening of April 27, 1927, in a Buick car and in company with another young man. About five o'clock on the following morning, it was discovered that a rear window of the building at Nelson's filling station in Lebanon had been pried open, during the night, and that ten or twelve automobile tire-casings and tubes, of the total value of $250, had been taken from the building. There were marks on the lower sill and sash of the window and the window latch was broken. When the defendant and Joe McBride were questioned by the Sheriff of Pettis County and the Chief of Police of Sedalia, following their arrest, the defendant said that he did not participate in the taking of the casings and tubes; and that he loaned his car to Joe in Springfield for about thirty minutes and Joe came back with the casings and tubes in the car. Then, in the presence of these officers, he said to Joe: "You take the fall for this and let me out, and I will get you out. I can get you out if you will just relieve me." A few days later, the defendant came to Lebanon, in company with his father and an attorney, and had a conversation with Nelson, the owner of the filling station and the stolen casings and tubes. The defendant told Nelson that he had been arrested and charged with *Page 806 participation in this offense, but was innocent, and, if Nelson would not prosecute him, he would tell him where the missing casings and tubes were. Nelson told the defendant that he would not prosecute an innocent man. The defendant then told Nelson that the casings and tubes were in the prosecuting attorney's office in Sedalia, and that he and Joe McBride had "swapped off" two of the casings for smaller ones for use on the defendant's car. The defendant and his father offered to pay Nelson for the casings and tubes. Not long thereafter, Nelson went to Sedalia with the defendant and Joe McBride, and there, in the prosecuting attorney's office, saw eight of the casings and eighteen of the tubes which had been taken from the building at his filling station. He identified them by the cost marks thereon, in his handwriting. They were the casings and tubes which had been found in the room occupied by the defendant and Joe McBride in Sedalia at the time of their arrest. Sometime after Joe McBride had been taken to the penitentiary, but before the defendant was tried, the defendant went to the home of McBride's parents in Laclede County and inquired of them as to what Joe McBride had said concerning him. When told that Joe said he was with him at the filling station the night the casings and tubes were taken, the defendant said: "I wasn't in the building with Joe. I was off down the road."

The defendant took the stand in his own behalf and testified at length. He denied that he had any part in the taking of the casings and tubes. He admitted that he was with Joe McBride, in Kansas, when the Chevrolet automobile was traded to Joe's brother, Homer McBride, for the Buick; and that he had an interest in the Chevrolet and gave Homer his check for $100, as a part of the consideration for the trade. He said that he and Joe drove through Rolla in the Buick on their return trip from Kansas, at that time, but he was not in Rolla nor with Joe on the night of April 28, 1927.

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36 S.W.2d 923 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1931)

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Bluebook (online)
24 S.W.2d 1027, 324 Mo. 801, 1930 Mo. LEXIS 551, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-fike-mo-1930.