State v. Frazier

98 S.W.2d 707, 339 Mo. 966, 1936 Mo. LEXIS 558
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedNovember 17, 1936
StatusPublished
Cited by55 cases

This text of 98 S.W.2d 707 (State v. Frazier) 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. Frazier, 98 S.W.2d 707, 339 Mo. 966, 1936 Mo. LEXIS 558 (Mo. 1936).

Opinion

ELLISON, J.

The appellant was convicted of manslaughter and his punishment assessed at a fine of $400 and six months in the county jail, for the killing of Daniel I. Gross in Fredericktown in August, 1934. The cause was tried in St. Francois County on change of venue from Madison County. The deceased was a hemophiliac, or “bleeder.” The appellant struck him on the jaw once with his fist. A slight laceration on the inside of the mouth resulted which produced a hemorrhage lasting ten days and ending in death. The State’s evidence showed the appellant’s assault upon the deceased was unprovoked. The evidence for the appellant was that he acted in self-defense; and his theory further was that Gross’s death was notf caused by the blow struck but by his disease, aforesaid, and the! failure to treat it properly. Other assignments in appellant’s motion for new trial and brief in this court challenge the information and the overruling of his plea in abatement thereto, the sufficiency of the evidence and the overruling of his demurrers thereto; and complain *970 of the admission of evidence, the giving of instructions, and the failure to instruct the jury properly.

For the State two eyewitnesses testified. One of these was Mr. E. D. Anthony, city attorney of Fredericktown, a man seventy-eight years old. By him it was shown that the deceased was standing at the outer edge of the recessed entrance to his book and magazine shop in Fredericktown a little before noon on August 31, 1934, when the appellant from a point further west rapidly crossed the street diagonally to the other side and thence, after a very short interval, returned at a brisk pace walking straight up to where the deceased was standing and with his right hand hit him on the left side of the jaw. At that time the witness was about twenty feet away on the adjacent sidewalk. The deceased retreated into his store, the appellant following and striking at him. The deceased said, ‘ ‘ don’t hit my face, you hurt me.” By that time the witness was passing in front of the door within six or eight feet of the two men. The deceased grabbed a book from the table and said, “Get out of here — get out.” The appellant turned around and went out. During the .whole time the appellant did not say a word so far as the witness heard.

The other eyewitness was Mr. E. IT. Bess, hardware and furniture merchant for thirty years in Fredericktown. He was walking on the other side of the street, which was fifty feet wide, about opposite the deceased’s store. Glancing up he saw the appellant walk real fast toward the deceased, who was standing at the edge of the entrance to his shop, and hit him with his fist on the left side of th'e jaw, and then turn away and walk down the street. The deceased staggered back into the building and did not hit the appellant. The witness did not hear either of them say a word, and only one blow was struck.

For the defense two young women who were eyewitnesses referred to the occurrence as a “fight.” They testified the appellant and the deceased were scuffling on the sidewalk in front of the shop; that the appellant started to leave and the deceased followed him four or five steps and hit him on the head with a book whereupon the appellant struck the deceased and walked away. The two girls were on the same sidewalk about 100 feet west of the shop when they first observed the difficulty. They did not see Mr. Anthony, the State’s witness, who would have been between them and the struggle if all were positioned as they testified. Mr. Anthony on rebuttal declared the two • girls were not anywhere in sight on that side of the street at the time.

The appellant swore he did cross the street diagonally as Mr. Anthony testified, and that the deceased, who was standing in the doorway of his shop, called out and cursed him. Appellant thereupon came back and walked up to the deceased, asking what was the matter. The deceased assaulted him. Appellant warded off the blows and pushed the deceased back. The deceased took off his glasses, renewed *971 tiie attack, and then, uttering foul epithets, retreated into the store and got a book. Appellant started away, the deceased followed and hit him with the book, and appellant hit the deceased an ordinary blow in self-defense. He swore he did not know the deceased was a hemophiliac.

Regarding the evidence showing the physical condition of the deceased and the effect upon him of the blow struck by the appellant. He was thirty-six years old and had been afflicted with hemophilia since birth. He had been under treatment for that disease about two years before when he bumped his knee on a table, and was in the Veterans’ Hospital in St. Louis for a short time. He was below the average in height and overweight, or fat, as some of the witnesses said, and rather pale or anemic. He walked with a slow draggy or hobbling gait.

The two young women aforesaid who were called as witnesses by the appellant testified that after the difficulty had ended they walked on by the shop and saw the deceased standing in the doorway spitting out a little blood. R. O. Buzbee, deputy sheriff, said he had occasion about noon that day to go to the deceased’s shop, and found him standing inside the door. He was bleeding from the mouth and his jaw was puffed up and discolored. Mrs. F. T. Gross, mother of the deceased, said she saw him that night about six o’clock. His face, jaw and lips were swollen. His lip was in very bad condition. He went to bed about eight-thirty or nine o’clock that night, but remained in bed only over night, taking care of himself. He was confined to his bed in his last sickness from September 5, five days later, and died on September 10. One of the defendant’s witnesses testified to seeing him at a picnic in Fredericktown on Labor Day, which was September 3. He was standing by one of the booths.

Dr. W. H. Barron, a physician at Fredericktown of thirty years’ practice, treated him in his last illness. He had known him for fifteen years and intimately for six or eight years, having been his physician on the occasion of his illness two years before. The deceased came to his office in the morning of September 1. His left jaw was badly swollen. An examination disclosed that he had an abrasion or laceration on the inside of his lip. It was an opening in the mucous membrane about one-eighth inch deep, but did not cut into the muscular tissue. The wound was bleeding slowly but hot excessively. His face was swollen and rather pale. The doctor did not treat him on this occasion.

Three or four days later the mother of the deceased called at the doctor’s office and the latter prescribed treatment for him which included rest in bed, quietude, light foods, cold packs on the face and a drug called ergot. The doctor did not see the patient on this occasion. Several days later on September 8 Dr. Barron was called *972 to see the deceased in the latter’s home. The swollen condition of his jaw was about the same and he was pale and weak. Lots of blood was coming from the mouth and also from the intestines and kidneys. He was expectorating clots of blood coming from the abrasion in his lip. Part of this blood was swallowed and going into the intestinal tract. The patient was vomiting some. On September 10 the doctor was called to the deceased’s bedside again. The pallor in his face was more marked and he was going into a state of coma. The pulse at the wrist was barely perceptible.

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Bluebook (online)
98 S.W.2d 707, 339 Mo. 966, 1936 Mo. LEXIS 558, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-frazier-mo-1936.