State v. Gadwood

116 S.W.2d 42, 342 Mo. 466, 1938 Mo. LEXIS 575
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMay 3, 1938
StatusPublished
Cited by53 cases

This text of 116 S.W.2d 42 (State v. Gadwood) 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. Gadwood, 116 S.W.2d 42, 342 Mo. 466, 1938 Mo. LEXIS 575 (Mo. 1938).

Opinion

*473 ELLISON, J.

The appellant was convicted of manslaughter in the Circuit Court of Jackson County and sentenced to imprisonment in the penitentiary for ten years, for shooting and killing Lee Flaeey. His brief makes 16 assignments of error. These complain of the overruling of his application for a continuance; of the denial of his counsel’s request to inspect a document used by a witness for the State to refresh his memory during direct examination; of the exclusion of evidence in nine instances; of the giving and refusal of instructions; of the failure to instruct the jury on all the law of the ease; and of improper argument by counsel for the State. The record and briefs are long and it will be necessary to extend the opinion to unusual length to discuss the points presented.

The homicide occurred on March 27, 1934, during a city election in Kansas City at a restaurant located at 5824 Swope Parkway, two doors from the polling place for the Twenty-fifth Precinct of the Sixteenth Ward in the southeast section of the city. The appellant was the ward leader of one of two rival factions of the so-called “rabbit” Democratic political organization in the city, and the deceased was the captain in that precinct for the other faction. The State’s theory was that the appellant entered into a conspiracy to kill the deceased, marshaled a gang of from eight to twelve gunmen and led them to the restaurant about six o’clock in the evening where he participated in the actual shooting and killing of Flaeey.

Several persons were present in the restaurant at the time, of whom three testified that the appellant headed the group of men entering the place; that he called for Flaeey; and directly or inferentially *474 that he was armed with a revolver. One of these witnesses, named Shaw, said the appellant advanced with his revolver drawn toward Flaeey, who stood there empty handed, and that as he, Shaw, was starting to get out of the room he saw the flash of a gun which looked as if it had been fired by appellant. Another witness, Dorothy Perry, testified the appellant’s blue steel revolver was partly drawn from his pocket but that he let it drop back and withdrew his bare hand, about the time the man next behind him fired a gun from the hip. Flaeey was behind a partition out of sight but she heard him flounder and groan.

Margaret North said when the appellant entered the restaurant with the others following, and his hand in a position which she indicated but which the record does not show, she covered her head with her coat collar,- that the appellant called for Flaeey twice, his voice the second time sounding behind her; that out of the corner of her eye she saw the barrel of a blue gun and Flaeey’s terror stricken face. The witness heard a shot from right behind her. There were two shots fired together, but she said on cross-examination that she didn’t see the appellant have or fire a revolver and then repeated on redirect examination that the shots came from behind her (where the appellant was). She kept her head covered for about two minutes until the assailants had left the restaurant and then looked back and saw Flaeey falling with his hands up. He had no weapon in sight. We do not find any testimony that more than these two shots, both presumably from pistols, were fired inside the restaurant. There were two bullet holes in the partition separating the restaurant from the rear room. One of them was near the ceiling. The other was not too high for the bullet to have struck the deceased.

The number of men who entered the restaurant was variously estimated by the witnesses. Shaw said there were fifteen or twenty. Dorothy Perry judged there were four and Margaret North thought there were four or five. Witnesses who were on the outside put the number of men who approached the restaurant door at eight to twelve. Some of the witnesses testified there were a number of Italians in the group. Others said they were of mixed nationalities. Many of them were armed.

After the shooting and the departure of his assailants Flaeey, who was a deputy sheriff, got up from the floor and hopped on one foot to the front door, saying “They can’t get away with that.” He drew a revolver from under his left arm and began shooting into the street at the gangsters who were headed for the three automobiles in which they had come. They returned the fire. One witness, Raines, said he saw the appellant pull a black gun from his belt but didn’t know whether he fired it. Another witness, Mrs. Emma Craighead, said she saw a man who resembled the appellant, and whom she had heard, addressed as “Gadwood” by a third party a few minutes before, *475 with a gun (pistol) in his hand, and that he shot at Flacey after the latter had fired at him from the restaurant door. One man in, on or behind a ear fired several shots with a shotgun. There was a barrage of shots. The door and glass front on the left side of the restaurant were shattered.

A nonparticipant in the affray, a Mr. Oldham, was fatally wounded, one of the gangsters named Cappo was shot by Flacey and later died, and Flacey fell in the restaurant doorway, dead. One witness, Larwood, an eighteen year old boy employed at a neighboring grocery store, was of the opinion that Flacey was killed by missiles from the shotgun since he dropped following the firing of that gun. This witness saw .the appellant running from the restaurant with Harry Gallagher following a few feet behind him. Whether or not the appellant did the fatal shooting, or any of the shooting, he was seen to attempt unsuccessfully to get into the second and then the third of the three cars in which the gangsters were leaving. One of these was a Chrysler sedan. Three men entered it. It backed up quite a distance, struck an obstacle, and turned over. The mortally wounded Cappo was on the back seat of this car and two men, Dryden and Kirby, were in the front seat. Their first names were not stated by the witnesses who gave this testimony, but they were reported to be from Independence. Anticipating a little, we will say the appellant testified he saw Harry Gallagher standing looking at the overturned car.

An autopsy disclosed there were five wounds in the back of the deceased, three between the shoulders, and two just above the pelvis. One of the latter went clear through the abdomen making a wound at about the same level in front. Dr. Leitch, chief deputy coroner, thought the wound in the abdomen was an exit wound because it was larger and irregular in shape. That would mean the bullet hit Flacey in the back and came out in front. If he was hit by any pistol shot it must have made this wound because the missiles that made the four other wounds were found in the corpse and proved to be shotgun slugs. Dr. Leitch expressed the opinion that the abdominal wound was not fatal.

From the foregoing recital it will be seen why the State was unwilling to stand on the sole theory that the appellant, himself, killed Flacey, and sought to establish that he was a conspirator with the gangsters, aiding in the foray. Carrying out the latter theory the State introduced evidence tending to show the appellant recruited the gang. A police officer, C. B. Perry, testified that about four-forty or five o’clock in the afternoon of said election day he was in the appellant’s political club room at 4811 Prospect Avenue in the same ward.

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Bluebook (online)
116 S.W.2d 42, 342 Mo. 466, 1938 Mo. LEXIS 575, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-gadwood-mo-1938.