State v. Gillman.

44 S.W.2d 146, 329 Mo. 306, 1931 Mo. LEXIS 538
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedDecember 1, 1931
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 44 S.W.2d 146 (State v. Gillman.) 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. Gillman., 44 S.W.2d 146, 329 Mo. 306, 1931 Mo. LEXIS 538 (Mo. 1931).

Opinions

Defendant, Claude Gillman, together with John Pepe and John Sinovich, was indicted by the grand jury of St. Louis County on the charge of kidnaping Jacob Hoffman. Pepe and Sinovich made application for and were granted a severance. Defendant Gillman was tried May 19, 1930, was found guilty, and was sentenced to a term of ten years in the penitentiary. His motion for a new trial having been overruled, defendant appealed to this court. At the close of the State's case, defendant offered a demurrer, which the court refused to give. Defendant then rested his case. The main question for decision is the sufficiency of the evidence offered by the State.

Jacob Hoffman, a resident of the city of St. Louis and having a cigar store at 112 North Broadway in that city, had an office on the floor above the store. He testified that he was in his office on the evening of February 18, 1930, when three men, masked with handkerchiefs over their lower faces and armed with pistols, entered and robbed him of $200. They led him down stairs to the street and placed him in an automobile in which there was a fourth man at the wheel. His three captors also got into the car, which was driven about the streets of St. Louis at high speed and at last came to a stop at a point which Hoffman sensed was in the southern part of St. Louis. With his eyes blinded by the taped glasses he was led into a building where "they" kept him the first night of his captivity, and until the next night. Then he was driven to another house into which his captors led him on the second night. And there he remained until the third night, his eyes meantime having *Page 310 been blindfolded. He was taken to still another place on the third night over a very hard road, and, on the way, one of his captors said the chances were that he (Hoffman) would be there for a week. He was kept for a time in a shed or a cottage, it seemed to him, with one of the men in charge of him. The others left but returned after an absence of five or ten minutes and gave orders that a bed, which was in the shed, be moved into a cellar. This was done and Hoffman, still blindfolded, was led into the cellar of a house, where he was found the next morning, the fourth day of his captivity, by the sheriff of St. Louis County and by police officers of the city of St. Louis acting in consort.

The cellar, as described by the officers, was beneath the brick house of Joseph Sinovich, 4025 Bayless Avenue, between Lemay Ferry Road and the Kirkwood branch of the Missouri Pacific Railway, in the southern part of St. Louis County. The house was fifteen or twenty feet above the highway and hidden by trees. A grove, used for amusements, was west of the house and a ball park was east of it. The cellar was separated into two parts by a solid wall. The part into which Hoffman was led was subdivided into two small rooms by a partition with a doorless communicating passageway. Stairs covered by the familiar type of folding cellar doors led down from the yard of the Sinovich premises to an area-way from which conventional wall doors admitted to the cellar spaces. A porch above the area-way together with the folded doors on the yard level kept the cellar rooms in darkness. In the part of the cellar where Hoffman was kept there was one small window which, when the officers came, was obscured by heavy dark paper. An electric wire with a brown globe giving little or no light, was also in the cellar. Of the two rooms into which was subdivided the half of the cellar in which Hoffman was captive, one was ten by twelve feet and was entered by a door from the area-way. The other, a smaller room, about six by ten or twelve feet, being the room in which Hoffman was kept, was entered from the adjoining larger room through the doorless opening already mentioned.

When the officers came into this underground prison about 11 A.M. on February 21, 1930, the dishes and the remnants of Hoffman's breakfast were on a box beside the cot on which he had lain. In the larger room, hard-by the doorway to Hoffman's smaller room, was a chair which the sheriff of St. Louis County described as "one of these canvas-back chairs, deck chairs that you recline in." And on top of a barrel within two feet of the chair near the door were three .45 calibre automatic pistols, each with a cartridge in the chamber and a full load in the clip. On that morning, the fourth day of Hoffman's captivity, the sheriff of St. Louis County and a squad of detectives of the St. Louis police department drove to *Page 311 Bayless Grove and searched a shed or cottage there for Hoffman. They did not find him, and several of the force made for the Sinovich house, and through the folded cellar doors into the area below. They kicked open the closed door admitting from the area to the larger room of Hoffman's cellar prison. There was a barricade and the door gave but a foot. It was dark within, but the sheriff and several detectives entered. They met and seized John Pepe, and the sheriff of St. Louis County pushed Pepe before him, as a shield, announcing the while that they were officers, and that any one else within should come out. Hoffman from his inner room shouted that he was Hoffman, that he was coming out with his hands up and they should not shoot. His was the only voice heard and he was the only one to advance. But in the darkness Lieutenant Wren collided with the defendant Gillman and seized him in the cellar within two feet of Hoffman, who had placed himself in the hands of the sheriff. There were none others in the cellar but Hoffman, Pepe and the defendant Gillman.

When Hoffman was led down to the cellar of the Bayless Avenue house the night before his rescue, four men went with him. All through the night while he lay on the cot in the inner room he heard the men whispering in the outer room. Some departed from time to time, but always there were at least two men outside his doorway. And he heard no one come or go after ten o'clock of the night of his imprisonment in the cellar. In the early evening one of the men brought him bread and coffee. The next morning, one of the men from behind the partition asked him if he wanted any breakfast and Hoffman said that he would take some ham and eggs. Through the night he had asked for and obtained permission to remove the bandage from his eyes as he had a headache. So the man with the breakfast first required him to restore the bandage before the meal was brought in. Hoffman identified the defendant as one of the two men whom he saw in the custody of the police when he was led out into the yard of the Sinovich premises after the raid into the cellar.

Over the objection of defendant the three .45 calibre automatic pistols and their ammunition which the officers found in the cellar were offered and received in evidence.

The prosecuting attorney inquired of Hoffman whether from midnight of his stay in the Bayless Avenue cellar until the appearance of the police the next morning, he was there of his own free will and he answered no. He was next asked why he did not leave there and, defendant's objection being overruled, Hoffman answered: "I was afraid of getting killed. I could not take a chance leaving there."

I. The evidence in this case is circumstantial. But we are of opinion that it was sufficient to support a submissible question *Page 312 whether defendant was guilty or innocent of the felony charged and to sustain the verdict of the jury upon the issue. Section 4020, Revised Statutes 1929, defines and fixes the punishment for the crime of kidnaping for ransom. Defendant was prosecuted under Section 4021, Revised Statutes 1929, which does not have the element of ransom in the crime denounced. Section 4021 is as follows:

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Bluebook (online)
44 S.W.2d 146, 329 Mo. 306, 1931 Mo. LEXIS 538, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-gillman-mo-1931.