State v. Glahn

97 Mo. 679
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedOctober 15, 1888
StatusPublished
Cited by33 cases

This text of 97 Mo. 679 (State v. Glahn) 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. Glahn, 97 Mo. 679 (Mo. 1888).

Opinion

Black, J.

On the sixteenth of October, 1886, the defendant and his brother were indicted in the Shelby circuit court for murder. The charge is, that with pistols they shot and killed Joseph Hunolt on the fourth of June, 1886. The state dismissed as to Christian P. Glahn, and the venue was changed to Monroe county. After one mistrial, and at the October term, 1887, the defendant was convicted of murder in the first degree.

The evidence is entirely circumstantial, and defendant’s counsel earnestly contended that it does not support the verdict. This objection necessitates a somewhat extended statement of the evidence. The deceased was a judge of the county court, traded largely in stock, and often carried larger sums of money on his person than is usual for farmers to carry. The defendant was a farmer and resided in the same neighborhood. About one o’clock in the afternoon of the fourth of June, 1886, the deceased left his home on section eleven and went east to the east line of that section to a public road, thence north two miles, and thence east one mile to the town of Leonard. His home-place could be reached by what is called the east road, which runs south two miles from Leonard, and thence west one mile by a lane. Defendant’s land is within this territory of one by two miles. About the same time of day the defendant left his home [683]*683and went in a northeast direction across his farm and thence by the public roads to the same place. Both were on horseback. At Leonard they and other persons met and talked about matters in general, as is usual on such occasions. No unfriendly feeling was manifested by either to the other while at Leonard.. About five o’clock the defendant left for home, taking some small purchases, and returned by the same route that he went. Shortly thereafter the deceased left for home, but went by the east road, with a view of going to or passing by section one which he owned and in which he kept his cattle. This section one is south of the south part of defendant’s farm and is separated therefrom by the lane before mentioned. Deceased went south from Leonard for one mile to the cross-roads, where he was last seen alive. The evidence tends, to show that from there he went south another mile and thence west along the north side of section one along the lane. On the next day between nine and ten o’ clock his body was found in section one in the brush and timber at a point on a branch which is some 238 yards south of the lane. His horse was hitched to a bush which stood much nearer the lane. To the north and east of this bush there were indications in a patch of grass that the body had been dragged over it in a northeast direction, and at one place on this drag, as it is called, there were found foot-tracks, one' set appearing to have been made with a coarse, and the other with a fine boot.

Thqpost-mortem examination disclosed five wounds from two shots ; one shot entered the right side near the navel and extended upwards through the left lung, and the bleeding was internal. When found there was a gash in the throat extending from ear to ear, but with little or no blood on the deceased’s clothes or on the ground at the place where the body was found. The inference is drawn that deceased had been carried from the drag to the place where found, and that his throat was cut at the latter place subsequent to his death.

[684]*684For the state, a Mr. Robirds testified that he heard shooting and hallooing in the direction of section one at about six o’ clock in the evening. He was then at work at a place not far from the defendant’s house. He had been working for the defendant up to ten o’clock in the forenoon of that day. He says when he heard the shooting and hallooing he went to defendant’s h ouse and made inquiry about it of Mrs. Glahn, and then inquired for Mr. Glahn and she said he was about the farm, perhaps at the granary. Robirds passed by the granary on his road to Mr. Gay’s house, where he boarded, but did not see the defendant. That evening the defendant went to Mr. Gay’s and the witness gives the following account of what was said: “He came over there about dark.' I asked him about the shooting, if he had heard it. He said yes, and turned to Mr. Gay and addressing him asked if he knew where there was a big elm tree down in my pasture. Mr. Gay told him he did. He said he was standing there watching a squirrel-hole in that tree'; that he wanted to kill some squirrels. He said, ‘ I was sitting there at the time and heard the shooting, and it seemed like it was to his back, to the southwest.’ He said he heard three or five shots. I do not know whether he gave any definite number or not. I think he heard the hallooing ; said he wanted to see if I could cultivate for him the next day in the afternoon. I told him I could. He left it unsettled; he would see me next morning, is my recollection about it. He said he was going from there to Mr. Gartrell’s.”

This evidence is corroborated by Gay and others. From there, the defendant went to Gartrell’s. Mrs. Gartrell testified that her husband was not at home, and the defendant asked her to tell him to bring some money over to his (defendant’s) house early the next morning, as his wife was going to Shelbina, and he needed the money. It appears that Mr. Gartrell owed him $2.50 ; but Gartrell says „he had before told the defendant [685]*685that he could not pay it until the following Monday. Mrs. Glahn says her husband came in with his gun in a few moments after Robirds left; that he milked the cows, ate his supper, went to Gay’s, came back and went to bed and did not leave the house again that night.

Gus. Glahn, a brother of the defendant, lived in Shelbina, but owned a farm in the same neighborhood, and upon which one Gosney resided. Gosney says that defendant came to his house about sun-up on the morning of the fifth of June, and inquired for Gus., saying that he wanted to send a pig to Shelbina to be sent to his mother. Gus. Glahn had been at his farm, but left on the fourth without leaving word where he could be found. Prom there the defendant went to Ben Glahn's, another brother, and made like inquiries. Gus. Glahn was not there and the defendant took breakfast with his brother Ben. While there he said he had been to Gosney’s and that his wife wanted to go to Shelbina with Gus. The defendant then went back to his house, and between nine- and ten o ’ clock he had a conversation with some three different persons on the road in front of his house, in which they spoke of the fact that Hunolt was missing. He then had his gun and professed to be hunting squirrels. To these persons he related the circumstance that he was watching the squirrel trees on the previous evening when he heard the shots towards section one. To some of them he stated that when he came home from Leonard, he put his dog in the granary before he went for the squirrels, because the dog frightened them. These squirrel trees were three-quarters of a mile north of the place where Hunolt was found. The state put in other statements of the defendant of a like character, and also the evidence of two or three persons who testify that they heard defendant say, at the coroner’s inquest, on the fifth, that he was ploughing corn when he heard the shots.

The theory of the state is that defendant came from [686]*686Leonard, put away his horse, shut the dog up in the granary, and then went down to section one and there shot Hunolt, and that these statements were made to screen himself from detection.

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Bluebook (online)
97 Mo. 679, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-glahn-mo-1888.