State v. Glasscock

134 S.W. 549, 232 Mo. 278, 1911 Mo. LEXIS 12
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedFebruary 7, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 134 S.W. 549 (State v. Glasscock) 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. Glasscock, 134 S.W. 549, 232 Mo. 278, 1911 Mo. LEXIS 12 (Mo. 1911).

Opinion

KENNISH, P. J.

On the 3d day of November, 1909, the grand jury of Ray county returned an indictment charging George Glasscock with the crime of murder in the first degree. The indictment was in three counts, in each of which, in slightly varying language, the defendant was charged with shooting with a rifle and killing Clyde Hatfield on the 13th day of June, 1909. A demurrer, plea in abatement and [283]*283motion to quash the indictment were each in turn filed and overruled. The State elected to prosecute for murder in the second degree. The accused was arraigned, entered his plea of not guilty and was put upon his trial, which resulted in a verdict of guilty, the punishment assessed being a term of fifteen years in the penitentiary. Timely motions for new trial and in arrest of judgment were filed and overruled, sentence was pronounced in conformity with the verdict, and an appeal was taken to this court.

The evidence for the State tended to show that during the summer of 1909 Clyde Hatfield was living upon and cultivating a portion of appellant’s farm. Bad blood seems to have arisen between the two men. About ten days before the killing, appellant, explaining the purchase of a new rifle, said he wanted to get rid of Hatfield; that Hatfield had stolen about forty of his chickens; that he got the rifle to “shoot people off the place and kill some stray dogs.” To another witness, a few days before Hatfield was killed, appellant said that Hatfield and Vanbebber were stealing his chickens and that Hatfield had to get off his place or' he would get him off. He added that he had a Winchester that would kill a man a half mile away, exhibited one pistol and declared he had another concealed on his person. To another witness appellant said on June 9, 1909', that three of his steers had been shot and he believed Hatfield did it; that he thought Hatfield had taken some of his chickens; that he had shot one Hatfield and he died afterwards. On the next day he made like accusations against Hatfield, inquired for him and said he was hunting him. On the same day appellant said to another witness: “I am on the track of my man and can get him. The thing I want to find out is who loaned the gun.. There is a certain class of people in this neighborhood you can’t reach by law; all the way you can reach them is [284]*284with a gun from the brush and let them find it out; that’s the way to do it.” To another witness appellant said he thought he knew who shot his steers, and added: “I think he has gone to the Springs to see one of his aunts, the party that I think done it. I aim to get the s — n of a b — h when he comes back.” It appeared from the testimony of other witnesses that Hatfield had been in Excelsior Springs that week.

The night before he was killed, Hatfield and his family, which included his wife and two small children, stayed at the home of his mother, Mrs. Ida Hatfield, about five miles from the house in which he was living on appellant’s farm. He had arranged to move away from appellant’s farm on the following Monday. About nine o’clock on Sunday morning, June 13, 1909, Hatfield, his wife and children, his sister, a Mrs. Kauffman, and Dave Petty, started from Mrs. Ida Hatfield’s home to the home of the deceased on the Glasscock farm. In making the trip they passed appellant’s house, which stands near the public road. From this point they went west, thence south and thence east to the Hatfield home. The distance around the road from appellant’s house to the Hatfield home is about three-quarters of a mile, but in a direct line through the field the distance is almost exactly a quarter of a mile. Petty having turned off and gone to his own home, the other members of the party reached the Hatfield home about nine-thirty o’clock in the forenoon. Hatfield harnessed a horse for his sister, who proceeded to her own home. He then carried some wood into the house, kindled a fire, and shortly before eleven o’clock a. m. started to a guinea’s nest southeast of the house, leaving his wife in the garden, where she busied herself with getting vegetables for dinner.

In the meantime, a little after ten o’clock a. m., a neighbor named Fields went to his mail box, which [285]*285stood in the road west of appellant’s residence, and in the field between the homes of appellant and' Hatfield saw appellant some three hundred and fifty yards away, walking southward toward the Wilkerson pasture, which lies south of and adjacent to the Hatfield cornfield and garden. Fields testified that appellant-had something in his hand which looked like a gun. He said in his testimony that he would not swear that it was a gun, but “it looked to be a gun.” Fields had also seen appellant a few minutes before at a point north of where he saw him the second time. Each time he was. seen by Fields appellant was walking in a southerly direction. The second tune the witness saw him, appellant was “down in the hollow.”

After leaving his wife in the garden, as above stated, Hatfield went southeast into the Wilkerson pasture. Shortly thereafter,- and at about eleven o’clock a. m., Mrs. Hatfield heard the report of a gun close at hand. She arose from the ground, where she was sitting beside a lettuce bed, and called her husband, but received no reply. He was not in sight, though he could have been seen by her if he had been standing. Thereupon, she hastened to the Barnett home, about a quarter of a mile northwest of the Hatfield home. Barnett returned to the Hatfield home with her and they went into the pasture which Hatfield had entered just before the firing of the shot.' At a point in this pasture about thirty feet south of the garden fence and two hundred feet from the house, they found the dead hodv of Clyde Hatfield, lying face downward in a pool of blood. The head was to the southwest.

An examination of the body ’indicated, according to the witnesses for the State, that a bullet had entered the body on the left side of the breast, near the shoulder or arm-pit, and had passed out on the right side of the breast, inflicting a wound that caused instant [286]*286death. The clothing was driven into the wound on the left side.

There was no evidence of a struggle and no tracks were found near the body, except those made by Barnett and Mrs. Hatfield after the shooting, nor was there any indication that robbery had been the motive for the killing. No weapon was found, neither was the bullet found, although search was made for it.

The body was found in a “little open place which was surrounded by brush' and timber.” Behind a bush about forty feet northeast of the point where the body was found, several imprints of a portion of a man’s foot were discovered. These imprints were found on the east side of the bush. The bush was between the the imprints and the house, and the limbs of the bush, on the east side, were bruised and scorched.

It further appeared that a man could make his way from the point where appellant was seen by Fields, to the bush behind which the tracks were found, without exposing himself to the view of persons at the Hatfield house. Along the fence on the south side of the cornfield, footprints were found leading in the direction of the Hatfield home. These footprints were large, as were those near the bush.

After the finding of the body the whole countryside flocked to the Hatfield home. Appellant, though living but a quarter of a mile away, did not go to the Hatfield home until that night, when he went in obedience to a subpoena to attend the inquest.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
134 S.W. 549, 232 Mo. 278, 1911 Mo. LEXIS 12, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-glasscock-mo-1911.