State v. Goddard

62 S.W. 697, 162 Mo. 198, 1901 Mo. LEXIS 152
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedApril 23, 1901
StatusPublished
Cited by33 cases

This text of 62 S.W. 697 (State v. Goddard) 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. Goddard, 62 S.W. 697, 162 Mo. 198, 1901 Mo. LEXIS 152 (Mo. 1901).

Opinion

GANTT, J.

On the second day of April, 1897, at the Woodland Hotel in Kansas City, Jackson county, Missouri, Jefferson D. Goddard shot and killed Erederick J. J ackson. On the twentieth day of April, 1897, the grand jury of Jackson county returned an indictment charging Jefferson D. Goddard with murder in the first degree. After a mistrial defendant was, on a second trial in the J ackson County Criminal Court, before Honorable George E. Longan, special judge, convicted [205]*205of murder in the second degree, and his punishment fixed at imprisonment in the penitentiary for the term of sixteen years. On appeal to this court the judgment was reversed and case remanded (146 Mo. 177) and a change of venue was ordered to Oass county. Afterwards on the twenty-fourth day of January, 1899, the grand jury of Jackson county returned a second indictment against defendant for the same offense, again charging murder in the first degree, and the indictment pending in the circuit court of Oass county was nolled. Judge John W. Wofford disqualified himself and called in Honorable Dorset W. Shackleford, judge of the Eourteenth judicial circuit, to preside as special judge in the cause. Hpon application of the defendant for a change of venue from Jackson county the same was granted and the case was sent to Oole county.

The transcript of the record from Jackson county, together with the various motions made by the defendant’s counsel, was filed in the Cole Circuit Court April 20, 1899. On the eighth day of June, 1899, the trial began in the circuit court of Cole county. On the fourteenth day of June, 1899, the jury returned a verdict of guilty of murder in the second degree against the defendant, and assessed his punishment at twenty years in the penitentiary. After unsuccessful motions for a new trial and in arrest of judgment, defendant has again appealed to this court.

Frederick J. Jackson had lived in Kansas City for about twenty-two years. The record reveals a very pathetic story of how he had begun business in a small way, starting a laundry at 514 Independence avenue; living in rooms over it with his young and devoted wife; how they had struggled and worked together; he was a mechanical genius, studying, inventing and perfecting laundry machinery; she helping in extending the business, reading scientific papers to him, night after night, on account of 9his bad eye-sight; sometimes reading to him out of [206]*206these scientific and mechanical papers until one o’clock in the morning, papers in which she took no interest, devoting her life to him and her family, which as the years went by increased until there were four girls to bless their happy and prosperous home. As testified to by Dancy, a nephew of Mrs. Jackson, who had worked in the laundry for nine years, and had sustained intimate relations with the Jackson family, up to the time Goddard, the defendant, came between Ered Jackson and his wife, they were a friendly and happy family, as affectionate as could be. She would not eat her meals unless he was with her. It was in the language of George Jackson, a brother of the deceased, “a happy home in every respect.”

Some time in the year 1892 or 1893, Mrs. Jackson’s arm or wrist was injured in some way and the defendant, who had an office across the street from the laundry and the Jackson home, began to treat her; this was the beginning of what the evidence tends to show afterwards ripened into a criminal intimacy. The defendant spent a great deal of time in the company of Mrs. Jackson, sometimes in the Jackson home, sometimes in the drugstore of defendant, which was diagonally across Independence avenue, a few dpors to the west of the laundry, anil sometimes in the defendant’s rooms over the drugstore. As time went on Mrs. Jackson secured the legal title to the business in her name, and some sis months before the defendant killed Jackson, Mrs. Jackson and the girls removed to the Woodland Hotel on the corner of Eighth street and Woodland avenue. While at the hotel, Mrs. Jackson was sick, Goddard the defendant visited her every day and at all hours up to the fatal night of April 2.

The details of this intimacy from its beginning down to the death of Ered Jackson, and its continuance up to within two weeks of the last trial are narrated by a number of witnesses, showing the parties in many compromising situations. So open [207]*207and flagrant in the face of society were their relations as to cause a public scandal.

Elmer Phillips, a business man, whose stoxre was located on the southwest corner of Locust street and Independence avenue, while the drugstore of defendant was on the southeast eornex*, had seen defendant Goddard-and Mrs. Jackson together constantly, on the street, in the drugstore, over the laundry, and in Goddard’s rooms over the drugstore, early and late. He had seen them in Goddard’s rooms, remaining there for a long time „ together, and having, afterwards, some six weeks or two months before.the homicide, gone to Goddard’s room and found Mrs. Jackson there with Goddard, he spoke to both of them about the matter, telling them what people were saying about them.

Mrs. Mary March saw them from her rooms over the grocery store across the street, many times, together in Goddard’s rooms; several times in nearly a nude condition, saw them embracing and caressing each other.

Mrs. Eeichel who had rooms over the front part of the drugstore tells of the relations between them, culminating in seeing them in the sexual act.

Erank Stewart, one of the defendant’s witnesses, a resident of the Woodland Hotel, saw the defendant several times leaving the hotel as late as twelve and one o’clock at night.

Dr. Hetherington, who had boarded and roomed at the hotel during the time the Jacksons were there, and who had been called in consultation in Mrs. Jackson’s sickness, testified to the same effect about seeing the defendant leaving the hotel at night.

Albert E. Eeichel, husband of Mrs. Eeichel, was a druggist who had been in the employ of defendant from the fifteenth of April, 1894, to the middle of August, 1895. When he first went there Mrs. Jackson would come over once a week, then it was every day; and finally she would be over in the morning, [208]*208afternoon and at night. Reichel went to work about eight o’clock in the morning, and found her there with defendant very nearly every morning. Witness tells what he saw of the conduct between the defendant and Mrs. Jackson, which is in detail, in acts and words, the old story of guilty love and blind infatuation so -plainly visible to - all observers, from which but one deduction can be drawn, and but one end to be expected, a tragedy. On one occasion, defendant not feeling well, witness got to the store and opened up a little before seven o’clock. About seven Mrs. Jackson came over and asked for defendant, passed on up to his room and remained there until eleven o’clock.

David Eagan, a workman in the employ of the Metropolitan Street Railway Company, stationed at Eighth street and 'Woodland avenue, across the street from the Woodland Hotel, testifies that he saw Goddard frequently prior to the killing, coming and going every day, some times two or three times a day, supposed he was a guest of the hotel. On one occasion about three weeks before the killing, at nine o’clock in the morning, he noticed Goddard come out of the hotel and go out into the middle of the street and drop something in the cable slot. To satisfy his curiosity he and two other men got it out and found it was a freshly-used cundrum. Upon another occasion A. A.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
62 S.W. 697, 162 Mo. 198, 1901 Mo. LEXIS 152, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-goddard-mo-1901.