State v. Grugin

42 L.R.A. 774, 47 S.W. 1058, 147 Mo. 39, 1898 Mo. LEXIS 127
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedNovember 7, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 42 L.R.A. 774 (State v. Grugin) 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. Grugin, 42 L.R.A. 774, 47 S.W. 1058, 147 Mo. 39, 1898 Mo. LEXIS 127 (Mo. 1898).

Opinion

SHERWOOD, J.

— The appeal in this instance is taken by defendant from the judgment of the trial court, which, based on the verdict of the jury, adjudged and sentenced [43]*43Mm to the penitentiary for the term of fifteen years as punishment for the crime of murder in the second degree.

The indictment was for murder in the first degree. There had been a mistrial, at the end of wMch defendant was admitted to bail in the sum of $5,000.

Briefly told, the substance and general outline of the evidence is this: Jeff Hadley who was hilled on the sixth of May, 1896, had about a year prior to that date, induced Louella, one of the daughters of defendant, to run away with him and get married. This was done after defendant, not liking the bad habits Hadley had, forbade him to visit his house. These circumstances naturally produced bad blood between, the parties, and gave rise to reciprocal threats being made by them; defendant on the occasion of the daughter being carried away by Hadley and married, remarking: “It looks like I ought to take my gun and go kill him” or words to that effect. On his part, Hadley was not backward in making threats respecting his recalcitrant father-in-law, by exhibiting a knife and revolver and inquiring how they would do for “Old Seal ?” etc., etc. These threats of Hadley’s had been told to defendant.

Time went on, however, and occasionally Louella would visit her old home, and on perhaps two occasions her husband accompanied her, and on one occasion, she visited the house of her father, the Sunday before the homicide, which occurred on Wednesday, and took dinner there.

Defendant had also visited his daughter, perhaps once or twice, and taken a meal or two with her, her husband being present. The families lived something over two miles apart, and both were by no means in affluent circumstances. Defendant owned, and lived on, a little place of his own, and Hadley had rented a forty of his wife’s brother-in-law, who lived also on the same place and about a quarter of a mile distant. Defendant was about fifty years old, had been twice married, and of the first marriage there had resulted [44]*44several children, all of them daughters and married except two, Caroline and Alma who lived at home, and a son who was about grown and also unmarried remained with his father, assisting in working the little farm.

Alma was sixteen years old in April, 1896. On the afternoon of the eighth or ninth of that month she went to the house of her brother-in-law Hadley and remained with him and her sister over night. It is alleged that during the night he ravished her. On her return home the next day she had evidently been weeping, and her sister Caroline, with whom she slept, frequently would be awakened nights by her sister’s crying, and finding her weeping would ask what was the matter, when she, without reply and still weeping, would turn her face to the wall. This continued for several weeks. On the Sunday next before Wednesday, May 6, 1896, Alma, who was not permitted to meet George Stephens, her betrothed, at her father’s, met him at E. S. Tate’s, her mother’s father, and there without grossness she imparted to him the secret of her said story. Eeceiving this information, Stephens conveyed it the same day to Dan Tate and John Tate, the uncles of Alma, and also to Eansford, her brother. By Wednesday morning following, the information of the matter had reached the ears of E. S. Tate, the grandfather, who came down to the field on his place where Stephens was at work, and there, at his request, Stephens told what he had heard to the grandfather, and to Web Morse who was with the latter. Tate, the grandfather, not being on good terms with defendant, and thinking it best he should be informed of the matter in hand, asked Morse to go over to Grugin, who was something about three quarters distant at work in his field, and tell him about it. Morse accordingly taking with him Ancil Milan as Tate asked him, went and delivered the message of old man Tate. Morse speaking of this message to Grugin, said-: “I told Mr. Grugin that the report was that Jeff Hadley had [45]*45ravished his girl about four weeks ago up at his house; that we didn’t know whether he knew it or not and that Mr. Tate wanted me to tell him.” It was about 9 o’clock in the morning when this message was delivered. Morse states that its delivery “seemed to hurt defendant dreadfully.” “He wanted to know how I got it. I says: Your son knows it and my boy knows it, and he said: My son? You fellows stay here and I will go and see my boy. The boy was out of sight over the hill.” When defendant reached the place where his son was plowing, and asked him about the truth of the report, his son replied: “Pa, it must be so.” Eeceiving this answer defendant, greatly agitated, told his son to “turn out: that our family is ruinedProceeding with his story, Morse says: “He went over and directly he came back. Tears were running down his eyes, and he was terribly red in the face. He was crying. He says: ‘Boys, it is so. Eansford says it is so and,’ he says, ‘I’ll take my shotgun and go and kill him.” Then we tried to pacify him, but it didn’t seem to do very much good. After he said he-would kill him we told him that he hadn’t better do it; that the thing was not positive. I told him it was not proof — - it was not proven that it was so yet. I says: How will you find out? He says: ‘I will go to the house and Caroline will tell me.’ ” Leaving the field where Morse was between 10 and 11 o’clock, defendant went up to his house to see his daughter Caroline, and Morse returned to old man Tate and told him he had delivered his message. Defendant on reaching his house about 11 o’clock, spoke to Caroline and requested her to ask Alma if the report about Hadley and herself was true, when she replied it was, and Alma, a few minutes afterwards, reaffirmed the same thing to her -father. Her father at that time was excited and crying, and Caroline being prostrated with the excitement incident to such an occasion, her father was occupied the most of the time until noon in taking care of her.

[46]*46About that time (Gordon came, and defendant having an engagement had to assist him in setting up a corn-planter, and dinner had to be prepared for him. Not much dinner, it seems, was eaten by that stricken household.

When Milan left between 10 and 11 o’clock, in order to tell Tate that his message had been delivered, he promised to come by on his return home and see defendant. He did so, arriving sometime after the noon hour. On Milan’s arrival, he told defendant that as Hadley might get the news of the discovery of his crime, he might get away, and advised ■defendant that he had better go and get him and turn him over to the officers. Having no doubt now, as defendant, ■states, of Hadley’s guilt, and fearing he would escape as suggested by Milan, defendant says: “I thought I would go up there and see Mr. Hadley and take charge of him, until I could get an officer.” With this end in view, defendant took his double-barrel shotgun and four shells loaded with ■ordinary shot, and started to the place where Pladley lived. Pie arrived there about 3 o’clock in the afternoon, saw Pladley at work in the field planting, corn," spoke to his daughter Louella, as he crossed the fence, and approaching Hadley, and when within a few feet of him, said: "Jeff, what ever possessed you to rape Alma, my daughter f Hadley replied,"! will do as I damn please about it!" Defendant says that as Pladley made this insolent reply,' “He pitched forward as though he was coming at me — coming to me.

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Bluebook (online)
42 L.R.A. 774, 47 S.W. 1058, 147 Mo. 39, 1898 Mo. LEXIS 127, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-grugin-mo-1898.