State v. Guffey
This text of 262 S.W.2d 152 (State v. Guffey) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
STATE
v.
GUFFEY et al.
Springfield Court of Appeals. Missouri.
Tom A. Shockley, Waynesville, for appellants.
Ronald J. Fuller, Rolla, for respondent.
VANDEVENTER, Presiding Judge.
Appellants were convicted of violating Section 252.040, V.A.M.S. and regulations of the Missouri Conservation Commission and have appealed. The section of the statute is as follows:
"No wild life shall be pursued, taken, killed, possessed or disposed of except in the manner, to the extent and at the time or times permitted by such rules and regulations; and any pursuit, taking, killing, possession or disposition thereof, except as permitted by such *153 rules and regulations, are hereby prohibited. Any person violating this section shall be guilty of a misdemeanor."
This information charges that on the 12th day of September, 1952, the defendants in Phelps County, Missouri, did "willfully and unlawfully hunt, pursue, and attempt to take, with the use of firearms, a deer during the prescribed closed season; * * *," contrary to the statute and the wild life code. The part of the code referred to is Section 33, which provided that deer may be pursued and taken with firearms in the year 1952, only between the hours of 6:30 a. m. and 5:00 p. m. from "December 4th to December 6th."
The State's evidence shows that Conservation agents, about two weeks before the alleged offense, had procured the hide of a 2½ year old doe which had been killed by an automobile in Pulaski County. They had taken it to a taxidermist, who soaked it to soften it, stuffed it with excelsior and boards, inserted rods in the legs so it would stand upright and used the doe's skull in the head part of the hide so it would hold its former shape. For eyes, which had not been preserved, two small circular pieces of scotchlight reflector tape of a "white to amber color", had been placed over the eyeless sockets.
Four of these agents, Gretlein, Reed, Allen and Pugh, with the dummy deer in tow, met at "The Devil's Elbow" about 7:30 p. m. September 12th and then proceeded with this stuffed deer hide to what was described as the "Spring Creek Area" where they were reinforced by four other agents, Pritchard, Hartsock, Wilson and Feltz. The dummy was placed in a field, about fifty yards from the north side of an old road in Phelps County several miles southwest of Newburg, the old road running in an easterly direction from Highway J., so it could be seen by anyone coming along the road. The eight Conservation agents, fully armed, then concealed themselves in the brush on the south side of the road opposite the dummy and awaited the arrival of some citizen who might come that way, see the tempting bait and with visions of odoriferous venison cooking in pot or pan, decide not to wait until the 4th of December to replenish his larder. There had been some general complaints against violators for shooting deer and cattle and "spot-lighting" in this neighborhood, but there is no evidence that defendants were complained of or suspected.
About 9:15 o'clock an automobile, at a speed of about 30 miles per hour, passed going east and which the agents thought was a Chevrolet Sedan of the vintage of 1939 to 1941. No spotlights were noted as this car passed. About an hour later, a car was observed coming from the east on this road at a speed of 10 or 15 miles per hour and in addition to the headlights, it had two spotlights, one on each side, sweeping the countryside and piercing the darkness with their beams. As the car neared the place where the agents were concealed, one of the beams fell on the stuffed deer and someone in the car was heard to exclaim, "Wait, there stands one." The car stopped, backed up ten to fifteen feet, the spotlight on the left side was extinguished and the one on the right side of the car was trained upon the dummy deer. Immediately after the car stopped, there was a blast of a shotgun, which was fired by a man on the right side of the front seat, who was later identified as defendant Hoss. The agents converged upon the Chevrolet, and its occupants, seized the spotlights, a flashlight, the shotgun, an empty shell, and a loaded shell, the latter containing what was referred to as a "rifled slug." Proper "seizure receipts" were given for the articles taken by the agents and they told the occupants of the car to drive to Rolla and meet them at the fire station there in about an hour. This order was obeyed and the occupants of the Chevrolet proceeded on to Rolla some 15 minutes ahead of the agents, did meet them and were then ordered to appear at the magistrate's court the next day. They obeyed instructions and at that time charges were filed against the two appellants.
*154 The State's evidence further showed that there were no holes of any consequence in the stuffed hide until after the shotgun blast, but that a subsequent examination of the dummy revealed a small hole in its right side just behind the right foreleg and a larger hole on the lower left flank in front of the "left rear leg". This second hole was larger than the first one, in fact, it was so large that part of the excelsior had come out and it was necessary for the agents to do some emergency re-stuffing to keep the dummy from "collapsing". It was the considered expert opinion of the agents that a slug had entered at the little hole and made its exit at the larger one. In fact, the State's evidence indicated that defendant Hoss, to use a colloquial expression, had shot the "stuffing" out of the dummy deer, with a shotgun loaded with a "rifled slug." There was no evidence of a real live deer being anywhere in the vicinity.
The defendants' evidence showed that Mr. and Mrs. Guffey were friends of Mr. and Mrs. Hoss, they visited frequently, in fact, several times each week. On the afternoon in question, Mr. Guffey and his wife had driven from Rolla to Mr. Hoss' house, who lived in the vicinity of the scene of the shooting. It was their intention to get Mr. Hoss and go on over east of their place to a lake or pond (known as "Caney's Sink, Caney's Pond or Caney's Anchorage") and catch some frogs and the two spotlights and flashlight that they had taken with them were necessary paraphernalia for frog hunting. As defendant Guffey and his wife were approaching Hoss' house and near the vicinity of the locus in quo, they observed a wolf run across the road. When they arrived at the home of their friends, the Hosses, he told him about seeing the wolf and suggested that they take a gun with them over to the pond as they might see the wolf on the way and have an opportunity to slay it. This suggestion was acted upon, Hoss took his shotgun and two cartridges loaded with slugs, which was all the ammunition he had, and they left Mr. Hoss' house on the frog-hunting expedition, the two men riding in the front seat and their wives in the back. It was their car that had been observed by the agents proceeding in an easterly direction on this road. They went on over to Caney's Pond, spent 35 or 40 minutes frog hunting and then returned and as they approached the place where the agents were concealed, they were using the spotlight on the right side of the car in an effort to locate the aforesaid wolf. While the golden beams of the light were piercing the darkness, they met and reflected from the imitation eyes of the deer and someone in the car remarked, "Hold, I see it out there." "It" referred to what they thought was a wolf. They did back up ten or fifteen feet and defendant Hoss did shoot at the eyes, thinking they were the living orbs of a wolf.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
262 S.W.2d 152, 1953 Mo. App. LEXIS 443, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-guffey-moctapp-1953.