State v. Harmon

296 S.W. 397, 317 Mo. 354, 1927 Mo. LEXIS 653
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJune 3, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 296 S.W. 397 (State v. Harmon) 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. Harmon, 296 S.W. 397, 317 Mo. 354, 1927 Mo. LEXIS 653 (Mo. 1927).

Opinions

The information charges appellant and one Paul Smith, jointly, with first degree robbery, but appellant has been tried twice alone. After one mistrial, he was convicted and his punishment assessed at imprisonment in the penitentiary for five years. Judgment and sentence followed accordingly, and thereafter he was granted an appeal.

At about three o'clock in the afternoon of October 15, 1925, appellant and Paul Smith registered and were assigned to room "Number Two" in a rooming house conducted by a woman, known as Billy Schagel, at 115½ West Ninth Street in the city of Joplin, Missouri. Marcel Lamar was employed there as maid or housekeeper. Billy Schagel "was dressing to go down town" and as *Page 357 appellant and Smith were going through the hall she stepped out and said, "Well, hello, Glen." When about ready to start down town she took $45 in paper money from her purse and placed it in one of her stockings, which was rolled below her knee, and went to room "Number Two" to collect her room rent. A few minutes later Marcel Lamar, who was then in the kitchen, heard her screaming, and heard her say: "Help. He is trying to kill me." As she hurriedly entered that room Paul Smith rushed past her and went downstairs. She found Billy Schagel on the floor and heard her say, "Glen, take my money, but dont beat me up." Appellant had one hand in her stocking and a pitcher in his other hand. He said: "Dead men tell no tales" and hit her over the head with the pitcher. "Blood was coming out of her mouth, well, she had blood all over her." Appellant took the money from her stocking and put it in his left hip pocket. Then looking up and seeing Marcel Lamar in the room he said: "Oh, are you here too?" and then hit her in the mouth and in one eye and knocked her down, and kicked her in her face and mouth and head, and the last thing she remembered was Billy Schagel trying to get to the stairway.

The above recital of facts is the testimony of Marcel Lamar, in substance, given at the trial of this case.

Billy Schagel was not present at the trial. She had left Joplin, but her whereabouts at that time is not disclosed by the record.

The testimony of other witnesses for the State tends to show that appellant left the rooming house in a wild and desperate flight, with Billy Schagel joining in the chase, "screaming and hollering and all bloody;" and that to the man in the front door of the shop downstairs she said, "That fellow has robbed me," and, as "they came down the alley and run into the tin shop," she was saying, "Stop him; stop him;" and that after much excitement and much effort on the part of volunteers in the neighborhood, Johnny West "checked his speed" and John Parker "brought him down and held him" until the arrival of the police officers, Caylor and Ford; and that when Billy Schagel and Marcel Lamar "came up," one of them said, "He has got my money in his left hip pocket;" and that, in their presence and in the presence of others, officer Caylor took $45 in paper money from appellant's left hip pocket.

It does not appear from the record whether or not Paul Smith was present at the trial or whether or not he was ever prosecuted on this charge.

On behalf of appellant several witnesses testified that the general reputation of Marcel Lamar for chastity and morality was bad. And on this evidence appellant rested his defense.

Nineteen separate assignments of error are included in the motion for new trial, but many of these assignments relate to the same legal *Page 358 proposition, and we will so group them for the purpose of this discussion.

I. Appellant first complains of his conviction on the grounds that he was not arraigned and did not plead to the information on which he was tried, and that he at no time answeredArraignment. ready for trial, but objected to being placed on trial on said information, asserting that the trial court erred "in failing to permit or requiring" him to plead and "in forcing" him to trial.

A careful examination of the record shows that appellant, in due course, waived a preliminary hearing before a justice of the peace of proper jurisdiction, on this charge, and that he was thereafter formally arraigned in the Circuit Court of Jasper County and entered a plea of not guilty to the information on which he was tried. The record further shows that both parties announced ready for trial. It does appear that the State filed an amended information, but it also appears that the same was withdrawn and the original information refiled.

Of course, appellant's assertions of no arraignment and no plea have no standing in the face of these plain recitals of the record. And the contention that a rearraignment was necessary upon the withdrawal of the amended information and the refiling of the original information, on which he had once been arraigned, is wholly without merit. [Stat. of Jeofails; Sec. 3853, R.S. 1919; State v. Sovern, 225 Mo. 580.]

II. Next, appellant challenges the information and insists that his motion to quash the same should have been sustained. In this contention, also, we fail to find any merit. TheInformation. information follows the language of the statute (Sec. 3307, R.S. 1919) and covers all essential elements of the offense of robbery from the person. It is true that the information charges that this robbery was committed both by "violence to" and by "putting in fear" the victim of the offense, but, as we have repeatedly held, this form of pleading is permissible where the pleader uses the conjunctive conjunctionand in charging both of the ways in which this offense may be committed. This, for the reason that the statute defines but one offense, though it may be committed in more than one way. [State v. Flynn, 258 Mo. 211; State v. Eddy, 199 S.W. 186; State v. McCullough, 289 S.W. 811; State v. Hahn, 289 S.W. 845; State v. Holmes, 289 S.W. 904.] While no information so drawn can be said to have been done with precise care, its form was not altogether inappropriate in this case, where the undisputed evidence shows the use of brutal force, attended by extraordinary fear on the part of the person assaulted. *Page 359

III. Appellant makes a general complaint against the rulings of the trial court in the admission of evidence offered by the State. This assignment of error in the motion for new trial did not advise the trial court with any particularity whatsoever as to the evidence complained of. The 1925 session ofAssignment. the Legislature ended the long continued use of "masked batteries" in motions for new trial in criminal cases by the enactment of new Section 4079 of our statutes. This section provides that the motion "must set forth in detail and with particularity in separate numbered paragraphs, the specific grounds or causes therefor." [Laws 1925, p. 198.] The plain purpose and intention of the law-making body in providing for this much needed relief has been given full force and effect in many recent decisions of this court. [State v. Standifer, 289 S.W. 856; State v. Murrell, 289 S.W. 859; State v. Vesper, 289 S.W. 862.] It follows that nothing is presented for our review on this complaint.

IV. The motion for new trial does preserve for our consideration the action of the trial court in excluding evidence as to particular or specific acts of moral delinquency on the part of the State's chief witness, Marcel Lamar.Impeachment.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

State v. Johnson
457 S.W.2d 762 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1970)
State v. Hardy
276 S.W.2d 90 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1955)
State v. Morris
248 S.W.2d 847 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1952)
State v. Tiedt
229 S.W.2d 582 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1950)
State v. Massey
219 S.W.2d 326 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1949)
State v. Pyle
123 S.W.2d 166 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1938)
State v. Pinkston
79 S.W.2d 1046 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1935)
State v. Aguelera and Martinez
33 S.W.2d 901 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1930)
State v. Nasello
30 S.W.2d 132 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1930)
State v. Evans and Blankenbaker
23 S.W.2d 152 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1929)
State v. Ball
14 S.W.2d 638 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1929)
State v. Sappington
2 S.W.2d 729 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1928)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
296 S.W. 397, 317 Mo. 354, 1927 Mo. LEXIS 653, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-harmon-mo-1927.