State v. Hart

56 S.W.2d 592, 331 Mo. 650, 1932 Mo. LEXIS 454
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedDecember 14, 1932
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 56 S.W.2d 592 (State v. Hart) 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. Hart, 56 S.W.2d 592, 331 Mo. 650, 1932 Mo. LEXIS 454 (Mo. 1932).

Opinions

Appellants were jointly charged, by an information filed in the Circuit Court of Texas County, Missouri, with the crime of robbery in the first degree by means of a dangerous and deadly weapon. Appellants were jointly tried. The jury, by separate verdicts, found the defendants guilty and assessed the punishment of each at ten years' imprisonment in the penitentiary. A joint motion for a new trial was filed. The court overruled this motion and each defendant was separately sentenced in accordance with the verdict of the jury. From this sentence appellants were granted an appeal to this court.

According to the testimony of the prosecuting witness, Baucom, the following occurred: On November 10, 1930, the witness drove alone in his car from Kansas City, Missouri, south over United States Highway No. 71 to Carthage thence east over routes 66 and 60 through Springfield and Mountain Grove to Cabool. At this point the witness turned north intending to go to Houston, Missouri. When he reached a point within a few miles of Houston, at about eleven P.M., he was crowded off the highway by another car. The witness testified that defendant, Pete Hart, stepped on the running-board of his car with a large revolver in his hand and ordered him to stop. *Page 654 The witness did so and the automobile that had crowded the witness off the highway stopped just a little ahead of the witness. When the witness stepped out of his car, the three defendants ordered him to hold up his hands; searched him and took $509 in paper money from his person. The Garners then securely tied Baucom's hands and feet with a rope, while defendant, Pete Hart, kept the gun pointed at him. After some argument among the defendants and a woman who was with them, the woman removed a stocking from her foot and the defendants utilized this as a gag. A rock was placed in the stocking and the stocking tied around Baucom's head with the rock in his mouth. Baucom was struck in the back of the head and later placed in his car, which was then pushed over an embankment. The witness testified that while he was lying in the road, after he had been struck, Fred Garner drove the car over his body, breaking a number of his ribs. At the trial the witness pointed out which of the defendants had committed the various acts detailed in his evidence. Baucom did not know the defendants. He testified that the defendants alternately passed before the lights of the two cars thus enabling him to observe them closely. He also recognized their voices, as he had heard their argument on the night of the robbery. At about four A.M., the next morning Baucom was found. He had been seriously injured and was unable to speak for some time. Three or four days later, when he had regained his voice, he gave a vague description of the men to the sheriff. About a week later defendants were arrested and brought before Baucom one at a time and he positively identified them as he did at the trial, as the men who had robbed him. The prosecuting witness, at the preliminary hearing, testified that he had seen the same three men and a woman pass him in a car on his way to Houston from Kansas City; that they were driving an Essex car and he first saw them at Butler, Missouri. At the trial Baucom testified that he did not know whether the men that robbed him were the same as the men he had seen on his way from Kansas City, Missouri.

Defendant interposed as a defense an alibi. The evidence in support of the alibi, if true, would have made it impossible for defendants to have been at Butler. Missouri, during the day of November 10. The evidence is not so convincing as to defendants whereabouts at the time of the robbery. The theory of the defendants is that the three men whom Baucom had seen at Butler and who on several occasions passed him during the day on the highway, were the perpetrators of the robbery. Many witnesses testified that the three defendants were often seen together at Mountain Grove, but not on the day in question. At least five witnesses testified for each defendant as to his whereabouts during the afternoon of November 10. Defendant, Pete Hart, offered evidence of his presence at Mountain Grove all day and evening of November 10. Fred Garner offered *Page 655 evidence tending to establish his presence at Manes, about eighteen miles north of Mountain Grove. Defendant, Jess Garner, accounted for his whereabouts by witnesses who had seen him in and near Mountain Grove during the day and evening of November 10. Appellants have filed a highway map with their brief and according to that Mountain Grove is nineteen miles west of Cabool and Cabool is eighteen miles south of Houston.

[1, 2] Appellants make three assignments of error as grounds for a new trial. The first is that the record proper failed to show that a jury had ever been impaneled, or that the court had ever made a finding that thirty men were qualified to try the case. The record entry on the point in question reads in part as follows:

"Now at this day comes the Prosecuting Attorney for the State and also comes the defendant in his own proper person, into open court, with his attorneys and counsel and being duly arraigned for his plea to the Information in this cause says he is not guilty of the charges therein; whereupon comes the following jury, to-wit:" (Names of twelve jurors.) "twelve good and lawful men summoned from the body of Texas County, who are dulysworn to try this cause;" [Italics ours.]

The contention that the record failed to show the court made a finding that thirty men were qualified to try the case is without merit. No contention was made, nor does the record disclose, that thirty men were not called in this case. Assuming that thirty jurors were not called, appellants failed to object at the time and, therefore, waived that right. The point is first made in the motion for a new trial and there is no showing in support of the allegation that thirty veniremen were not called. It was held in State v. Yondell, 100 S.W. l.c. 470, 201 Mo. 646, that an objection that an insufficient number were drawn, made after the jury was sworn to try the case, came too late and defendant had waived his right to a full panel of forty jurors. See, also, State v. Bell, 65 S.W. 736, 166 Mo. 106; State v. Perno, 23 S.W.2d l.c. 88 (1-3).

The record in this case affirmatively shows that "twelve good and lawful men, summoned from the body of Texas County, who are duly sworn to try this case, etc." No objection was made at the trial, nor here, that the twelve men, who tried the case, were not in every way qualified jurors. Under the Constitution a defendant has the right in a felony case to be tried by twelve qualified jurors. That constitutional right was accorded the defendant in this case.

Appellants contend that the statute Sections 3676 and 3681. Revised Statutes 1929, make it mandatory that a jury should be impaneled as well as sworn. The contention is further made that a record showing a jury to have been sworn is no evidence of the fact that a jury was impaneled. We cannot see any merit in appellants' contention. *Page 656 A jury may be impaneled and not sworn. But, if the record shows that a jury was summoned and sworn does it not necessarily imply that the jurors were called and selected to try that particular case? Why else would twelve men be in the jury box and sworn to try a case unless they had been selected as jurors in that case? After all, if a jury has been duly summoned and sworn to try a case has it not been impaneled? The record entry in this case contains the names of twelve jurors. The word `panel' with reference to jurors simply means a list of the veniremen summoned for that term of court.

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Bluebook (online)
56 S.W.2d 592, 331 Mo. 650, 1932 Mo. LEXIS 454, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-hart-mo-1932.