State v. Hayes

256 S.W. 747, 301 Mo. 304, 1923 Mo. LEXIS 133
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedDecember 3, 1923
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 256 S.W. 747 (State v. Hayes) 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. Hayes, 256 S.W. 747, 301 Mo. 304, 1923 Mo. LEXIS 133 (Mo. 1923).

Opinion

DAVID E. BLAIR, P. J.

Defendant has appealed from a conviction of murder in the first degree and sentence to life imprisonment, for killing Andrew Deck in Jefferson County, on February 26, 1921.' Defendant was jointly indicted with James Seward and others for such homicide. A severance was granted to defendant, and a change of venue was taken to Iron County, where he was tried in November, 1921.

A full statement of facts in the case is rendered unnecessary because we have already stated the facts fully in other cases growing out of the same homicide. [State v. Seward, 247 S. W. 150; State v. Eugene Hayes, 247 S. W. 165; State v. Ernest Hayes, 249 S. W. 49.] Reference to those cases is made for a full understanding of the facts.

For the purposes of this case, it is sufficient to say that the evidence on the part of the State tended to shqw that one Andrew Deck, living at Herculaneum, and a former saloon-keeper, had incurred the wrath of Ernest Hayes, Eugene Hayes, William Hayes, Jesse Thomas, Otto Thomas and Elvie Thomas, because of their belief that he had become engaged as a prohibition-enforcement *308 officer and had given information to the authorities in respect to their supposed violations of the prohibition law.

E'lvie Thomas, a co-indictee and not related to either Jesse or Otto Thomas, was dismissed from the indictment, and was separately charged as an accessory after the fact. Thereafter he testified against his former co-indictee. ITis testimony tended to show that an agreement and conspiracy existed between Ernest Hayes and his sons Eugene and the defendant and the Thomases to procure the services of a thug from St. Louis to go to Herculaneum to “beat up” Andrew Deck; that in pursuance of such agreement Eugene Hayes procured James Seward and brought him to Herculaneum late in the afternoon of the day of the killing; that thereafter Seward went to Deck’s home and'represented himself as a prohibition enforcement officer, induced Deck to produce his revolver and, when he laid it down, seized it and forced Dock to accompany him out upon the street where Seward afterward assaulted and shot Deck, resulting in his death soon thereafter; that Elvie Thomas drove Seward and Eugene Hayes to St. Louis where they left Seward and returned to Herculaneum the same night.

I. In the cases of Ernest Hayes and Eugene Hayes judgments have heretofore been reversed and said cases remanded for error of the trial court "in refusing to give an instruction similar to instruction numbered four asked by defendant in this case. However, in this case the court gave instructions numbered nine and ten, which fully covered the matter embodied in defendant’s refused instruction number four, and there was no error in the refusal of such instruction for that reason, which did not exist in those cases.

II. Defendant asked the following instruction:

/ “The court instructs the jury that unless you find from the evidence beyond a reasonable-doubt, that James Seward killed An- , „ . -,. , , ,, , drew Deck, your verdict should be for the defendant.”

*309 It requires no argument to demonstrate that this instruction cofrectly stated the law and that defendant was entitled to have it given in such converse form, unless covered by the instructions given by the court. [State v. Ernest Hayes and State v. Eugene Hayes, supra, and cases cited in those two cases.]

In Instruction One the court told the jury that if Seward killed Deck and defendant aided,- counseled, abetted, etc., him in such killing, the jury should find defendant guilty. The jury was nowhere told that if it did not so find it should acquit the defendant. The refusal to give the instruction quoted was therefore reversible error under authority of the cases above cited.

III. We think the trial court should either have given defendant’s refused instruction numbered five or so modified instruction numbered ten as to have included therein the proposition that defendant is not required to establish beyond a reasonable doubt his defense that he was not present at any .. n n . time or place when the alleged conspiracy was formed or when Deck was shot and that all that is necessary for acquittal is that the jury should have a reasonable doubt of such presence of defendant. In other respects, Instruction Ten given by the court covers the law as stated in refused Instruction Five.

IY. In the trial of this case, as in the cases of James Seward, Eugene Hayes and Ernest Hayes, the witness Alois Wagner was permitted to testify to statements made by Andrew Deck after he was shot. The admission of such testimony was held improper in those cases. In the Seward Case, however, the error was held to have been cured, ‘ ‘ as appellant’s counsel not only developed the same facts on the cross-examination of Wagner, but thereafter made inquiries touching the same matter of other witnesses, and developed the same facts.”

Speaking of the refusal of the trial court to exclude such testimony in the case of State v. Eugene Hayes, supra, Reeves, C., said:

*310 “This answer was not a part of the res gestae, but a narrative of a past event, and therefore imcompetent. [State v. Reeves, 195 S. W. l. c. 1030; State v. Kelleher, 201 Mo. l. c. 633, 634, 635, 100 S. W. 470; State v. Hendricks, 172 Mo. 654, 73 S. W. 194; State v. Birks, 199 Mo. 263, l. c. 273, 274, 97 S. W. 578.] However, it was not prejudicial to the appellant, as the statement did not refer to him. [State v. Dougherty, 287 Mo. 82, 228 S. W. 788.] Moreover, he is not in a position to complain for the reason that it was admitted by his counsel, in open court as follows: “ ‘It is not necessary to go into detail as to how Mr. Deck was shot. It has already been proven and is of record that Mr. Seward killed Deck.’ ”

The action of the trial court was held not to be prejudicial to the rights of the defendant in that case for the reasons stated. The soundness of the suggestion that defendant in that case was not prejudiced because the statement did not refer to him, is not apparent when applied to the facts in that case and in the case at bar. The admission of counsel, quoted in the foregoing excerpt, rendered the testimony harmless in that case, but such situation does not exist in this case. The killing of Deck by Seward and the participation of defendant therein were the important issues in this case. No matter how much defendant and others conspired with Seward to have Seward assault or kill Deck, defendant could not be convicted of the murder of Deck under the indictment, unless Seward killed him. The case of State v. Dougherty, 287 Mo. 82, cited by Reeves, C., was one where the defendant was charged with firing the fatal shot and not as an accessory before the fact.

The admission of the testimony of Wagner covering the statements of Deck, which were not part of the res gestae a'nd not shown to have been part of the dying declaration, was error.

*311 *310 Y.

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Bluebook (online)
256 S.W. 747, 301 Mo. 304, 1923 Mo. LEXIS 133, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-hayes-mo-1923.