State v. Henke

285 S.W. 892, 313 Mo. 615, 1926 Mo. LEXIS 923
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedApril 5, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 285 S.W. 892 (State v. Henke) 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. Henke, 285 S.W. 892, 313 Mo. 615, 1926 Mo. LEXIS 923 (Mo. 1926).

Opinion

*621 BLAIR, J. —

Appellant was charged with murder in the first degree for the alleged killing of his'wife. The jury found him guilty of murder in the second degree and assessed his punishment a.t imprisonment in the penitentiary for twenty years. He was sentenced upon such verdict and has appealed to this court.

As the evidence was wholly circumstantial and the chief contentions of appellant are that, the evidence did not make a case for the jury and that the trial court should have instructed the jury to find -appellant not guilty, the facts developed by the evidence: should be fully stated in order to dispose of such contentions intelligently.

At about six o’clock p. m., July 11, 1924, appellant’s wife, Marie Henke, was found dead in her bed. The cause of death was a blow on the'head with some blunt instrument. There was no direct proof concerning the identity of the person who caused her death. Appellant was twenty-five years old. His wife, to whom we will frequently refer as “deceased,” was twenty-four years old. They had been married about two years. They lived at 1721 Beulah Place in Richmond Heights, St. Louis County, in the home owned by Joseph Yost. Mys. Yost was the moth *622 er of deceased. Lucille, a ten-year-old daughter of Tost and wife, lived, with her parents. Edward Meister and wife also lived in the same house. Joseph Tost, the appellant and the deceased worked in St. Louis. At the time in question, Mrs. Tost, Lucille Tost and Mrs. Meister were visiting’ in Seattle, Washington. Meister was a traveling salesman and was then in Cincinnati, Ohio. This left Joseph Tost, appellant and his wife as the only occupants of the home on July 10th and 11th. The house was on the west side of the street, facing the east. Appellant and deceased occupied the southeast front bed-l’oom on the second floor and Tost the southwest bedroom on the same floor. A small hall leading to the stairs connected these two. rooms.

On' the night of July 1.0th Mrs. Thompson, who lived directly across the street, and Mrs. Manahan visited the Henkes. Mrs. Thompson went home about 10:20 p. m. About 10:30 p. m., appellant and thb deceased accompanied Mrs. Manahan four or five blocks, where she boarded a street car to ride to her home. A pleasant evening had been spent. Ice cream and cake were served. Joseph Tost was at home during the evening. After locking the rear door of the house, he had retired while appellant and deceased were accompanying Mrs. Manahan to the street-car line.

Two closets opening into the respective bedrooms separated the room occupied by Tost from the room occupied by appellant and his wife. Tost heard them return to the house, but did not hear them go upstairs. He left his door leading into the hall partly open. He heard nothing during the night. With the exception of appellant, Mrs. Manahan was the last person known to have seen Mrs. Henke alive.

On the morning of July 11th Tost arose at'about 5:15 o’clock. As he passed down stairs he observed that the door to the Henke bedroom was open. He glanced in, but his view included only the lower end 'of the bed. He then saw the covered-up forms o.f the lower limbs of two per *623 sons lying on the bed. He went down stairs, went ont in the back yard and attended to his chickens, returned to the house, hooked the rear screen door, prepared a frugal breakfast, including a pot of coffee, and left the house at about 6:15 a. m., leaving the front door open, but closed the screen on that door. Before he left the house he heard some one moving about upstairs in the hall described.

'Appellant testified that he got up about 5:50 o’clock, dressed, went to the bathroom, shaved and returned to the bedroom. Deceased was then awake and complained of feeling badly and announced that she would not go to work, that day. She had not. worked the previous day. She spoke of going to the home of Mr. and Mrs. Dunn in North St. Louis that evening. If she went, appellant expected to join her there. Appellant went down stairs and drank a cup of coffee, which he found already prepared. He then returned to the bedroom and kissed his wife goodbye and left the house at about 6:30 a. m. He closed and locked the front door when he left. In walking the four blocks to the street-car line he was joined by and talked with one Doerbaum, who rode into the city on the same car with appellant, but sat in a different seat. Doerbaum testified to such meeting and the time thereof. Appellant arrived at his place of work at about 7:45 a. m., and punched -the time clock, which registered the exact moment. He remained at his place of work all day and apparently performed the customary duties of his employment in the usual manner. He punched the time clock upon departing for home at the usual time. He arrived at home about 6:50 n. m.

Appellant testified that he telephoned to his home at about 12:30 p. m. He received no response and called up-the office of the Standard Oil Company, where his wife worked, and found that she had not gone to work. He then called up Mrs. Thompson, who lived across the street, and asked her if she had seen his wifei and was informed that she had not seen her. She stepped to her front porch and looked across the street at appellant’s request. She *624 then reported that everything was locked up over at his house. Appellant produced witnesses who corroborated his testimony as to his act of calling' up' some one and getting' no answer and calling-, up' some one else and also that some one called up the Standard Oil Company and asked if deceased had come to work. These witnesses fixed the time of such calls at approximately the time fixed by the appellant. Mrs. Thompson testified that she received the call from appellant about 8:30 a. m., and not during the noon hour. There was evidence that, she had made statements tending to- show that her telephone' conversation with appellant took place about noon. The- purpose of the telephone call to his wife, as stated by appellant, was to learn whether she intended going to the Dunns in North St. Louis that evening. In that event, he planned to join her there before going home. It does not appear that appellant called any more. He apparently assumed that his wife had abandoned the visit. Hence he came directly home, where he claimed first to have learned of his wife’s death. The theory of the State is that the telephone calls were not in good faith, but were made by appellant for the purpose of manufacturing evidence in. his own behalf by creating an inference that he- had no knowledge that Anything had happened to his wife.

When Joseph Yost returned home- at about 5:50 o’clock in the evening, he found the front door locked and was required to open the door with his key. He passed through the house and laid down some packages he had brought home. He discovered that the rear screen door was unlocked. He went out and fed his chickens and called to Mrs. Henke, thinking’ she was in the back yard. He returned to the house and went upstairs to change his clothes.. As he came to the top of the stairs he looked into the Henke bedroom and saw the- room was in great disorder and went in. Articles had been dumped' out of a -cedar chest and dresser and chifferobe drawers into a pile onto the floor. He saw his step-daughter, the deceased, lying in bed apparently asleep.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
285 S.W. 892, 313 Mo. 615, 1926 Mo. LEXIS 923, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-henke-mo-1926.