State v. Herring

188 S.W. 169, 268 Mo. 514, 1916 Mo. LEXIS 96
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJuly 5, 1916
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 188 S.W. 169 (State v. Herring) 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. Herring, 188 S.W. 169, 268 Mo. 514, 1916 Mo. LEXIS 96 (Mo. 1916).

Opinion

ROY, C.

— Defendants were charged with murder in the second degree and convicted of manslaughter in the fourth degree. The jury disagreed as,to the punishment. The court sentenced Herring to two' years in .the penitentiary, and Baldwin to pay a fine of five hundred dollars. They" have appealed.

They were both employed as attendants in ward 3 of Hospital Number Two for the Insane at St. Joseph. They both had' several years’ experience in such employment and the evidence shows that they had been previously careful in such work. Ward 3 was one in which violent patients were confined, but other patients were kept there to. do certain parts of the work necessary in caring for the patients. Joshua Wallace and George Young were two of the most dangerous patients in the ward. About Decern-her 15, 1904, Wallace had bitten off a large portion [519]*519of one of the ears of defendant Baldwin. He had a reputation for biting. He was about twenty-eight years old. Both he and Young were about the average in size and strength. Wallace had worn “restraints” for a considerable period of time, but they had been removed several days prior to the alleged offense. Those restraints were leather straps around his body and around his wrists.

Patrick J. Fitzpatrick, one of the patients, testified for the State as follows: “A. Well, that morning before we went to breakfast Wallace was going around mumbling. He was a vicious patient, a man that would bite. He was going around mumbling over them coming out. He was not a crazy man, he was just simply mad, acted like he was mad and foamed at the mouth. He was going around mumbling and he kept that up before breakfast. After breakfast he got worse, I mean he acted like he was going to do something. Murphy was at the back end of the hall— “Q. Who is Murphy? A. He is a patient in ward 3. Murphy kind of went toward him. I was in the middle of the hall. I thought I would go back and help Murphy quiet him down. I knew the attendants were at breakfast, • and when I got back there the attendants came back behind me, and when I saw them I thought there was plenty to handle him and I went back to my work, and they had led him off the hall.
“Q. Who led him off the hall? A. Mr. Herring and Mr. Baldwin. I think Mr. Smith came back there.
“Q. Tell the jury whether or not Murphy had any fight with Wallace? A. None whatever. They were just talking. Murphy was trying to quiet him so they would not hit one another.
“Q. You say Mr. Herring and Mr. Baldwin led the patient Wallace off the hall? A. They caught hold of him right at the entrance of the hall. It occurred right along there, and they got up to the en[520]*520trance and took hold of him by the arms and led him out just like this, one on each side like this. Then I went back to my work.
‘‘Q. Do you know how Wallace went around to make assaults upon patients that he was angry with, or on attendants? A. He went like a mad man.
“Q. Did he go■ with his mouth open? A. Yes, his mouth was open and he was frothing.”

Thomas J. Murphy,, another patient, testified:

"Q. I wish you would turn to these gentlemen and tell what occurred between Mr. Wallace and Mr. Herring and Mr. Baldwin on this Sunday morning that Mr. Wallace was killed? A. For the information of the jury, the ward is ward 3. It was just about breakfast time, after the patients- had had their breakfast and the attendants, the gentlemen mentioned, had just about finished their breakfast, and Mr. Wallace, who was running a rubber, there were about thirteen or fourteen other men running rubbers, and they kept passing by where I was stationed. I was stationed at the table which belonged to these gentlemen mentioned, these attendants, and where they kept' their property in the table and their reports. I watched it while they were out. On this last turn around Mr. Wallace stopped where I stood and made the remark, ‘Those men didn’t get all that was coming to them, didn’t get enough,’ and when he made the remark I told him he had to keep still and go on with the rubbing.
‘‘Q. It was your business to help with the keeping of the patients? A. Yes, and to call their attention to them if they tried to make trouble. By calling attention to a patient always some attendant responds, and we work that way. Mr. Herring and Mr. Baldwin had about that time started out of the dining room, and I walked along with Wallace so he would keep on with the rubber, so I met them coming [521]*521on and. told them what Mr. Wallace had said in regard to themselves, and they started to qniet Mr. Wallace the way they had before, that is, take him away so that he .would not make any trouble, that is take him to the anteroom.
“Q. What anteroom? A. There is a little anteroom that belongs to the ward, is a part of the ward.
“Q. Is that near the bathroom? A. Yes, from the anteroom, you pass into the toilet.”

He further testified that the defendants took hold of Wallace and led him to the door and out of sight of the witness, who saw nothing that occurred between them after that.

Defendant Baldwin testified that when, he went into the hall Murphy told him that Wallace had said “they didn’t get enough and were going to get some more.” He further testified as follows:

“A. We took him by the arms and started to bring him in here, and when we got here he resisted and jerked away and started in this doorway and started to fight. Mr. Herring was ahead of me, and so I couldn’t see just what happened. Mr. Herring either shoved him or struck him and he fell kind of staggering backwards and fell back in here, and with his head between the radiator and the bath tub, and Mr. Cráin,' another patient—
“Q. Where was Crain? A. He was inside the bathroom drawing a bucket of water with a little piece of hose attached to the faucet where he was drawing the water into the bucket.
“Q. This is the rubber hose that has been introduced in evidence? A. Yes, sir. Mr. Herring was ahead and that is the first thing I seen, the rubber hose. I grabbed that off the faucet, I think Mr. Crain grabbed the right arm and Mr. Herring the left arm, and as he came up I struck him twice with the hose just across the neck, and as I struck him he [522]*522kicked me in the stomach and back to where the wash basin was, and Mr. Yonng, another patient, was in the stool room there, or had been.
‘ ‘ Q. What did Mr. Tonng do ? A. He came out and just as he kicked me back Mr. Young grabbed him by the feet and jerked his feet out and he fell in here on his right side and turned some way so he struck his right side.
“Q. Ho you know what he did strike as a matter of fact?
“A. I don’t know. It might have-been the radiator. I presume it was the radiator.
“Mr. McDaniel: I object to his presumption.
“The court: Don’t state your presumption.
State what you saw. Don’t state what you think.
“A. Well, it looked to me like he struck the radiator or the floor in front of him. I think it was the radiator. That is what it looked to me like.

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Bluebook (online)
188 S.W. 169, 268 Mo. 514, 1916 Mo. LEXIS 96, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-herring-mo-1916.