State v. Hesselmeyer

123 S.W.2d 90, 343 Mo. 797, 1938 Mo. LEXIS 492
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedDecember 20, 1938
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 123 S.W.2d 90 (State v. Hesselmeyer) 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. Hesselmeyer, 123 S.W.2d 90, 343 Mo. 797, 1938 Mo. LEXIS 492 (Mo. 1938).

Opinion

*802 ELLISON, J.

The appellants, husband and wife, were convicted of displaying signs of an honest occupation and business upon the exterior parts of a house in Franklin County then and there ordinarily used as a common assignation and bawdyhouse, whereby decent persons might be inveigled thereinto, in violation of Section 4295, Revised Statutes 1929 (Mo. Stat. Ann., p. 2992). Their punishment was assessed by a jury at two- years’ imprisonment in the penitentiary. On this appeal they challenge the sufficiency of the information and evidence, and complain of the admission of improper testimony and the giving of erroneous instructions at the request of the State.

Regarding the sufficiency of the information. Appellants contend it is fatally defective in that it does not designate with particularity the house or building on which the alleged signs were displayed. It alleges that appellants were “in charge of a house and building, to-wit: a one story frame restaurant, tavern and kitchen consisting of a bar room, kitchen and living room and bedroom, and one cabin, commonly known as a tourist cabin . . . said house and building then and there being ordinarily used as a common, assignation and bawdyhouse.” Then follows a charge that the appellants displayed the aforesaid signs “upon the outer walls, window and roof of said building.” The complaint made is that since two buildings are described, a three room tavern building and a cabin, the foregoing allegations do not make it plain whether the signs were on the tavern or the cabin.

We think there is no substance in this assignment and overrule it. This part of the information is poorly drawn but the evident intent was to designate the cabin merely as a cabin, and the tavern as the “house or building.” The evidence showed the signs were on the *803 latter j the appellants lived' in it; and they did not challenge the information at the trial. It'strains credulity to. say they were misled. The two cases cited by appellants are easily distinguishable. In State v. McLaughlin, 160 Mo. 33, 40, 60 S. W. 1075, 1076, the indictment failed even to give the location of the-building involved except to say it was in the county; In State v. Malloch, 269 Mo. 235, 239, 190 S. W. 266, 267, another building not mentioned in-the information was operated in connection with the one charged- and evidence was admitted showing aets’of illicit.sexual intercourse in the former.

Five assignments of error in appellants’' brief- charge that the evidence was insufficient to' support the verdict and -judgment. These are based on the proposition that the State- failed to establish the tavern was used as a common assignation or bawdyhouse — this because only two acts of bawdry were proven, and because the evidence showed only one female inmate in the house; On this point.we must review the evidence briefly. The trial occurred in November, 1937. Appellants had been operating Bourboise River Inn since January of that year. The tavern building faced north upon U. S. Highway No. 50, just east of Union in Franklin County. It was a square or rectangular one story building with the public or bar room aci’oss the front exxd and a small kitchen and combination living and bedroom behind it. A door led from the bar room to the kitchen, another from the kitchen to the bedroom, 'and still axxother from the kitchen to the back yard. There was a privy in axx outbuilding behind the' tavern 'and in going thereto customers sometixnes would pass through the-kitchen. Also they could wash and dry their hands and drink water ixx the kitehexx. The cabixi mexxtioned ixi the information does not figure, promixxexxtly in the testimony. Beer, soft drinks and sandwiches-were sold in the tavern. There was axi electric phonograph in the public room and daneixxg was permitted. On the end of the-building was a sign “Louis Hesselmeyer Place, Falstaff Beer.” At the side of the entrance door was a “7 Up” soda sign. Over the door and, as we understand the record, attached to the roof or eaves was a sign “Bourboise River Inn.”

For the State one witness, Thompson,- testified that on a certain occasion (which other testimoxiy indicates was in August) when-he was at the Inn the appellaxxt Louis Hesselmeyer told him his wife, the appellant Martha Hesselmeyer, wanted to see him (the witness) and showed him the way to the bedroom. There he paid her oxxe dollar and had sexual intercourse with her. About a month later he returned to the Inn with a man named Pope. That time there was an argument or fight between some other mexi, outside the building. Pope testified to this and also said that on that occasioxi -Thompson proposed going over to U. S. Highway No. 66, apparently oxx some *804 amorous quest.' The appellant Louis Hésselmeyer spoke up -and said “you-can get anything you. want here.” Mrs. Hesselmeyer was in the other room at the time. : ■ .

Witness Russell testified that 'one morning about the first-week in June he was talking to. appellant Louis Hesselmeyer about women and the latter said “Right here is as good a place as any.” The witness gave Hesselmeyer 75 cents and-was directed by the latter to the bedroom .where he had sexual intercourse with Mrs. Hesselmeyer. He returned late that afternoon and repeated the act. -The same day he saw a salesman give Mr. Hesselmeyer $1 but didn’t, hear any conversation between them. The witness Russell was a frequenter of the place having been there about- twenty times during the summer. He never noticed any woman staying at the Inn other than Mrs. Hesselmeyer except Mr. Hesselmeyer’’s daughter, and he saw her there only one time; Good order- prevailed on that' occasion .as well as-on perhaps three-fourths, of his visits.

■Nevertheless he had seen “lots 'of men” there at various times. Some were in the public room and some would go back into the kitchen from' which a door led into the bedroom, but they might have gone out the back door instead- of into the bedroom. Sometimes -Mrs. Hesselmeyer would be in the public room and sometimes not. Another witness, Bullock, several times had seen men go from the public room into the kitchen,- but he didn’t know where they went from there. - Mrs. Hesselmeyer-was not always in. the public room when this occurred, but whether she preceded'or followed the men into the baek room-the witness “couldn’t say for sure.” Some of the people present on such occasions were people of good character.

: Alvin Diestelkamp,--city marshal -of Union and deputy sheriff of Franklin County, testified he had been called to Bourboise River Inn three or four- times because of noises, cursing and fighting there. Over-objection he said the general reputation of the general class of people that frequented the pláee was bad, and that both appellants had the reputation -of running -a: bawdyhouse at the Bourboise' River Inn. On cross-examination he stated he had had a lot of complaint^ from citizens because:the Inn was “a joint of that kind;” and that witnesses Thompson' and Pope had - told him of a fight which occurred there when Louis Hesselmeyer attempted to kill them with a shotgun and knocked his- wife down- and beat her up. John Geibler, sheriff, testified that both Mr. and Mrs. Hesselmeyer had the reputation of-keeping a bawdyhouse. On cross-examination appellants’ counsel- elicited -testimony that the - reputation of some of the. men who visited the -place was good, and as to others not good.

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Bluebook (online)
123 S.W.2d 90, 343 Mo. 797, 1938 Mo. LEXIS 492, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-hesselmeyer-mo-1938.