State v. Hicks

3 S.W.2d 220, 3 S.W.2d 230, 319 Mo. 28, 1928 Mo. LEXIS 641
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedFebruary 18, 1928
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 3 S.W.2d 220 (State v. Hicks) 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. Hicks, 3 S.W.2d 220, 3 S.W.2d 230, 319 Mo. 28, 1928 Mo. LEXIS 641 (Mo. 1928).

Opinion

*34 WALKER, J.

The defendant was indicted in the Circuit Court of Jackson County for the murder of one Martin Erickson. Upon a trial defendant was convicted and sentenced to an imprisonment in the penitentiary for life:

The murder occurred in Kansas City, Missouri, on the evening of May 21, 1926. Two women, who testified for the State, witnessed the tragedy. They were, at the time, sitting on a porch of the residence of one of them. They saw, sitting on the doorstep of a building about seventy-five feet away, a man and a woman. The woman screamed, the man caught her by the hand, and they rose and ran towards the door of their house. They were quickly followed by a man, afterwards shown to be the defendant, who as he ran held a pistol in his hand pointed at the man and woman. Just as they reached the door their pursuer shot each of them down. Running up to where they had fallen, he fired five more shots into their prostrate bodies. He then turned and fled.

Attracted by the first shot, two boys, who were playing ball on a lot near at hand, saw the defendant fire the subsequent shots at the fleeing dr prostrate couple. A witness, named Golden, followed the defendant as he fled and intercepting him asked what was the matter. The • defendant replied that a yellow bastard had stolen his wife and that he would never steal another man’s wife. Another witness, named Berger, who heard the shots fired by the defendant, saw the latter fleeing from the scene, and after parking his car followed the defendant several blocks, overtook him and taking him into custody delivered him to the nearest police station. Upon being searched an automatic pistol with two unfired cartridges in the magazine was found on his person. He was held to await the action of the prosecuting attorney, who filed the information upon which the prosecution was based.

*35 A deputy coroner answered tbe call and repaired to the scene of the tragedy soon after it occurred. He found the dead bodies of the man and the woman lying where one of the women, who had witnessed the shooting, said they had fallen when shot. There were several bullet wounds in the body of each, from which he testified that Erickson, for whose murder the defendant was being tried, and the woman had died. No weapon of any character was found on the bodies of either.

The moving cause of this murder was the infidelity of the woman. Sometime prior to the tragedy she had lived with the defendant as his wife. Becoming enamored of Erickson she left the former and when killed was living with the latter.

The defendant testified that at about six o’clock, p. m., he was walking down the street when he was greeted by a woman’s voice. He recognized it as that of his wife, who was sitting on a doorstep with Erickson. She arose and made a step towards the defendant as if to shake hands with him, when Erickson seized her hand and drew her towards the door of the house. As he did so she screamed, and the defendant fired one shot, but does not remember that he shot more than once. The defendant said he shot Erickson because he thought the latter was about to shoot him. He denied that he intended to shoot the woman.

Threats by _ Erickson against the defendant were testified to by the latter. On one occasion, the night before the defendant’s wife left him, he met Erickson on the street and the latter said to him: “You need not be fooling around that woman now, for I am going to have her; and if you want to keep on living you had better stay away from her.” On another occasion, as the defendant was alighting from a street car, Erickson stepped up to him and said: “Is your name Boat Hicks?” Defendant said: “Yes,” when “Erickson pulled out a little pistol from his hip pocket and said: ‘You had better beat it down the street. ’ ”

The bill of exceptions is burdened with much wholly irrelevant matter, which, having been incorporated into the statements of the State and the defendant, tends to confuse rather than enlighten. We will consider such portions of the same as have been preserved by the defendant as material to his defense.

I. The contention is made that the members of the trial jury were not chosen with a due regard for the rights of the defendant, and hence he was not awarded a fair and impartial trial by a j1Try 0£ hig peers, or as stated in our Constitution (Aft. 2, S'ec. 22) “a public trial by an impartial jury of the county.”

The refusal of the trial court to sustain challenges' to certain jurors on the ground that they had formed opinions in regard to the *36 guilt of the defendant is urged as error. These opinions, it was shown, were based on having read newspaper accounts of the killing and from conversations with others, which opinions it would require evidence to remove. This particular phase of the question concerning the qualification of jurors we discussed in State v. Woodard, 309 Mo. 1. c. 27, in which we said in effect that:

■ “A juror is not disqualified who has read newspaper reports or has talked to persons concerning the case in which he is being examined, if, in reply to inquiries in regard thereto, he states that the information thus obtained will not influence him in rendering a verdict, but that he will be governed by the evidence adduced at the trial. Further than this, if he answers that the information obtained has caused him to form an opinion as to the merits of the case this will not disqualify him if he states that he will be governed by the evidence in reaching his verdict regardless of his former opinion. [State v. Samis, 296 Mo. 1. c. 487; State v. Poor, 286 Mo. 1. c. 656; State v. Herring and Baldwin, 268 Mo. 1. c. 529 and cases; State v. Smith, 228 S. W. 1. c. 1060 and cases.]
“In the Poor case we reviewed'the earlier rulings on this question and discussed the large discretion confided in the trial court in the performance of the duty of selecting a trial jury. The conclusion there reached may pertinently be referred to as applicable in the instant case.
“From these cases may be deduced the general rule that when a defendant, to use the quaint phrase of the common-law;, ‘puts himself upon the country,’ the limit of his rights in the selection of the triers of the facts is that they be unprejudiced, or in other words, with that discrimination which should characterize the performance of their duty, that their minds may be open only to the consideration of such facts as are admitted in evidence.”

The jurors objected to in this case met this measure and the appellant has no just ground of complaint on this score.

The citizenship in the county of the juror named Carlisle not being questioned, his competency was not affected by the fact that only a few weeks before the trial he had removed to Jackson County from Minnesota. [Sec. 6607, R. S. 1919; State v. France, 76 Mo. 681.]

A juror named ITarlow stated that he had conscientious scruples against the infliction of the death penalty. This disqualification -was waived "by counsel for the State and the jui’or accepted. Authority for this waiver is found in Section 4012, Revised Statutes 1919, as amended, Laws 1925, page 196.

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Bluebook (online)
3 S.W.2d 220, 3 S.W.2d 230, 319 Mo. 28, 1928 Mo. LEXIS 641, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-hicks-mo-1928.