State v. Holloway

56 S.W. 734, 156 Mo. 222, 1900 Mo. LEXIS 296
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMay 8, 1900
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 56 S.W. 734 (State v. Holloway) 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. Holloway, 56 S.W. 734, 156 Mo. 222, 1900 Mo. LEXIS 296 (Mo. 1900).

Opinion

SHEEWOOD, J.

The questions presented by this record relate to the homicide of Julius Boillot, pérpetrated by defendant on Christmas eve, 1898, in Osage county, by shooting him to death with a pistol, and repeatedly shooting him after he had fallen to the ground.

The circumstances relating to the death and those preceding and subsequent thereto and connected therewith, are in substance and effect the following: Defendant at the time of the occurrence was a single man of about 31 years of age, bom and reared near Aud, in Osage county. When about four years old his father died. Soon after the decease of the latter, the farm on which defendant’s mother lived, was sold under a deed of trust for $600, which had been placed on the land by his father, and the land was bought at the sale by Julius Boillot. This sale, and the widow and her family being compelled to leave their home, engendered very bitter feelings in the breast of her son, especially in that of the latter, and this feeling received accession in consequence of persecutions and annoyances to which the widow was subjected by having her stock killed or driven off or stolen, her fences thrown down and the rails hauled away, etc., etc. Whether these acts were those of Boillot or not, does not fairly appear.

Einally, it seems, upon the payment to her of a sum of money by Boillot, the widow was induced to quit the farm, but bore within her breast, as did her son in his, but more intensely, a sense of having been grievously treated and injured by Boillot, in consequence of the facts aforesaid. And this bitter feeling suffered no abatement as the years went by, but gathered intensity with the lapse of time. As defendant grew toward man’s estate, the mention of Boillot’s name in conversation would often excite him to a phrensy of anger, which some of the witnesses called insanity and others merely attributed such exhibitions to an ungovernable tem[226]*226per. In these paroxysms of rage, he indulged in threats against their subject. About one year before the tragedy which forms the gravamen of the charge in the indictment, defendant Avas about to go and kill Boillot, but vras prevented by one vritness.

On the night of the 24th of December, 1898, there was a public gathering at the school house at Aud, in Osage county, the people in the vicinity assembling for the purpose of delivering presents from á Christmas tree. Defendant was on the outside of the school house, gazing intently at what was going on in the school house, Boillot being in there. After the meeting had adjourned Boillot had gone to assist his daughter in mounting her horse preparatory to returning home. While he was standing beside the horse and about fifteen yards from the corner of the building where his son stood, the defendant came running around the house raising his revolver, fired four or five times, two or three of the bullets taking effect in Boillot’s breast. He sank to the ground and expired in a few moments. The defendant then run a short distance, turned around, and exclaimed in a tone loud enough for a number of persons present to understand, “I am the Reverend John Holloway and I have killed Jul Boillot.” Defendant then disappeared in the woods and was in hiding several days. He was arrested near his mother’s home, at the house of a justice of the peace, to whom he surrendered, after receiving a scalp wound from persons in pursuit. Defendant was identified by the son and daughter of the deceased as well as by other persons present, as the perpetrator of the crime. He afterwards admitted committing the deed, and said he was glad of it.

Insanity was interposed as a defense. The testimony of the professional, as well as lay witnesses, greatly preponderated in favor of the view that defendant was sane.

[227]*227A sufficient outline of the testimony has already been given.

The instructions given on behalf of the State were fifteen in number, and fully covered all the points necessary for the information of the jury in the performance of their duties; they embraced murder in the first degree and insanity, with appropriate definitions, etc., etc. To these instructions exception was saved on part of defendant, and an instruction asked for him in these words:

“The court instructs the jury that the defendant may be of sufficient mind as to intend the murder of the deceased and at the same time be not of such understanding and control of his mind and mental powers as to- coolly deliberate said murder, and if you so find from the evidence you will find the defendant guilty of murder in the second degree.” And upon its refusal exception was saved.

Particular assailment is made on the 6th instruction given, which is the following:

* “The court instructs you that the defendant, in law, is presumed to be innocent, and that it devolves upon the State to prove, by evidence, to the satisfaction of the jury, beyond a reasonable doubt, that the defendant committed the crime as charged in the indictment and explained in these instructions; and if, upon a view of the whole case, you have a reasonable doubt of defendant’s guilt, you will give him the benefit thereof and acquit him. But a reasonable doubt to authorize an acquittal on that ground must be a substantial doubt of defendant’s guilt, formed on the careful consideration of all the facts and circumstances proven in the case, and not a mere possibility of the defendant’s innocence.”

A reasonable doubt “formed on the careful consideration of all the facts and circumstances in the case,” necessarily involves a .consideration of such facts and circumstances as are lacking to establish and make complete the full measure of [228]*228defendant’s guilt. "These two considerations of the evidence and the lack of evidence are bound together by an indissoluble connection as surely as the premises of a syllogism involve its conclusion. It is 'logically impossible for a jury to consider the sufficiency of evidence, without at the same moment considering, and with the same thought, its insufficiency. A different mental operation would be as much dehors the power of the human mind as would be the remembrance and the forgetting of the same thing at the same instant. In State v. Sacre, 141 Mo. 64, an instruction similar to the one under review, was ruled to be unobjectionable. In State v. Blunt, 91 Mo. 503, a like ruling was made where the instruction complained of read: “To authorize an acquittal on the ground of reasonable doubt alone, such doubt should be a real, substantial, well-founded doubt, arising out of the evidence in the' cause, and not a mere possibility that the defendant is innocent.” The objection, therefore, taken to the instruction, must he held untenable.

But it is difficult to refrain from asking why it is that circuit 'judges do not copy the instruction on reasonable doubt which passed muster in State v. Nueslein, 25 Mo. 111,, and in every other case since, where it has been copied ? No other reason suggests itself, except that the opinions of this-court are never read, or if read are never heeded, by the trial judges.

Instruction 7 of the given series, is also assailed; it reads in this way: “Insanity is interposed by the counsel for the defendant as an excuse for the charge set forth in the indictment. This defense, when established, is one the law recognizes, and should insanity be proven by the evidence in the case, to the reasonable satisfaction of the jury, it would be-the duty of the jury in that event to acquit the defendant altogether.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
56 S.W. 734, 156 Mo. 222, 1900 Mo. LEXIS 296, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-holloway-mo-1900.