State v. Hughes

125 S.W.2d 66, 344 Mo. 116, 1939 Mo. LEXIS 607
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedFebruary 21, 1939
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 125 S.W.2d 66 (State v. Hughes) 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. Hughes, 125 S.W.2d 66, 344 Mo. 116, 1939 Mo. LEXIS 607 (Mo. 1939).

Opinion

*119 LEEDY, J.

Appellant was charged with murder in the first degree, in having stabbed and killed one Alvah J. Harris at the county of St. Clair. Tried in the circuit court of that county, he was found guilty of manslaughter and sentenced to a term of five years in the penitentiary, and he has appealed.

The sufficiency of the evidence to support the verdict has not been raised; nor, indeed, could a challenge thereof be sustained, if made. It is therefore unnecessary to set forth the evidence in any detail. The deceased, Alvah J. Harris, was about twenty-seven years of age at the time of his death. He had been married to Lois, the daughter of appellant, Walter Hughes. Their marriage had terminated in divorce, the decree going to the husband, and the custody of an infant son was divided equally between the parties, in alternating periods of two weeks each. Lois had remarried, but at the time in question was living at the home of her parents in the town of Collins. Harris, the deceased, lived across the street. It was his custom, during the periods when the child was in the care of its mother, to take a quart of milk daily to the home of appellant for the use of the child. It was in connection with such a delivery, at about 6 p. m., on January 19, 1937, which proved to be the final one, that the altercation in question arose, and out of which this prosecution grew.

The evidence on the part of the State tended to show that when Harris opened the door of the Hughes home, appellant ordered him out, and directed that he stay out, and ran at him with a knife; that Harris ran to the street, and was pursued by appellant who stabbed him several times with a knife. There were four cuts on his left side *120 along the mid-line, about four inches under the arm, and a long, lacerated, jagged wound on deceased’s head. The largest of the cuts was about an inch and a quarter to an inch and a half in length. The other three stab wounds were smaller. Although it was shown that immediately after the encounter Harris was in a condition of severe shock, and was bleeding profusely, the hemorrhages were external only, and none of the cuts penetrated the pleural cavity, and their nature was not such as to necessarily prove fatal. However, an infection set up and Harris died on January 23, four days later, as a result of said wounds.

On the part of appellant, it was shown that he was a man sixty-three years of age and in somewhat delicate health; that theré had been unpleasantness between himself and deceased growing out of the marital difficulties mentioned; that he had previously ordered deceased out of the house on several occasions; that on the night in question, when Harris came to the door, after telling the latter to take the milk and go home, and informing him that if the baby needed any medical aid or milk, he would see that he got it, deceased applied a vile epithet to appellant, and.invited him to go outside, saying, “I am going to knock your brains out;” that appellant believing he had to fight, either in the house oi; outside, followed deceased outdoors; meanwhile the latter was cursing him. A lively altercation ensued out in the street in which appellant admitted that he got out his knife, and stabbed deceased, but contended„that he acted in self-defense, and in the defense of his daughter whom Harris was menacing. Other pertinent facts will be stated in the course of the opinion in connection with the points to which they relate.

By contrasting the great variety of errors as alleged in the motion for a new trial with the points now relied on for a reversal, it will be seen that the appellate issues have been sharply reduced. As narrowed, they may be said to be limited to two general propositions, both bottomed on rulings of the trial court with respect to certain evidence admitted on the part of the State.

I. The first of appellant’s complaints is that the several dying declarations of deceased, five in number, were improperly .admitted in evidence over his objections and exceptions. It is the contention that there was no sufficient foundation laid for the introduction of any of the statements as dying declarations, in that it was not shown that they were made in anticipation of impending dissolution and at a time when the declarant had abandoned all hope of recovery. In view of the position taken by the State, it becomes unnecessary to relate even the substance of the several statements, or the circumstances attending their utterance, except, perhaps, as to the last (fifth) one, because the State tacitly concedes that the first four statements were not made while the declarant was in extremis, or under such *121 circumstances to render them admissible in the first instance. In that connection respondent’s brief- states.: “We base the validity of the first four declarations upon the fifth declaration which was made by the deceased to his mother the day before he died. . . . The statement made to Mrs. Harris (the mother) was a reiteration and recapitulation of the four previous dying. declarations. Therefore, even if the admission of the four' previous declarations was error, such error was cured when the dying declaration made to Mrs. Harris was put in evidence. ’ ’

The fifth declaration was in a conversation between' Harris and his mother on Friday, .the day before his death. He was in his room at the Dimmitt Memorial Hospital at Humansville, to which institution he had been taken the night of the altercation. It was not shown that he had been advised by his physicians either that death was imminent, or that he could not'expect to recover; however, it does appear that a ‘ ‘strep ’ ’ infection of the tissues had developed from the stab wounds (proved as the cause of death), which was apparent as early as 9 o’clock the morning after the fight, and deceased’s knowledge thereof. The mother, who had been with her son throughout the entire timq he was in the hospital, testified that on Friday morning, “He talked about these wounds . '. . and showed them to me and complained about them hurting him so bad;” that she went out to lunch, and came back in, and that the doctors had been in to see him while she was gone-; that “when I went up and took my coat off and hat, he just laid his hand out that way (indicating) and said, ‘Mother, look here.’ says, ‘See that poison? You. know what that means;’ he says, ‘I hope you get the baby.’ ” Previously, he had manifested despair of recovery, as attested by his statement to Cleve Wilson, his employer (to whose place of business he went directly after the fight) when and where, after asking for a .place to lie. down, and requesting that a doctor be called, he said: “I believe I am going to die.” Within a short time thereafter, the prosecuting attorney arrived and reduced to writing what purported to be a dying declaration. It is true that there was testimony to the effect that in the interim between thé night on which he was cut and the day of his death; Harris had indicated á belief on his part that he would be sufficiently recovered as to leave the hospital in a few days.

In State v. Livingston (Mo.), 204 S. W. 262, where one of the questions was whether a declaration was made under the sense of impending death and wherein no physician or other person had told declarant that there was no hope for him, the following from Mattox v. United States, 146 U. S. 140

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Bluebook (online)
125 S.W.2d 66, 344 Mo. 116, 1939 Mo. LEXIS 607, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-hughes-mo-1939.