State v. Ilgenfritz

173 S.W. 1041, 263 Mo. 615, 1915 Mo. LEXIS 175
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedFebruary 23, 1915
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 173 S.W. 1041 (State v. Ilgenfritz) 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. Ilgenfritz, 173 S.W. 1041, 263 Mo. 615, 1915 Mo. LEXIS 175 (Mo. 1915).

Opinion

WILLIAMS, C.

Under an indictment charging them jointly with the murder of Jacob W. Davis, defendants were tried in the circuit court of Adair county [620]*620and found guilty of murder in the second degree. The punishment of defendant Ilgenfritz was assessed at fifteen years and that of defendant Lottie Davis at ten years. Defendants duly perfected an appeal to this court. The evidence on the part of the State tended to establish the following facts: The dead body of Jacob W. Davis, who, prior to his death, was the husband of defendant Lottie Davis, was first discovered about 6:30 a. m., on Sunday, October 27, 1912, on the ground, a few feet in the rear of the house in which defendant Lottie Davis and her five daughters then lived in the city of Kirksville, Missouri. The house was a four-room cottage, fronting east, having one front and one rear door. Deceased’s body was found lying on its left side in a north-and-south position; the feet near a brick walk at the rear door, and the head toward the south. Underneath the body was a thirty-eight-caliber pistol containing two discharged' and three loaded cartridges and between his body and the house was a leather walking stick with a steel rod through the middle. A tub was located between the body and the house. Just north of the brick walk or platform was found a man’s light colored hat. The band in the hat contained the initials of the defendant Ilgenfritz. Deceased had been seen wearing this hat a few days prior to the tragedy; one witness saying that he understood that deceased and defendant had traded hats some time prior to the tragedy. A black mark caused by powder burn or smoke was discovered on the under side of the rim of the hat. One strip of weather-boarding on the south side of the house was chipped or split, and there were spots of blood on the weather-boarding, begining on the fifth board from the foundation and extending down to the ground. There was a bullet hole, caused by a thirty-eight-caliber ball, in the head of the deceased. The bullet entered about an inch and a half above the right ear, passed entirely through the brain and skull and lodged un[621]*621der the skin about two inches above and about three-quarters of an inch in front of the left ear. The skin around the left eye was blackened. The revolver found under the body of the deceased was identified as the property of one C. IX Stott, a citizen of Kirks-ville, and shown to have been loaned by said Stott to the deceased on the afternoon preceding the homicide. At the time of the tragedy, deceased and his wife, because of domestic troubles, were living apart; the deceased making his home with a daughter by his first wife. The house in which Mrs. Davis lived, which for convenience will be hereinafter referred to as the Davis home, was located about seventy-five feet west of the Wabash railroad tracks which run north-and-south at this point. One hundred and seventy-five feet south of the Davis home was the home of - Mrs. Danes and her three children. The ground between the Davis home and the Danes home was open and unoccupied. The Davis home was in the southwest part of the city and in going to and coming from the main part of town the people of this section frequently used the railroad right of way as a footpath, coming down the railroad tracks to a place in front of the Danes home where there was a gap in the fence and a path led into the road which ran north-and-south in front of the two houses. Defendant Mrs. Davis and defendant Ilgenfritz appeared to be very intimate and friendly in their association with each other. ' Ilgenfritz had been seen by neighbors to go into the Davis home on different occasions and sometimes as often as two or three times a day. One witness testified that he saw defendant go into the Davis home about sis o’clock on the evening of the homicide. Ilgenfritz and Mrs. Davis were also seen together at different places of amusement and on some occasions the husband of Mrs. Davis accompanied them. On one occasion, at night, while the two defendants were sitting on a railroad bridge, near the depot at Kirksville, Ilgenfritz was seen to kiss Mrs. [622]*622Davis and pnt Ms hand under her clothing. It appeared that the deceased had accompanied them to this place, but, just prior to the occurrence of the above, the deceased had turned away a few steps to go after some pop. The above transaction was noticed by his daughter by his first wife. On another occasion, the defendants and deceased were together fishing at the city reservoir. The two defendants were sitting together under an umbrella, while the husband was a few feet away, out in the rain. At this time the manager of the water company saw Ilg’enfritz have his hand under Mrs. Davis’s clothing. On the evening of the homicide and between eight and nine o’clock at night, defendant Ilgenfritz and a woman were seen about two miles from the Davis home walking, along a country road. Ilgenfritz had his arm around the woman. At one time prior to this, Ilgenfritz was seen walking along a road south of Kirksville at night with a woman. About two or three weeks before the homicide two witnesses heard Ilgenfritz say, referring to the deceased, that “he would get the d-old s-of a b-, if he fooled with him.” One W. Shorter, who at the time of the trial was serving a term in the penitentiary for larceny, testified, on behalf of the State, that in the day of the tragedy, he had gone to the town of Millard, a few miles south of Kirksville, in search of work; that he left Millard, upon his return, about seven p. m., and walked back to Kirksville along the Wabash railroad right of way; that when he was a short distance south of the Davis home, he heard a pistol shot and stopped for a moment to listen, then continued walking toward the north along the track, and when he had reached a point a short distance south of and opposite the Davis home, he heard another shot, and that immediately thereafter he saw the defendant Ilgenfritz come running from the back of the Davis house toward the railroad track, coming through two fences out onto the right of way of the [623]*623railroad at a distance of fifteen or twenty feet in front of the witness; that it was a moonlight night and he plainly recognized defendant; that defendant was bare-headed and was without either coat or vest; that defendant hastened on down the track in front of the witness and disappeared at a distance of about three or four blocks.

Upon the cross-examination of this witness, it was shown that he and defendant Ilgenfritz had spent a few days together as inmates of the jail at Macon.and that the witness had an unfriendly feeling toward the defendant. The witness did not tell any one about having this information concerning the crime- until two weeks before the trial, at which time, the witness, then in the penitentiary, desiring, as he says, to lead a better life, wrote a letter to the prosecuting attorney. One witness for the State, upon cross-examination, testified that the reputation of witness Shorter for truth and veracity was bad. Two witnesses testified that they saw witness Shorter in Millard on the day in question.

The State was permitted to introduce in evidence, over the objection and exception of defendant, some clothing, more particularly a pair of trousers, claimed to be the property of defendant Ilgenfritz. There was some evidence to the effect that Ilgenfritz was seen wearing this pair of trousers about two days prior to the tragedy. It also appeared in evidence that some time after defendants’ arrest, Ilgenfritz was taken to Macon and there confined in jail. There was also evidence introduced that an express package was sent from Kirksville by Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
173 S.W. 1041, 263 Mo. 615, 1915 Mo. LEXIS 175, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-ilgenfritz-mo-1915.