State v. James

321 S.W.2d 698, 1959 Mo. LEXIS 888
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMarch 9, 1959
Docket46713
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 321 S.W.2d 698 (State v. James) 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. James, 321 S.W.2d 698, 1959 Mo. LEXIS 888 (Mo. 1959).

Opinion

BARRETT, Commissioner.

The appellant, Frank James, upon a charge of robbery in the first degree and allegations of prior felony convictions has-been found guilty and sentenced to life imprisonment. In almost incomprehensible hortatory jargon the substance of the charge was that on July 13, 1957, the defendant “with force and arms” made an assault upon Rose Salensky and Rose “in fear of an immediate injury to her person, then and there feloniously did put,” the defendant, presumably, by “force and violence” took $178 of which she was in charge, the money belonging to Dave Sherp, doing business as Dave Sherp’s Market at 2101a Cole Avenue. The quotations, particularly the words “fear” and “by force and violence,” are for emphasis and future notation. The defendant admitted the prior convictions and sentences, beginning in 1947 when Frank was seventeen, one year in the workhouse upon a charge of assault with intent to rob, 1949 a sentence of six months in the workhouse for assault with intent to ravish, in 1950 a sentence of ninety days in the workhouse for carrying concealed weapons, and in 1957 a sentence of sixty days in the workhouse for carrying concealed weapons.

All of the principals, the defendant, the witnesses and others, are Negroes, and some of the witnesses were not articulate as to some very important and vital matters; they were hesitant and doubtful and often not orientated. Sherp’s Market was *699 owned by Dave Sherp and his wife but on July 13, 1957, they had left Mrs. Sherp’s mother, Rose (“Baba”) Salensky in charge of the store. About three o’clock that afternoon there were present and in charge of the store these employees: Rose Salen-sky, Mary Lee who had been a clerk for eight years, Norman Lee Benson, a boy of fifteen who was a clerk and handyman, and Ozzie Brooks, a boy of eighteen or nineteen, who was away at school when the case was tried and did not testify. There were also several patrons in the store, perhaps eight or more, but those in charge could identify them by their first names only even though they were long-time, regular customers. The defendant denied that he had been in the store but according to Mrs. Sherp and Mary Lee he was a frequent customer, particularly in the liquor department, and Mary Lee and Frank had once lived in the same block when they were children. While Rose was unable to identify Frank as the person who assaulted her and took the money from the cash register, she distinctly remembered his coming in the store that morning and buying a ten-cent cake. So, unquestionably, the appellant was personally known to Mary Lee, if not to others employed in the store, and although she was probably the only witness able to do so she unequivocally identified the defendant as the person in the store about 3:10 that afternoon and at a later date in the police “line-up” as well as upon his trial.

About 3:10 Mary Lee was at the meat block when she heard “Baba” scream and she ran to the back part of the store and saw “Baba” on the floor, the defendant standing over her. She returned to the vicinity of her former position and turned on the burglar alarm and immediately ran back to the “kitchen part” where Rose and the defendant had both been on the floor. Mary Lee says that the defendant was standing between her and Rose, “no one could think of what to do next,” and then he turned and moved past her “and he slapped me up on the side of the face.” But as he turned “there was a Seven-Up bottle setting on the table, and I took and picked up the Seven-Up bottle and threw it at him, and by that time he went to come at me, so I ran back in the back, in the back farther we keep a lot of pots and pans there, and I picked up the top of a boiler that we have there and ran out in the front and hit him from the back in the back, that is all.” Rose and Norman saw Mary Lee hit Frank in the head with the Seven-Up bottle and one of the disputed issues, bearing on identification as well as other matters, was whether the unhealed gash on his head was caused by the crashing Seven-Up bottle. Mary Lee and Rose saw Frank punch the cash register, take out the contents and run out the front door. Mary Lee only saw the defendant, Frank, she did not see anyone else with him. She said, “What I mean is I don’t know whether there was two of them was together or not.” Except as subsequently noted, she was not asked and apparently did not see a weapon of any kind in Frank’s hands or in the hands of anyone else.

Rose, who is blind in one eye “and I don’t know exactly how much eyesight I have,” could not, as has been noted, identify Frank as the person who assaulted her. And again except as subsequently noted, she said, “if he had a weapon, he didn’t show it,” and she was not asked whether she saw anyone else with a weapon. This was her summary narrative of the occurrence: “Well, I was standing at the cash register and a man came around and grabbed my hand, he didn’t say a word, he pulled me, and I shoved him about three or four different times, he turned around and saw a gun on my shelf, and he picked it up, and seen it was a toy gun, and he threw it down and grabbed ahold of me, and he pushed me back into the kitchen, and I was still holding on to him, and I started screaming, and as I was holding on to him, he pushed me on the floor and he fell on top of me, and then Miss Lee came running in, the first thing she stepped on the alarm, and then he got up, and as he *700 was passing her, he kind of slapped her, and she grabbed ahold of a 7-Up bottle, there was a 7-Up bottle, she grabbed ahold of it and threw it at him, as he was running out, he still didn’t say a word, he pushed this register and grabbed ahold of the money, and she took the top of a roaster and threw it at him, that is all.”

These particular facts and circumstances are not noted for the purpose of determining whether the evidence adduced by the state made a submissible case of robbery in the first degree, these and other circumstances not now noted were sufficient for that purpose (V.A.M.S. § 560.120; State v. Whitley, 327 Mo. 226, 36 S.W.2d 937); these particular circumstances are related for the background and in connection with the one serious and meritorious point the appellant makes upon this appeal —that the trial judge, over the defendant’s objection, unduly injected himself into the trial of the case and improperly asked improper questions of Rose Salensky, Norman Benson and Officer Russo. In his brief here it is said that these and other questions by the judge “indicated the judge’s feeling against the defendant and his belief of defendant’s guilt contrary to the law of this state.” In his motion for a new trial the assigned grounds were that the court erred in directing a question to Officer Chandler to straighten out inconsistencies in the officer’s testimony, that the court erred “in the line of questions directed to Mrs. Salensky that brought out the facts of fright, failing of her sight and force used against her and that money was taken against her will and other questions that went to prove elements of State’s case” which it is said deprived the appellant of a fair and impartial trial and conveyed to the jury the impression that the judge thought the defendant guilty, and that the court erred in directing questions to Norman Lee Benson “that would put him in a position to' see things that he had placed himself in a' position where he could not see them.”; In this connection it was said that “The.

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Bluebook (online)
321 S.W.2d 698, 1959 Mo. LEXIS 888, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-james-mo-1959.