State v. Kanupka

153 S.W. 1056, 247 Mo. 706, 1913 Mo. LEXIS 306
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedFebruary 19, 1913
StatusPublished

This text of 153 S.W. 1056 (State v. Kanupka) 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. Kanupka, 153 S.W. 1056, 247 Mo. 706, 1913 Mo. LEXIS 306 (Mo. 1913).

Opinion

FABIS, J.

Upon an information, duly verified, and filed by the assistant circuit attorney in and for intent!* W'th the city of St. Louis, at the April term, 1911, of said court, charging defendant with assault with intent to do great bodily harm upon one Alfred Gunners, with a deadly [709]*709weapon, lie was, at the same term of said court, convicted of said offense and Ms punishment assessed by a jury at three years’ imprisonment in the penitentiary. After unsuccessful motions for a new trial and in arrest of judgment, the court, under the provisions of section 5257, Revised Statutes 1909, reduced the punishment as assessed by the jury to two and one-half years’ imprisonment in the penitentiary. Sentence was duly imposed in accordance with the verdict and order of the court. From which judgment and sentence defendant has prosecuted Ms appeal to this court.

The evidence for the State tended to prove that the prosecuting witness, Alfred Gunners, was a married man, living on the 13th day of March, The Facts. (the day of the alleged assault), at No. 5051 South Thirteenth street in the city of St. Louis. The defendant, John Kanupka, with his family, lived in the next block.

About seven o’clock on the evening of March 13, 1911, the prosecuting witness, Gunners, went to the residence of the defendant to see Sylvester Kanupka, a son of the defendant, to talk with him about some insulting remarks which Gunners stated the boy had made to his (Gunners’) wife and to ask the said Sylvester to refrain from such character of remarks. Gunners testified that when he knocked at the door of the defendant’s home it was opened by the defendant, and that he, Gunners, asked defendant if his son was at home. Defendant, who was a Polander, and who did not speak English very fluently, replied that he was not, but inquired what Gunners wanted. Gunners told him that he wanted to see the boy, Sylvester Kanupka, but that if he was not at home he would come back again and see him. Again inquiring of Gunners what he wanted with the boy, Gunners told Mm, whereupon defendant began cursing,- and Gunners remarked: “Man, what is the matter with you? [710]*710Can you say one word I ever done to you?” Kanupka then began talking in Ms native tongue and slammed the door in Gunners’ face as he walked out. As Gunners walked out of the yard and was endeavoring to hook the gate, he testified that Kanupka “sneaked up behind me with one of them machinist’s hammers weighing about a pound and a half, or two pounds, and hit me on the head with it.” That the blood ran ■down his face, but the lick did not knock him down, and that he and defendant began fighting. While they were fighting the defendant’s wife and three or four of Ms largest children got on top of the prosecuting witness and held Mm down. Gunners testified that he grabbed with his left hand defendant’s hammer which he was swinging at him, and quoting his language, says: “When he got me down he simply beat the life out of me. He cracked my shoulder bone; ,1 told Mm ‘my arm was broke; for God’s sake quit, now;’ he hit me once here, that knocked me unconscious.” Gunners testified that he was bruised about his side, knees and kidneys; that he was in bed under the care of a physician for about two weeks, and that it was four weeks before he could walk without a cane. About the time Gunners regained consciousness, his wife came dbwn and he was dragged home by her and his brother-in-law. Gunners denied that he made any assault whatever on Kanupka, or that he had a pistol with him at the time he went to Kanupka’s home.

Dr. IT. E. Livingston corroborated the prosecuting witness as to treating his wounds and as to the extent of them; stated that the character of the wounds received by the prosecuting witness were such as could have been inflicted with some kind of a blunt instrument. The physician further testified that in his opinion the injury to Gunners’ shoulder was a permanent one.

The wife of the prosecuting witness testified that when she heard her husband screaming for help she [711]*711went to Kanupka’s bouse; that she saw defendant hit her husband on the hip with a hammer while he was lying with his face on the ground; that she tried to get her husband up, but defendant hit her in the face with his hand; that she ran home, returning with a pistol, and that the defendant’s son hit her in the back'of the neck and the defendant hit her in the face; that they took the pistol away from her, and that she then, went into the street and hollowed for help, and that her brother-in-law came and helped her husband up and the two of them assisted him home.

It also appears from the evidence that although the families were only slightly acquainted, Kanup-ka’s family were unfriendly to Gunners and his family, because Mrs. Gunners had been a witness against one of the defendant’s boys in the police court a short time prior to the difficulty.

Another witness as to a part of the details of this difficulty was Harry Gomache. His testimony to a slight extent corroborates that of Mrs. Gunners as to when and where she got the pistol.

The defendant undertook to prove by himself, his ' wife, his son, his daughter and his wife’s daughter-in-law the defense of self-defense; that the prosecuting witness made the first assault and attempted to draw a pistol, but was prevented by their combined efforts. The defendant denied having or making use of a hammer on this occasion. He admitted, however, that he had no bruises upon him as a result of the difficulty.

Defendant’s daughter, Anna Kanupka, testified that during the difficulty the prosecuting witness, after striking defendant, attempted to draw his revolver from his hip-pocket; that her attention was attracted to it by the screaming of her mother, and that after some little time, while her father and Gunners were engaged in the difficulty, she succeeded in getting the pistol out of Gunners’ pocket; that it was [712]*712immediately taken up stairs, and turned over to a policeman upon his arrival shortly after the difficulty.

A police officer produced upon trial a loaded pistol which he stated he obtained at the home of the defendant shortly after the difficulty.

Defendant also offered some slight evidence touching his previous good reputation for peace and order.

We deem this a sufficient statement of the facts to enable us to dispuse of the legal questions presented.

OPINION.

• The brief of defendant containing an assignment of errors, filed here by learned counsel for defendant, Assignment, makes such assignment generally; not specifically. In the last analysis, these assignments are two, viz.': (a) that the evidence was not sufficient to go to the jury, and (b) that the court erred in overruling defendant’s motions for a new trial and in arrest. But as in duty bound we-have, as the statute enjoins (Sec. 5312, B. S. 1909), carefully examined the record, which includes the bill of exceptions, made a part of the record by proper and timely orders.

Learned counsel for defendant confuse, inadvertently no doubt, the office and contents of a motion in arrest with those of a motion for a new trial; since the motion in the record, styled a “motion in arrest,” is but a copy of his motion for a new trial. The distinct offices of these two motions are prescribed by statute. [Cf. Sees. 5284 'and 5286, B. S.

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Bluebook (online)
153 S.W. 1056, 247 Mo. 706, 1913 Mo. LEXIS 306, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-kanupka-mo-1913.