State v. Kennedy

106 S.W. 57, 207 Mo. 528, 1907 Mo. LEXIS 224
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedDecember 10, 1907
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 106 S.W. 57 (State v. Kennedy) 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. Kennedy, 106 S.W. 57, 207 Mo. 528, 1907 Mo. LEXIS 224 (Mo. 1907).

Opinion

GANTT, J.

— At the July term, 1906, of the criminal court of Greene county, the prosecuting attorney of said county filed an information in open court charging the defendant, David Kennedy, with murder in the first degree of Walter Williams at said county, August 2,1905. The- defendant being without means to employ counsel to conduct his defense, such counsel was assigned him by the court. Several dilatory pleas were filed by the defendant and overruled by the court, of which ruling but one, namely, the action of the court in overruling his motion to quash the panel of the petit jury, was preserved in the motion for a new trial, and therefore is now before this court for review. A change of venue from the regular judge on the ground of the prejudice of the judge was granted, and Judge Moore of the Thirty-first Judicial Circuit was requested to and did preside at the trial of the cause. The defendant was duly arraigned, tried and convicted of murder in the second degree, and his punishment assessed at fifty years imprisonment in the state penitentiary. A motion for new trial was filed in due time and being overruled and exceptions saved sentence was pro[534]*534nouneed in accordance with the verdict. After judgment had been rendered and sentence passed, a motion in arrest of judgment was filed, overruled by the court, and exceptions saved to such ruling. The defendant has appealed to this court.

On the part of the State the evidence tended to prove that the defendant, David Kennedy, commonly known as “Yank,” was an unmarried negro laborer, and at the time of the homicide, was working at Root Brothers’ camp, about four miles southwest of the city of Springfield, in Greene county. Root Brothers’ camp was a railroad construction camp at which the laborers lived in tents. The defendant had worked at said camp a greater part of the year, and' for some time before the homicide had occupied a tent with an unmarried negro woman named Eva Parks. "Walter Williams, the deceased, lived at the Root Brothers’’ camp and had been employed there as a teamster, and had known the defendant for several months before the date of the homicide. In the forenoon of the day of the homicide, the defendant did not work and was ■heard in his tent engaged in an altercation with the Parks woman. The witness Ray Williams went to the tent and saw the defendant oiling a revolver. The defendant stated to the witness that he did not feel well. While the deceased was at his dinner, he was informed that the defendant desired to see him at his, defendant’s, tent, and after eating his dinner, the deceased went to defendant’s tent and sat down on the outside. The testimony for the State does not show that any conversation occurred between Williams and the defendant, but that they were seen together after Williams went to the defendant’s tent. Just after the gong had sounded, summoning the men to work after dinner, the deceased got up and started in the direction of the corral to get his team to go to work. When he had walked a distance of about seventy-five feet from the [535]*535tent, the defendant appeared outside of the tent and fired a pistol shot at the deceased. The latter stopped and looked back over his shoulder, then walked on towards the corral. A second shot was then fired by the defendant at the deceased, at which the deceased flinched and started in a run through the corral and to the blacksmith shop beyond. Upon examination, it was found that the deceased had received a bullet wound, the bullet entering at the back part of the right hip, passing through the large intestine and lodging in the front part of the left groin. The wound, was fatal, and from its effects the deceased died about six o’clock on the evening of the next day.

On the part of the defendant the testimony tended ■ to prove that when he returned fróm his work on the ' evening preceding the homicide, he found the Parks woman in a distressed condition of mind, and was informed by her that she had been assaulted by Walter Williams, the'deceased; that when the latter came to defendant’s tent after dinner, the next day, he asked him concerning the treatment of the Parks woman, and said to him,.“Strong, how came you to make Eva have you?” and deceased said, “Who says, só?” and the defendant said, “She did,” and thereupon the deceased got up and the defendant said to him, “You ought to be ashamed,” and the deceased answered, he was not ashamed, and left and went up to another tent, and when the gong rang, he came by the tent and defendant again said to him: “You ought to be ashamed to look at that girl,” and deceased replied, “I ain’t, and if you don’t like it, you black s— of a b — ,- come out here and we will fight,” and then the deceased walked about as far as the stove and defendant shot. They were both walking south when the deceased applied the epithets to him. Defendant further testified, - “When I first shot, he put his hand in his pocket and 'said, ‘Never mind, I will get you.’ ” - Defendant tés[536]*536tified further: “I was never married, I lived with Eva Parks since March 1, have never lived with a woman here. I did down home. I looked on Eva as my wife. I supported her and her child. She did my work.”

Eva Parks testified that she had one child, that she had lived with Dave Kennedy out at the Root Brothers’ camp since March; “I have never been married. Dave cared for me and my little hoy, and I was known in camp as Mrs. Yank. I knew the deceased. He came to our tent the day before he was shot. I told Dave that Strong, meaning deceased, had imposed upon me.” On cross-examination she testified that she had pleaded guilty before C. A. Hubbard, a justice of the peace, of having lived in open and notorious adultery with Dave Kennedy. Two other witnesses testified to the fact that Kennedy, the defendant, and Eva Parks lived together in the defendant’s tent at Root Brothers’ camp. Other facts may be noted in the course of the opinion.

I. It is assigned as error that the criminal court erred in excluding evidence tending to show the existence of a common law marriage between the defendant and Eva Parks, but an examination of the record discloses that the court did not exclude any evidence offered for the purpose of proving a marriage between the defendant and Eva Parks.

II. It is insisted that the testimony tended to show that the woman Eva Parks was the common law wife of the defendant, Dave Kennedy, and that the killing of the deceased was of no higher grade of crime than manslaughter in the fourthdegree. We have in the statement set forth the substance of the testimony of both the defendant and the woman Eva Parks, and in our opinion, it utterly fails to establish a common law marriage between them. In the recent case of Topper v. Perry, 197 Mo. 531, we had occasion to examine the [537]*537law upon this point and it will be unnecessay to repeat wbat was there said, further than to say that in • order to establish a valid common law marriage there must be, not only reputation and cohabitation as a sequence thereof, but a present contract through words by which the man agrees to take the woman as his wife and the woman agrees to take the man as her husband. The record in this case entirely fails to. establish any such agreement, but in our opinion, simply established a case of open, notorious and lascivious conduct on the part of these two parties. With the question of a marriage relation between the defendant and Eva Parks out of the case, the contention that the killing of the deceased by the defendant was only manslaughter must rest upon the provocation, if any, which the deceased gave the defendant for killing him.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
106 S.W. 57, 207 Mo. 528, 1907 Mo. LEXIS 224, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-kennedy-mo-1907.