State v. Kenyon

126 S.W.2d 245, 343 Mo. 1168, 1939 Mo. LEXIS 410
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedFebruary 21, 1939
StatusPublished
Cited by49 cases

This text of 126 S.W.2d 245 (State v. Kenyon) 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. Kenyon, 126 S.W.2d 245, 343 Mo. 1168, 1939 Mo. LEXIS 410 (Mo. 1939).

Opinions

* NOTE: Opinion filed at May Term, 1938, August 17, 1938; motion for rehearing filed; motion overruled December 20, 1938; motion to transfer to Court en Banc filed; motion overruled at September Term, February 21, 1939. The appellant, twenty years of age, was convicted of murder in the first degree, the death penalty being inflicted by the jury, in the Circuit Court of Oregon County on change of venue from Howell County, for shooting and killing Dr. J.C.B. Davis while kidnaping him in the latter county on January 26, 1937. There were five assignments of error in his motion for new trial in the circuit court, only two of which are specific enough to comply with the new trial statute, Section 3735, Revised Statutes 1929 (Mo. Stat. Ann., p. 3275). One of these challenges the sufficiency of the evidence; the other complains of the reception of testimony from a witness who had remained in the court room during the hearing of the evidence after the rule had been enforced.

The Assignment of Errors in appellant's brief filed in this court complains of several errors not assigned in the motion for new trial, some of these being charged to be apparent on the face of the record proper: (1) that the information was fatally defective; (2) that the record fails to show the jury were kept together in custody of a sheriff during the second day of the trial, and when they returned their verdict; (3) that it does not appear from the record that the *Page 1173 appellant was present at the trial on said day; (4) that the State failed to prove the venue; (5) that error was committed in giving two instructions.

The deceased, Dr. Davis, was a practicing physician in Willow Springs, Missouri, well along in life. He had been married thirty-six years. He was seen by B.F. Thomas of that city to leave his office on the afternoon of January 26, 1937, about five o'clock, and walk away with the appellant. His office girl, Miss Geraldine Frommell, testified that about that hour he departed from the office saying he was going to see his sisters, but in a few minutes returned, and reported that he had to make an emergency call at the home of a man named James about six miles in the country. She saw him get his medical kit from his automobile and leave the latter parked. Thereafter he disappeared until his corpse was found a week later.

In the meantime a ransom note from the doctor to his wife passed through the West Plains post office on the evening of the next day, January 27; his medical kit was found in North Fork Creek in Ozark County on January 30, and a second ransom note addressed to Mrs. Davis was deposited in the U.S. Mail letter box outside the post office door in West Plains, about twenty miles from Willow Springs, sometime between 8 P.M. on February 1 and the next morning. A Special Agent of the Federal Bureau of Investigation saw a man answering appellant's general description drive up alone in a 1937 Ford sedan or coach with Missouri license plate No. 437,154, and deposit something in that mail box at 8:05 P.M. on the night mentioned. Mr. Thomas gave Sergeants Massey and Beach of the State Highway Patrol a description of the man he had seen leave with Dr. Davis on the afternoon of January 28. They arrested appellant at the home of his father, Daniel Kenyon, on February 2. He had a .25 caliber Colt's automatic pistol and his suit case contained a tablet of writing paper. His automobile was a 1937 Ford bearing license No. 437,154, corresponding with that seen to drive up to the West Plains post office.

After prolonged questioning about four o'clock in the morning of February 3 the appellant conducted Col. Casteel and other members of the State Highway Patrol, and Federal agents, to a point on Highway 63 about two miles south of Pomona where the body of Dr. Davis was found lying in the woods near a pond, face down, frozen to the ground, glasses on the nose undisturbed, the right arm extended akimbo with a glove on the hand, the left arm doubled under the body with a check book in the hand. His hat was on the ground about twenty feet away, and his overcoat on. There were two bullet wounds close together almost directly in the back of the head which did not penetrate the skull cavity; three entrance wounds in the back and three exit wounds in the front, of the torso. All of *Page 1174 these went clear through the body. Two of them passed through or near the heart and were instantly fatal. There were skin abrasions on the thumb and middle finger of the right hand made by a bullet. This accounted for six bullets. Two bullets about waist high at the front of the body had not penetrated the underwear and were recovered. Another bullet was later found which had been shot into and remained in the glove on the right hand. These three bullets were microscopically compared with test bullets fired through the pistol taken from appellant at the time of his arrest, and in the opinion of Mr. Guinn Tamm, a ballistics expert from the Federal Bureau of Investigation at Washington, all had been shot from the same firearm.

The paper on which the first ransom note was written was compared by Dr. F.M. Miller, examiner of questioned documents from the Federal Bureau of Investigation, with the paper of the writing tablet found in appellant's hand bag when he was arrested, and they proved to be similar. In addition certain handwriting indentations or impressions on the tablet correspond in form and position with words on the last page of the first ransom note, which was written by Dr. Davis. Also the written address on the envelope in which the second ransom note was mailed, and the handwriting of the note itself, were analyzed by this expert and compared with samples of the appellant's handwriting. In the opinion of the expert all were written by the same hand.

After the appellant's arrest and the finding of Dr. Davis' corpse on February 2 and 3, he was taken to the Jackson County jail in Kansas City and there confined for a time. On February 6 he made an oral confession to Colonel Casteel and to certain Federal Agents. On February 8 he signed a written confession, in which he stated he had contemplated kidnaping Dr. Davis for about two weeks. On the evening of January 26, 1937, he went to a grocery store in Willow Springs and inquired where the doctor's office was. Thence the confession continues, so far as need be detailed here:

"I obtained the information there and went directly to Dr. Davis' office where I met Dr. Davis at the door. I told him my wife was sick. He asked me what my name was and I told him it was James. He returned to his office to get his bag. I told him I lived on Highway No. 63 near Pomona, Missouri. He came out of the office with his bag and I told him I had my car and would drive him there and bring him back. This was before dark, around 5:00 P.M. I drove down Highway No. 63 from Willow Springs, Missouri, to North Dora Road, where we turned off towards Dora.

"When we were about ten or twelve miles off Highway No. 63 I stopped the car. I pulled my gun and I changed places with him, making the doctor drive the car, and while we stopped at this time *Page 1175 I pulled the writing pad, which I had obtained at my sister's, . . . and made Dr. Davis write the first ransom note. I do not remember exactly what was said in this note, but I do remember that he was to pay the ransom of $5,000.00 and that it had to be paid Saturday night which would be January 30, 1937. I did not tell the doctor what denominations of bills I wanted him to pay. The doctor wrote the note and included in the note the type of money wanted, including the four $1,000.00 bills. All I wanted was $5,000.00 from the doctor.

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Bluebook (online)
126 S.W.2d 245, 343 Mo. 1168, 1939 Mo. LEXIS 410, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-kenyon-mo-1939.