State v. Kretschmar

133 S.W. 16, 232 Mo. 29, 1910 Mo. LEXIS 286
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedDecember 27, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 133 S.W. 16 (State v. Kretschmar) 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. Kretschmar, 133 S.W. 16, 232 Mo. 29, 1910 Mo. LEXIS 286 (Mo. 1910).

Opinion

KENNISH, J.

On the 18th day of February, 1909, the grand jury for the city of St. Louis returned an indictment charging Herman A. Kretschmar, the appellant herein, with murder in the first degree for the killing, with a pistol, of Clarence N. Jones, on the 3d day of February, 1909. Appellant was thereafter tried, found guilty of murder in the second degree, and his punishment assessed at imprisonment in the penitentiary for a term of eighteen years. Timely motions for a new trial and in arrest having been duly filed and by the court overruled, appellant brings the cause to this court by appeal, and assigns error.

The material facts of this cause, as disclosed by the evidence for the State, are about as follows:.

The Commonwealth Feed Mills Company is a corporation with its office and place of business, located at the corner of North Second street and DeSoto avenue in the city of St. Louis. For about one and a half years prior to the 12th day of January, 1909, appellant had been the nominal secretary of the Mill Company, yet his real and active duties took him out most of the time as a traveling salesman for the feed products of the mill. On the last-named date appellant surrendered all of his stock and resigned as secretary of said Mill Company, as requested by its board of directors. He continued his services as salesman until the first day of February, 1909, after which time he had no further connection with the company.

On the 3d day of February, 1909, the day of the fatal tragedy, the deceased, Clarence N. Jones, was the president of the Mill Company and was the owner of fifty-one shares of its stock, which was a controlling interest. Edwin door was its vice-president and treasurer, and Drummond Jones, a son of deceased, was its secretary.

In the latter part of the month of October, or the early part of November, 1907, the Mill Company was in . [34]*34great financial distress. Mr. Jones was then living at his summer home at Arcadia, in this State, and owned twenty-five shares of the stock of said Mill Company; Grloor owned forty shares, and appellant thirty-five shares. It appears that appellant had bought what stock he then owned from the deceased, and Grloor, severally, and that he had given to each of said parties his note for the purchase price of the stock so purchased.

Grloor and appellant made a. trip or two to Arcadia to see deceased about putting more money in the business. This Mr. Jones declined to do unless he owned a controlling interest in the stock of the company. After some delay Mr. Jones was sold enough stock by Grloor and appellant to give him fifty-one shares, as he had requested, and he then furnished the money needed by the company. Appellant and Grloor each continued to own a portion of the stock.

It appears in the record that appellant had- failed to pay deceased or Gloor for a single share of the stock which they had sold him and some time during November or December, 1908, appellant was notified by deceased that he must pay for the shares he then owned and had purchased from deceased or return them and take up his note, which he had given in payment therefor.

At the time appellant ceased to be a stockholder and tendered his resignation as secretary (January 12, 1909), the Mill Company owed deceased more money than the entire value of the capital stock of the corporation.

Appellant’s employment with the company as secretary and salesman began in the month of August, 1907, and soon thereafter he made a contract for the company with Edmund E. Delph of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, by the terms of which Delph was to act as distributing agent for the product of the mill in that State and the surrounding district. At first many or[35]*35ders were received by the company from Mr. Delph, bnt the business began falling off, and on March 11, 1908, and again on the 17th day of the same month, the deceased wrote to Mr. Delph and in each letter complained that orders were not coming in from his agency as formerly, and asked for an explanation. The deceased referred in the letters to the representations made to him by appellant and Gloor as to the amount of business which could be expected from that agency and of his consequent disappointment over the results. Appellant learned of these letters, and obtaining the originals from Mr. Delph in October, 1908, made two copies of each. He seems to have considered the references to him in the letters as a reflection upon his character as a business man. The deceased had also written a letter to a man named Dula in New York City, which was not offered in evidence, but of which appellant had heard and took exceptions to as also reflecting upon him.

"When it became necessary to secure additional funds to continue the business of the company in the fall of 1907, appellant was greatly incensed at the refusal of the deceased to supply the money unless upon the condition of becoming the owner of a controlling interest in the stock, and appellant complained to Gloor at the time that deceased wanted to hog the proposition so that if it became profitable he could take it all himself, and he then said to Gloor, “I would kill anyone that went back on me that way; I would kill him; I would kill you if you went back on me.”

Appellant had said nothing about the Delph letters to the deceased or Gloor until Monday, February 1, 1909, the day after his connection with the company had ceased. That day, meeting Gloor on the street, he said: “I have got something to show you in a few days. ’ ’

On Wednesday, the 3d day of February, 1909, appellant went to the office of the Mill Company between [36]*36noon and one o’clock, having no special business, as he testified, but he still had a desk and some personal effects there. He had with him copies of the Delph letters and was armed with a revolver. On his way to the mill he stopped at a saloon and took a drink of whiskey. Arriving at the mill he found the deceased and Gloor at work in the office, the deceased sitting at his desk in his shirt sleeves engaged in addressing letters. No conversation of any special importance took place. About one o’clock appellant asked Gloor if he was going down town, and Gloor informed him he was as soon as. he finished copying a letter. Appellant and Gloor then left the office and walked to Broadway, and then to Gano avenue, where Gloor took his car. While appellant and Gloor were taking this short walk of about six blocks, the following conversation, in part, as testified to by Gloor, concerning deceased, took place between them: “I said, ‘I don’t think it was very kind of you to try to buy out Mr. Jones’s interest and leave me out entirely.’ He says, ‘Your stock isn’t worth anything. You will have to make sixteen thousand dollars before you can pay a dividend.’ He says, ‘Mr. Jones has bought this mill for his son. ’ He says, ‘He is on record to that effect.’ He says, ‘He has put me out and he will put you out. ’ ’ ’

While Gloor was waiting at Gano avenue for his car, he was reminded of the promise appellant made to him on the Monday before to show him the Delph letters, which appellant then drew from his pocket and handed to Gloor. After the latter had read the letters he endeavored to convince appellant that Jones was simply trying to get business for the company and was not intending any reflection by what was said in the letters.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
133 S.W. 16, 232 Mo. 29, 1910 Mo. LEXIS 286, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-kretschmar-mo-1910.