State v. Lane

376 S.W.2d 128, 1964 Mo. LEXIS 814
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMarch 9, 1964
DocketNo. 50064
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 376 S.W.2d 128 (State v. Lane) 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. Lane, 376 S.W.2d 128, 1964 Mo. LEXIS 814 (Mo. 1964).

Opinion

HOLLINGSWORTH, Presiding Judge.

By an information filed in the Hannibal Court of Common Pleas, defendant was charged with feloniously assaulting one Geraldine Avery with a deadly weapon, to wit: a loaded pistol, with intent to kill. Thereafter, on application of defendant, the case went on change of venue to the Circuit Court of Shelby County, where an amended information was filed charging defendant under § 559.180 RSMo 1959, V.A.M.S.,1 with feloniously, on purpose, and of malice aforethought making an assault upon Mrs. Avery with a deadly weapon, to wit: a loaded pistol, with intent to kill.

Tried to a jury, defendant was found guilty of felonious assault with intent to kill Mrs. Avery, with malice aforethought, and his punishment was assessed at imprisonment in the State Penitentiary for a term of five years. His motion for new trial was overruled and he has appealed from the judgment rendered and the sentence imposed in accordance with the verdict. Jurisdiction is here vested under Article V, § 3, of the Constitution of Missouri, V.A.M.S.

The sole error assigned on appeal is that the trial court erred in submitting the issue of defendant’s guilt of assault with intent to kill without malice aforethought.

The evidence in behalf of the State was, in substance, as follows:

At the time of the shooting, Mrs. Avery and her husband, Vincel, resided at 1714 Vermont Street in the City of Hannibal. Defendant, Robert Joseph Lane, frequently referred to in the evidence as “Bobby Joe” Lane, was married to the Averys’ daughter, Donna. The two families had been on friendly terms until a disagreement arose between them some year or more prior to the shooting concerning a joint venture by them undertaken in the acquisition and operation of a boat.

On February 9, 1962, Mr. and Mrs. Avery stopped at Bud Head’s tavern to cash a check. They there saw Bobby Joe playing shuffle board, stayed in the tavern only a few minutes, and then went to their home. About 6:15 p. m., at which time Mr. Avery was asleep in the bedroom and Mrs. Avery was watching television in the living room, Mrs. [130]*130Avery heard a knock at the hack door. She went into the back hall, turned on a light and, looking through a glass in the back door, saw Bobby Joe standing at the door, with a .32 caliber revolver in his hand. He opened the door and stepped inside the hall; Mrs. Avery stepped back and dropped her hands to her sides. Bobby Joe walked in and, with his finger on the trigger of the pistol, “stuck the gun in [her] chest.” She said, “Bob, what are you going to do ?” He said, “I’m going to shoot you and I’m going to kill you. Is Vince home?” She said, “No”, and said, “Bob, put that darned gun down.” Bobby Joe, then standing a foot or more in front of her, and very angry, was pressing the revolver hard into her chest and it was hurting her so bad that she said, “If you’ve got to shoot somebody, shoot me and leave [Vince] alone.” Bobby Joe then shot her in the chest. She raised her hand to her chest and ran through the kitchen into the living room, where she encountered her husband and told him, “Bob shot me.” She then ran out the front door to the home of Mr. and Mrs. Don Pickett across the street. She was taken from the Pickett home to Levering Hospital, where Dr. Robert Joseph Lanning, M. D., treated the shot wound inflicted upon her by the bullet fired into her chest by Bobby Joe. The bullet had entered the central portion of Mrs. Avery’s chest and pierced her right lung, causing it to collapse and blood to flow into the pleural cavity. The immediate treatment given her consisted of placing a tube into the lung to suck out the air and blood. If the condition found had not been promptly treated, death could have ensued within hours. The bullet was removed from her lung on February 19.

Vincel Avery testified that he, awakened by the shot fired by Bobby Joe into Mrs. Avery’s chest, jumped from his bed, came out of the bedroom, met his wife, saw blood coming from her chest, and his wife said, “Bobby Joe shot me.” He then saw Bobby Joe, who followed him back into the bedroom. Vincel got behind the bed. Bobby Joe came around to Vincel, who said, “Bobby, don’t shoot no more, you’ve done enough damage.” Bobby Joe said, “Don’t touch me, Vince, I’ll kill you.” Vincel then ran past Bobby Joe and began to back out the door,. Bobby Joe shot Vincel, first in the stomach and then in the back. Vincel also went across the street to the Pickett home and was taken from there by ambulance to Levering Hospital.

Bobby Joe was arrested about 8 p. m. and taken to the police station, where he made a statement which was transcribed and thereafter read and signed by him. That statement was admitted into evidence and read by the jury after defendant’s counsel announced that he neither challenged nor desired “a separate hearing on its volun-tariness or anything of that sort”, his only objection, he said, being “that it might have been effected by his [Bobby’s] mental condition.” Counsel for defendant also suggested, “I think the jury could read it themselves,” which the court then permitted the jurors to do. That statement, to the extent material, reads:

“Some time after 4 o’clock I called a cab at Head’s Bar and rode around between 30 and 45 minutes then I went to 2010 Hope Street and got my car. Then I went back down to Head’s Bar; and later left there, I don’t know what time, and went to my father-in-law’s on Vermont Street I unlocked the glove compartment of my car and took out a .32 revolver which I bought at Harve’s Hunting Hut on Thursday for $15.00. I had the gun in my hand when I knocked on the door. My mother-in-law opened the door and grabbed my hand and we went to scuffling and she called me some names. I don’t remember exactly what she said. I had the gun cocked in my hand and when she grabbed my arm I pulled the trigger. She screamed and I don’t know if the bullet hit her or not and I don’t know where she went. I don’t see how I could have missed her. This happened just inside the door.

“I went on into the house and Vincel jumped up off of the bed and said, ‘My God, [131]*131what happened ?’ He came running into the kitchen where I was and told me I could have the god-dammed boat and a bunch of stuff but I was so god-dammed mad I don’t know if I shot him while in the house or not, and he went running back into the bedroom and down under the bed and out the other side. Then he ran out the front door which faces Vermont Street. I ran out the front door after him and shot at him while he was running toward Donny Pickett’s house. I don’t know if I shot at him once or twice and I don’t know if I hit him. I don’t know who opened the door over there so I did not shoot him in the doorway.

“I got in my car and drove around the block and came in the back driveway and went back in the house looking for my mother-in-law and could not find her. Then I left again and I saw the ambulance and right after that the Police Car put a light on me and I drove down a dead-end street and stopped. I got out of the car and I don’t know if the Police took gun out of my hand or if it was in the front seat of the car or in my pocket or what. Then they brought me to the police station.”

Mrs. Gertrude Lane, Bobby Joe’s mother, testified in his behalf, saying that she saw Bobby Joe at the Hannibal Police Station shortly after the shooting and that he did not look normal to her. Mrs. Howard Kiser, the wife of Geraldine Avery’s brother and a sister of defendant, testified to the same effect and that Bobby Joe seemed hypnotized, like he was in another world.

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Related

State v. Hibler
5 S.W.3d 147 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1999)
State v. Fowler
558 S.W.2d 366 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1977)

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Bluebook (online)
376 S.W.2d 128, 1964 Mo. LEXIS 814, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-lane-mo-1964.