State v. Lewis

37 S.W. 806, 136 Mo. 84, 1896 Mo. LEXIS 303
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedNovember 20, 1896
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 37 S.W. 806 (State v. Lewis) 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. Lewis, 37 S.W. 806, 136 Mo. 84, 1896 Mo. LEXIS 303 (Mo. 1896).

Opinion

Buegess, J.

At the October term, 1895, of' the St. Louis criminal court the defendant was convicted of murder in the second degree and her punishment fixed at fifteen years’ imprisonment in the penitentiary, for having shot and killed with a pistol at said city on the thirteenth day of May, 1895, one Peter R. Morrissey. The case is before us for review on defendant’s appeal.

[87]*87The statement of facts made by counsel for the state is conceded to be correct by defendant. It is as follows:

Deceased was the proprietor of a saloon and restaurant in the city of St. Louis; appellant was the keeper of a bagnio at 2719 Wash street; and there had been for some time illicit relations between them which had been at intervals broken off and resumed.. On the night of May 12, 1895, in the neighborhood of 11 o’clock, deceased was in his saloon chatting with various friends, among whom were two young physicians, named Frank and O’Reilly. Appellant, accompanied by one of' her “girls,” came into the lunch room adjoining the saloon; she called to the deceased to come and drink with her, but he declined, saying he had friends with him, to which she retorted, “damn your friends.” She several times repeated the invitation, coming to the door between the two apartments, but he continually declined, until about midnight, when, after ordering everybody out of the saloon and directing his barkeeper to close up for the night, he went into the lunch room accompanied by the two doctors. The party drank together several times, during which appellant urged deceased to go home with her, he refusing and at one time telling hér he proposed to go and see some other woman that night. Deceased seemed vexed by her persistency, and at one time took a bank note from her purse and tore it in two, throwing the pieces on the floor; they were picked up by one of the doctors and returned to her.

At length deceased agreed to go with her to her home if his friends would go; a carriage was sent for and the whole party left the saloon. Deceased seemed very drowsy and went to sleep in the carriage. They arrived at the house of appellant about 2 o’clock in the morning of May 13,1895. The doctors and the “girls” [88]*88went in, but deceased refused to leave the carriage for some time, and did not get out until a police officer came up, and he was assisted in the house by him and the appellant. The entire party were then in a parlor or reception room, about in the center of the house, to which access was had by a hall from the front door; in front of this parlor, next to the street, was the bed chamber of appellant, and in the rear was the kitchen; from the parlor a flight of stairs led to a hall on the second floor and to rooms over the parlor and bed chamber occupied by appellant’s two “girls,” and over the kitchen was a small room occupied by an old man named Andrews, a sort of factotum in the establishment. After drinking some beer, the doctors retired upstairs, each with a girl, the officer withdrew and appellant and deceased were left together in the parlor.

The parties upstairs had disrobed and lain down, when two noises were heard in succession like the “slam of a window.” Dr. O’Reilly sprang from the bed, opened the door and saw the man Andrews going downstairs ; he called to Dr. Frank and followed Andrews down, being in his underclothes; when he got into the parlor he found appellant swearing and hysterical, and saw that Andrews had a pistol in his hand; going into the bedroom he found Morrissey lying in the bed on his back with one arm under his head and the other across his breast, his eyes closed as if asleep, two wounds in his face, and the skin powder burned; he was dead. Dr. Frank partially dressed himself and went downstairs; found appellant struggling with Andrews to get possession- of a pistol and shouting, “I’ve killed my Pete; give me that pistol I want to kill myself.” He also went into the bedroom, found Morrissey in the bed, noticed that he lay lengthwise and straight, and that he was covered up to the chest with the bed clothes, which were tucked in all around the [89]*89edge of the bed; he examined deceased, found him to be dead; he was dressed in underclothes, shirt and socks. The girls dressed themselves and went out for an officer, and soon after the whole party were taken to the nearest police station, while the body was conveyed to the morgue; appellant and Andrews were held in custody for the coroner’s inquest.

An autopsy revealed that only one of the wounds was fatal; a bullet had entered the inner angle of the right eye, passing upwards and backwards through the brain, and lodged in the parietal bone, on the top of the head, on the right side, causing instant death; the other wound„was in the month; the face was badly powder burned.

There was also testimony that at various times preceding the killing and up to within three nights before, appellant had made threats against deceased; on one occasion she had a large revolver concealed in a muff, which was taken from her by a police officer. One of the threats was “I’ll shoot his Gr-d eye out;” and another was “I’ll shoot out the pretty brown eye of the son of a bitch.”

The testimony on the part of the defense was as follows:

Appellant, testifying in her own behalf, stated that after the two girls and the doctors had withdrawn, deceased began to abuse her, knocked her down, caught her around the throat and choaked her, and then struck her on the head, whereupon she lost consciousness and knew nothing more until she came to at the city hospital. A physician testified that he examined her in the jail about three weeks after the homicide and found evidence of injuries on the right side of the frontal bone, and abrasion of the skin, some marks on the back and shoulders, and on the left leg in three places below the knee, and some soreness on the baek of her left hand.

[90]*90The man Andrews testified, as a witness for the defense, that he was the husband of' the appellant; that just preceding the homicide he came down the stairs to get a hot iron out of the kitchen and saw deceased beating appellant into unconsciousness; that he dragged the woman into the parlor, laid her on the sofa, went back to deceased and began to upbraid him for his brutality; that deceased seized him by the throat, pushed him back over a wash stand, and as he (Andrews) threw his hand back to steady himself, he felt the pistol lying on the stand, quickly seized it, raised and discharged it several times in the face of deceased who fell back upon the bed; that he then composed the body, covered it up, picked up the pistol and concealed it in his clothing; all of which was done before the doctors came downstairs.

The state in rebuttal introduced some testimony as to former sworn statements of Andrews for the purpose of contradiction and impeachment.

The court instructed as to murder in the first and second degrees, and manslaughter in the fourth degree, circumstantial evidence, credibility of witnesses, competency of defendant and reasonable doubt.

The second instruction was: “Unless you believe and find from the evidence beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant shot and killed Peter R. Morrissey, you will acquit her.” The eleventh instruction was: “The court further instructs you that if you believe and find from the evidence that the defendant, shot and killed Peter R. Morrissey, but at the time of the shooting she was from any cause so unconscious of her acts as not to know what she was doing, you will acquit her.”

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Related

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142 P.2d 435 (California Court of Appeal, 1943)
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Bluebook (online)
37 S.W. 806, 136 Mo. 84, 1896 Mo. LEXIS 303, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-lewis-mo-1896.