State v. Link

3 S.W.2d 369, 318 Mo. 1179, 1928 Mo. LEXIS 648
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedFebruary 18, 1928
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 3 S.W.2d 369 (State v. Link) 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. Link, 3 S.W.2d 369, 318 Mo. 1179, 1928 Mo. LEXIS 648 (Mo. 1928).

Opinion

WALKER, J.

An information was filed in the Circuit Court of Stone County charging Yerdo Link with having stolen a number of chickens of the value of fifty dollars. Upon a trial he was convicted and sentenced to two years’ imprisonment in the penitentiary. From this judgment he appeals.

The testimony for the State disclosed that one J. E. Gibbs, Avho AAras in the poultry business, discovered upon a return to his home *1182 with his family after a days’ absence, that about half of his flock of chickens, which had numbered more than one hundred, was missing. Informed of this loss and necessarily of other facts justifying action, the prosecuting attorney filed the information against the defendant upon which this trial was had. Marion Hembree, a brother-in-law of Gibbs, testified that he was. in Marionville, a village in Stone County, on the day of Gibbs’s and his family’s absence from home. In conversation with the defendant, who was keeping a restaurant, the latter said he wanted some chickens. While not so stated it necessarily follows from what subsequently occurred that the witness informed the defendant that he could supply his demand. Defendant at once got his car and taking one Henry Estes with them he and Hembree went to the country and drove about a mile or more beyond the residence of J. E. Gibbs, the owner of the chickens. The defendant waited at that point in his car, and Hembree and Estes went back to Gibbs’s house; filled two' gunny sacks, with which they were provided, with chickens and took them back and placed them in the car. The defendant then drove back to town -with. Hembree and Estes and going to the house of his father-in-law they turned the chickens loose. Defendant then paid Hembree and' Estes five dollars apiece for helping him get the chickens. This witness further testified that when the defendant said he wanted some chickens, the witness told him that he could steal some chickens, and that the defendant said if he did defendant would take them after they were stolen.

Henry Estes testified that he accompanied Hembree and the defendant when they went after the chickens. That they did not tell him where they were going or what they intended to do until they got out into the country, when they said that they were going out to Hembree’s sister’s (Gibbs’s wife) to get some chickens; that they stopped at some distance beyond Gibbs’s place, where the defendant waited for them while they went to Gibbs’s hen house, got the chickens, came back and put them in the defendant’s car and returned to town. Arriving there they took the chickens to the house of the defendant’s father-in-law, as directed by the defendant, and unloaded them.

Defendant testified that at the time of the alleged offense he lived in Marionville and was running a restaurant. On the last Sunday in May, 1926, he was at home when Hembree and Estes came to him to hire his car. He told them he was going to drive to Crane, to which they replied that they also. wanted to go there and asked if they could go with him. Accordingly, defendant, his father-in-law, brother-in-law and the two boys drove into Crane together. All got out of the car and the two boys disappeared and returned in about an hour and a half with two sacks of chickens. They told him that the chickens were obtained from Hembree’s sister and he bought them *1183 for twenty cents apiece. There was evidence that defendant inquired if they had been stolen, and that was denied. The chickens were taken to his father-in-law’s and turned loose. This evidence was substantiated by the testimony of defendant’s wife, his father-in-law and brother-in-law, but was not believed by the jury. There was evidence on the part of the defense that Estes and Hembree had been jointly charged and convicted of stealing cream at Aurora.

I. Objection was made to the testimony of certain witnesses, because their names Avere not endorsed on the information; that they had not been subpoenaed and that the defendant had no notice that they would be called until their testimony was offered at the trial. When objection was made to. the mony of one of these witnesses, Hembree, for the reasons above set forth, the court said to counsel: “I will give you an opportunity to talk with him before he testifies.” Counsel for the defendant, after conferring Avith the witness, returned to the court room and reneAved his objection, Avhich Avas overruled, and the AA'itness was called by the State and gave his testimony. This manner of challenging the competency of a Avitness AA'ill not suffice to preserve the objection for our consideration. Neither a motion to quash nor a demand for a reasonable time to meet the testimony of the Avitness Avas made. The conduct of the court was exceedingly considerate in the protection of the rights of the defendant in extending an opportunity for counsel to confer with the witness, evidently to enable him to ascertain the nature of the witnesses’ testi-monjr and, if desired, to demand time within which to meet it. After this conference counsel contented himself with simply repeating his objection. The reasonable inference from this course is, not that counsel was ignorant of the required procedure, but that he found nothing in the Avitnesses’ testimony to sustain a demand for time. Be that as it may, the objection Avas properly overruled. We have recently had occasion in State v. Cook, 318 Mo. 1233, 3 S. W. (2d) 365, to rule Aipon this question, with citations and the discussion of numerous cases. As in that case, so in this, we find no reason for questioning the correctness of the ruling of the trial court in this regard.

In objecting to the testimony of the witness (Estes), for the same reason as that urged against Hembree’s testimony, counsel for the defendant demanded no time to confer Avith the witness or to be afforded an opportunity to ascertain what his testimony would be, but simply, as in the case of Hembree, objected to his testifying. This objection Avas therefore properly overruled for the reasons before stated. , |

*1184 II. That the witnesses Hembree and Estes, above referred to, were self-confessed criminals and were tinder separate indictments for the same offense, does not render their testimony inadmissible. Their turpitude, while a proper subject of consideration by the jury as affecting their credibility, does not render them incompetent as witnesses. They were not jointly charged with the defendant and are not within the terms of the disqualifying statute. [Sec. 4035, R. S. 1919.] If accomplices of the defendant in this crime, but separately charged, they were competent witnesses against him. [State v. Meyers, 198 Mo. 225; State v. Broyles, 295 S. W. 556; State v. Braden, 295 S. W. (Mo.) 784; State v. Newman, 289 S. W. (Mo.) 831; State v. Hayes, 247 S. W. (Mo.) 165.] .

III. The objections made to the remarks of the prosecuting attorney in his argument to the jury were sustained. To1 the demand that the counsel be reprimanded there is no ruling, and no objection was made or exception saved to the failure 0| cour£ i0, rlde as thus requested.

IY. After the jury had retired to begin their deliberations one of the jurors returned for a moment to the court room in the custody of the sheriff and asked the court if they could find the defendant guilty and leave the punishment to the court. What answer, if any, was made by the court is not disclosed record.

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Related

State v. Cooper
648 S.W.2d 137 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1983)
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240 S.W.2d 114 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1951)
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Bluebook (online)
3 S.W.2d 369, 318 Mo. 1179, 1928 Mo. LEXIS 648, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-link-mo-1928.