State v. Little

128 S.W. 971, 228 Mo. 273, 1910 Mo. LEXIS 125
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMay 26, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 128 S.W. 971 (State v. Little) 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. Little, 128 S.W. 971, 228 Mo. 273, 1910 Mo. LEXIS 125 (Mo. 1910).

Opinion

POX, J.

On the 14th day of September, 1908, the prosecuting attorney of Pemiscot county filed in the circuit court of said county an information charging the defendant with murder in the first degree. Thereafter, upon the defendant’s application, the regular judge of the circuit court was disqualified, and Honorable J. L. Port, judge of the Twenty-second Judicial Circuit, was selected to try the case. Thereafter the State waived the charge of murder in the first degree, and elected to try the defendant on the charge [288]*288of murder in the second'degree. Upon trial had, the defendant was found guilty of murder in the second degree, the jury assessing his punishment at ten years in the penitentiary. Timely motions for new trial and in arrest of judgment were filed and overruled. Judgment was entered in accordance with the verdict, from which judgment defendant prosecutes his appeal to this court.

The testimony on the part of the State tends to prove that at about 7:30 or 8 o ’clock on the evening of March 2, 1908, the deceased, Edward Langdon, in company with Clay Pillow, Elmer Sanders and Ed Mode, was in a saloon, known as the Opera saloon in the town of Caruthersville, Pemiscot county, Missouri, and that said Clay Pillow, who was intoxicated, was giving expression to an unfriendly feeling towards one Jerry McElvain, not then present. Soon thereafter McElvain, one Vaughn, and the defendant entered the saloon. McElvain stepped to the bar, borrowed two diollars from the bartender, and invited those present to join him in a drink. The defendant did not go to the bar, but stood near the wall, opposite from the bar, and behind the deceased. Some of the invited persons, including Clay Pillow, accepted McElvain’s invitation to drink with him, whereupon Sanders and the deceased, having observed the intoxicated condition of Pillow, a brother-in-law of the defendant, persuaded him to leave the saloon and start towards home. The deceased, Sanders and Pillow left the saloon, and when they reached the Depot saloon, which was owned by Sanders, Pillow stated that he wanted one more drink, and would go home after getting it, whereupon they entered the Depot saloon. They had been there about ten minutes when the defendant, McElvain and Vaughn entered the saloon together, and the testimony is that when these three left the Opera saloon McElvain exposed a pistol and carried it in his hand. Upon entering the Depot saloon, McElvain went to the bar and [289]*289invited those present to have another drink with him. The deceased was then standing at the bar, and just as the other invited persons stepped to the bar for the purpose of taking a. drink, the defendant, without any apparent provocation, assaulted the deceased, striking, beating and kicking him. The deceased made no hostile demonstration whatsoever, but when attacked by the defendant he said, “What is the matter — what do you mean?” To which the defendant replied: “You know what I am whipping you for; you whipped my brother when he could not help himself, and you kicked me off the train.” The defendant then cursed and abused the deceased, and continued to beat him upon the head and face, the deceased endeavoring to ward off the blows. Finally the deceased released himself and left the saloon, saying, “If this is the kind of treatment I get I will leave,” the defendant replying, “I think you will get out.” As Langdon (the deceased) was going out the door, either the defendant or McElvain said, “We will make him come back and take a drink.’’ Little then called to him, but the deceased did not come. Soon after the deceased left the saloon, the defendant said: “I have been owing him that for some time. He kicked me off the train when he was conductor, and he also whipped my dead brother when he couldn’t help himself.” While the defendant was assaulting Langdon, McElvain and Pillow stepped back from the bar and drew their pistols, Pillow saying to McElvain, “I think you are handy with your gun.” The witness who testified to this fact said he supposed that Pillow thought that McElvain wanted to' engage in a difficulty with him, Pillow having previously expressed ill-will towards McElvain.

After leaving the Depot saloon, Langdon went to Barnett’s saloon, a short distance away, opened a drawer in that saloon and! took therefrom a pistol belonging to the bartender, and which Langdon carried [290]*290away against the expressed wish of the bartender. The pistol or revolver was a Smith & Wesson of a 32 or 38 caliber, and having five chambers loaded. Lang-don examined the pistol to see if it was loaded, and again examined it while crossing the railroad track between the two saloons, and then returned to the Depot saloon. He stopped in the cigar department, which was separated from the barroom by swinging screen doors in which were glass panels, one of which was broken, and rested his arms on the cigar case. Witness Sanders saw him come in, having observed him through the broken glass panel in the screen, and he remarked to the defendant, “There he is now.” The defendant immediately went out to the cigar department, and, advancing upo'n the deceased, said, ‘ ‘ Here you are back; • you havenN had enough. ’ ’ He then struck the deceased with his hand, and immediately thereafter drew a large Colt’s revolver from his pocket and struck the deceased therewith on the head. The deceased was heard to say, “Albert, let’s not have any trouble; I have done nothing to you, and have nothing against you.” There was a struggle between the two men, and both fired several shots, each receiving two bullet twounds. The deceased was shot through the abdomen, and was also wounded in the jaw and neck; the latter wound, according to the testimony, indicating that it was made by a smaller bullet than that which passed through the abdomen. The defendant’s wounds were in the neck and leg. Both men were taken to a hospital, where the deceased died next day from the effect of the bullet wound in the abdomen. The testimony is conflicting as to who fired the first shot, but two witnesses to the encounter, who testified for the State, stated that the defendant was the aggressor and fired the first shot; that they saw the defendant strike the deceased with his pistol, and then place the weapon against the side or stomach of the [291]*291deceased and discharge it, after which the deceased fired his pistol, and the defendant fell.

On the part of the defendant, the testimony tends to prove that between 6:30 and 7:30 o ’clock, on the evening of March 2, 1908, the defendant, McElvain and Vanghn were at McElvain’s saloon, and while there defendant borrowed a large pistol of McElvain. Thereafter, McElvain, Vaughn and the defendant went to the Opera saloon'in search of defendant’s brother-in-law, Olay Pillow, who was intoxicated, the defendant having previously been requested by Pillow’s wife to take him home. Upon their arrival at said saloon they there found said Pillow, in company with Sanders, the deceased, and others. As to what occurred at the Opera saloon, the testimony is similar to that on the part of the State as above detailed. About five minutes after Pillow, Sanders andj the deceased left said saloon, the defendant, McElvain and Vaughn also left and went to the Depot saloon, to which place they went in search of Pillow. Upon arriving at the Depot saloon, where the tragedy occurred, they found Pillow, Sanders and the deceased. McElvain invited the crowd to drink at his expense.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
128 S.W. 971, 228 Mo. 273, 1910 Mo. LEXIS 125, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-little-mo-1910.