State v. Lucas

292 S.W. 714, 316 Mo. 904, 1927 Mo. LEXIS 715
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMarch 14, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 292 S.W. 714 (State v. Lucas) 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. Lucas, 292 S.W. 714, 316 Mo. 904, 1927 Mo. LEXIS 715 (Mo. 1927).

Opinions

*909 BLAIR, J.

Appellant and one John Burgess were jointly charged with first degree murder for killing one Pauline Miller. Upon his separate trial appellant was found guilty as charged. The jury assessed his punishment at life imprisonment. Failing to secure a new trial, he has appealed from the judgment entered on the verdict.

The undisputed facts are: William Miller and his wife and children lived on land belonging to Burgess situated in Stoddard County. Appellant had the land leased from Burgess. Miller was appellant’s sub-tenant. Burgess and appellant lived close together on the south side of the north section-line road. Miller lived in the same north half section and west of the road bounding the section on the east. On the evening of April 20, 1925, at about eight o ’clock, Mrs. Miller was sitting in the east porch of her home holding in her lap her five-year-old daughter, Pauline. Her fourteen-year-old daughter, Marie, was also sitting on the porch. Four or five pistol shots were fired by someone riding in an automobile passing south along the road. The shots were directed toward Miller’s house. Several of the bullets struck the house. One of them struck Pauline, causing her death an hour or so later. While it was dark at the time, Mrs. Miller could see that someone occupied both the front and rear seats of the automobile. It is conceded that at least appellant and Burgess were in the automobile from which the shots were fired, and that the automobile proceeded on around the entire section and did not stop until it reached appellant’s home.

For the State, Mrs. Miller testified that the shots were fired from the back seat of the ■ automobile. (Appellant and his son testified *910 that they occupied the front seat, and that Burgess was in the back seat.) William Miller testified that he had been to a neighbor’s house to the south, and was returning when he saw the automobile approaching and passing his house and heard the shots. He saw the flashes of gun fire just as the automobile was opposite his house. He stepped to one side of the road and concealed himself. By the aid of a lamp in a near by window and the headlight from a neighbor’s automobile, he was enabled to see and recognize the occupants of the automobile as it passed him. He identified appellant and Burgess as the sole occupants of the automobile. He .said Burgess occupied the front seat and was driving the automobile, and that appellant occupied the rear seat. Miller’s testimony, in connection with that of his wife that the fatal shots were actually fired from the rear seat, which" Miller said was occupied by appellant, made a case for the jury on the theory that appellant himself fired the fatal shots.

But, even if appellant did not fire the fatal shots himself, still, if he aided, abetted or conspired with Burgess to that end and, as a result of such conspiracy and common plan, Burgess fired the fatal shots, then appellant was just as guilty as if he had fired the shots himself. Of course, if Burgess fired the fatal shots and appellant had no knowledge of his purpose to do so and did not conspire with him to that end, as appellant’s testimony tended to show, then he was guilty of no crime whatever. In attempted support of the issue of common purpose or conspiracy, most of the State’s evidence was admitted and, around the admission of such testimony and in connection with the instructions covering same, most of the alleged errors charged were committed.

•We will not attempt to detail all of the facts. The evidence offered by the State tends to show the existence of bad feeling between Miller on the one hand and Burgess and the appellant on the other. Appellant admitted that Burgess had been operating a still, and it appears that Burgess held Miller responsible for the destruction of the still by the officers. Appellant and Miller had trouble over the failure or refusal of appellant to give Miller work, as Miller claimed appellant had agreed to do. They also had some difficulty over the payment of a note given by Miller to a third person, which was signed by appellant as surety, to enable Miller to purchase some stock. It also seems that appellant guaranteed a doctor’s bill for Miller and there was trouble over the fact that Miller had not paid the bill. Miller claimed that both Burgess and appellant were in the whiskey business and knew that he had reported the existence of their still to the officers. There was some evidence of threats against Miller by Burgess and appellant, as well as counter threats on Miller’s part. Miller testified that he had seen a pistol in appellant’s *911 pocket earlier on the day of the tragedy. Appellant testified that he did not own and never had a pistol.

Appellant and his son testified that, just preceding the tragedy, they and Burgess started from appellant’s home in appellant’s automobile to go to the home of one John Horton. Appellant and his son occupied the front seat and appellant drove. To reach Horton’s place, they had to pass the house where Miller was living. As they were nearing the Miller house appellant said to Burgess: “Do you reckon Miller will cut the fence down and tear the paper off the house.” This remark referred to the expected move from the premises by Miller, as he had agreed. Burgess said: “I will take a couple of shots at the house and that will move him quicker than anything else.” Appellant asked him not to do this, saying that it would get them both into trouble, but Burgess immediately fired the shots. Burgess was not called as a witness.

It was fully established by the State and not denied by appellant that the automobile swerved about four feet toward and just in front of the Miller house and that the shots were fired at the house from directly in front of it. The automobile was then about fifty feet from the house. Although it was dark at the time and no moon was shining, it is reasonable to assume that at least the forms of persons on the porch of Miller’s house could have been seen at that distance, because Mrs. Miller could see forms in the automobile.

Appellant made no effort to stop the automobile or to go back and see if any damage had been done by the shots, although he claims they were fired against his will and over his protest. He proceeded to drive on around the section and back to his home. They did not stop at the Horton place, which they testified was their destination when they started out. Even when he was told of the serious re-^ suits of the shots, appellant made no disclosure of his alleged knowledge that they were fired by Burgess. He even visited the Miller premises after the tragedy became known, but made no disclosure of his knowledge. Thus his subsequent conduct appears inconsistent with his story of the shooting.

It appears unnecessary to enter into more minute details as to the facts. It should be stated, however, that a number of witnesses testified that appellant bore a good reputation as a peaceable, quiet and law-abiding citizen. The State offered no countervailing proof in that regard.

Appellant has made several assignments of error which we cannot consider because his motion for new trial, which was filed in October, 1925, was not sufficiently definite to meet the requirements of Section 4079, Laws 1925, page 198. [See State v. Standifer, 316 Mo. 49, 289 S. W.

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1 S.W.2d 106 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1927)

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Bluebook (online)
292 S.W. 714, 316 Mo. 904, 1927 Mo. LEXIS 715, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-lucas-mo-1927.