State v. Majors

44 S.W.2d 163, 329 Mo. 148, 1931 Mo. LEXIS 681
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedDecember 1, 1931
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 44 S.W.2d 163 (State v. Majors) 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. Majors, 44 S.W.2d 163, 329 Mo. 148, 1931 Mo. LEXIS 681 (Mo. 1931).

Opinions

By information filed in the Circuit Court of Pemiscot County defendant was charged with murder in the first degree for shooting and killing his wife. A change of venue was awarded to the Circuit Court of New Madrid County, where the cause was tried, resulting in defendant's conviction of murder in the second degree. He was duly sentenced pursuant to the verdict of the jury to fifteen years' imprisonment in the penitentiary, and has appealed. The State's evidence tended to prove the following:

The shooting occurred at the home of defendant and his wife in Pemiscot County on September 10, 1928. On the afternoon of that day Mrs. Majors was found in her home mortally wounded with two bullet wounds in her abdomen. Either wound would have caused death. There were also some scratches and minor bruises about her neck. She was removed to a neighbor's house, and thence to a hospital, where she died the next morning. Upon discovery of the crime a deputy sheriff was called. He found a trail leading away from defendant's house through a cornfield back of the house, the trail indicating that the person making it had first crawled on hands and knees. The officer followed the tracks of that person to a place where he learned that the defendant had surrendered himself. After taking custody of defendant he asked the latter: "What got the matter with you all?" To which defendant replied: "We fell out about some chickens."

There was evidence tending to prove that some four days prior to the shooting Mrs. Majors had missed some chickens, which defendant said he had sold, and that she and defendant had quarreled about it. He had made some threats against her at that time, but the witness who gave the testimony could not remember what the threats were. There was also testimony from another witness to the effect that about the last of March, 1928, the defendant had tried, unsuccessfully, to procure a gun from the witness "to kill his wife with." Another witness testified that a "short time" before the shooting defendant came to witness's store and "wanted to buy a gun from me." He was not permitted to state what, if anything, defendant said as to why he wanted the gun.

Witness T.V. Schoonover testified to a dying declaration of Mrs. Majors, the foundation for such testimony having first been laid by an examination before the court in the absence of the jury. Mrs. Majors when she made the statement in question was lying on a table, bleeding profusely, and was very weak. She would speak a few words, then pause and close her eyes, then speak again and so continue. She said she would not get well, she would die before morning. After expressing that belief of her impending death she made the statement which was offered as a dying declaration, in substance as follows: That she had gone to a Mr. Rankin's that day and *Page 153 when she returned she found her chickens were gone; that defendant had taken them to Pendergrass's store and she went down there and identified them; that (quoting the witness) "she told him [defendant] she wouldn't put up with that kind of stuff. She put on her dress and got ready to leave and he told her she couldn't leave him in that kind of a mess — she started to leave, to go out the door, and Majors grabbed her, choked her, kicked her and shot her in the stomach."

That statement was made about 7:30 P.M., on September 10, and Mrs. Majors died before nine o'clock the next morning.

Sam Stephens testified that in a conversation in which she said she could not get well, Mrs. Majors "told me she said she was going to leave him (defendant) and he said he would kill her before he would let her leave him in that mess." Q. What did she next say? A. She said he shot her.

Defendant relied upon self-defense. After giving his age as forty-eight and stating in answer to a question that he shot deceased, he testified in substance as follows: We were fixing to move, I had sold some chickens and she (Mrs. Majors) kept rearing all of the time about the chickens and fussing. We were fixing to move and it was hard times and we needed the money. It was before cotton picking and she kept growling about the chickens. We were back there packing up and we had taken down one of the beds and left one sitting in the corner and I was taking down a picture between the bed and the wall — I looked around and she was coming in with an axe and had it drawn on me — I said: "What are you going to do?" And she said: "I am going to end your life —" She looked like she was awful mad.

He further testified that after he shot his wife she dropped the axe, which he threw out on the wood pile, and that he went through the field but not on his hands and knees to a neighbor's house where he asked that "the law" be called for his protection; that when his wife became angry "she just got mad and she wanted to tear up the place and fight;" that she had "tried to poison us all," and did poison the cow, and had burned the barn and four mules. He denied having made threats or having tried to procure a gun. He introduced evidence tending to prove his own good character and Mrs. Majors' bad reputation as a violent and turbulent woman when angry.

I. In his motion for new trial defendant for the first time challenged the information on the grounds that it did not charge him with the violation of any law and is "too indefinite and uncertain and does not inform the defendant of theInformation. nature of the charge he is required to meet." In his brief here *Page 154 the only explanation of that challenge of the information is this: the information alleges in the usual form an assault made by defendant upon Mrs. Majors with a pistol loaded with gunpowder and leaden balls, which it is alleged he feloniously, etc., discharged "to, against and upon the said Mrs. J.W. Majors and that the said J.W. Majors with the metal balls aforesaid, out of the revolving pistol aforesaid, then and there by force of the gunpowder and leaden balls aforesaid . . . then and there feloniously . . . did strike, penetrate and wound her the said Mrs. J.W. Majors," etc. (Italics ours.) The contention seems to be that the information is rendered so vague and indefinite as to be insufficient, even after verdict, because it is first alleged that the pistol was loaded with leaden balls and when the missiles with which defendant struck deceased are next referred to they are described as metal balls. This objection to the information is hypercritical and without merit. Lead is a metal, so if the missiles were leaden balls they were metal balls. The phrase "metal balls aforesaid" could only be understood to mean the leaden balls previously mentioned in the information.

We considered and decided adversely to the defendant a somewhat similar contention in State v. Wilson, 34 S.W.2d 98, in which case the information charged that the pistol used was loaded with a leaden bullet and the proof failed to show of whatPlace of substance the bullet was composed. Except in theDeath. respect above referred to the information follows the form that has often been approved by this court. No other alleged defect in it is pointed out. It is sufficient.

II. Error is assigned in that the State failed to prove "the place of death of deceased as alleged in the information and thereby failed to make out its case against the defendant." The information alleged that the mortal wounds were inflicted in Pemiscot County, Missouri, and that deceased died in Mississippi County, Arkansas. The proof did not show where Mrs. Majors died.

So far as jurisdiction of the offense is concerned no question can arise.

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Bluebook (online)
44 S.W.2d 163, 329 Mo. 148, 1931 Mo. LEXIS 681, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-majors-mo-1931.