State v. Matthews

111 S.W.2d 62, 341 Mo. 1121, 1937 Mo. LEXIS 548
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedDecember 17, 1937
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 111 S.W.2d 62 (State v. Matthews) 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. Matthews, 111 S.W.2d 62, 341 Mo. 1121, 1937 Mo. LEXIS 548 (Mo. 1937).

Opinions

Appellant was charged with murder in the first degree. Upon a trial he was found guilty of manslaughter and sentenced to imprisonment in the penitentiary for a term of five years. He appealed.

The case originated in Laclede County, where there was a mistrial due to a disagreement on the part of the jury. A change of venue brought the case to Phelps County, where appellant was convicted. Appellant was alleged to have fatally stabbed one Bert Tracy, on the evening of November 24, 1934. Appellant and deceased had lived on adjoining farms near Lynchburg, Laclede County, Missouri. Evidence was introduced to support the following statement of facts: Appellant and deceased had not spoken to each other in a friendly manner for about five or six years. During this time deceased had made threats against appellant. A number of these were made in person. For example, appellant testified that on one occasion deceased threatened to strike him with a sledge hammer; that on *Page 1124 another occasion rocks were the instruments of attack; at another time a gun was displayed in a threatening manner, and that on the afternoon preceding the fatal stabbing deceased threatened to assault him with a car crank, but deceased's wife interfered and prevented the assault. There was also evidence of a number of threats made by appellant against deceased. The last of these was alleged to have been made a few hours before the stabbing, when appellant sharpened his knife and said he was going to use it on deceased. It may be stated that the evidence justifies the assertion that appellant and deceased had, as the boys say, "chips on their shoulders," ready and willing to fight at the first opportunity. Idle gossip was the occasion for the difficulty between the men on the afternoon of the killing, as well as the altercation which sent Tracy to his grave. This gossip was first brought to the attention of appellant and his wife at that time. Deceased was alleged to have said that one Marion Williams had made disparaging remarks concerning appellant's wife, which reflected on her moral character. It was at that time that deceased was alleged to have threatened appellant with a car crank. Marion Williams visited the home of appellant that same evening. He was asked by the Matthews whether he had made the remarks related by Tracy during the afternoon. Williams denied that he had, and stated that he would straighten the matter that evening after the church meeting. Williams testified that it was at this time that appellant sharpened his knife and placed it in his pocket remarking that he would have it ready for use that evening. This was denied by appellant.

All the parties concerned attended the church services that evening. They were: Williams and his wife, deceased and his wife and also appellant and his wife. At the conclusion of the services Williams requested appellant's wife and also Tracy and his wife to go outside the church building so he could straighten the question of the gossip. When these parties met outside, Williams, according to his own statement, undertook the impossible task of peaceably settling a dispute over gossip, between people who had not been on friendly terms for years. This alleged peace party soon broke out in a verbal battle, during which the participants called each other had names and used language which they had not learned at the church meeting. The evidence did not definitely disclose appellant's whereabouts at this time, but all parties agreed that he did not join in the affray until the deceased called appellant's wife a liar. At this point appellant took to the defense of his wife and called Tracy a liar. A physical combat followed immediately, between appellant and deceased, and resulted in deceased receiving stab wounds in the abdomen, from which he died ten days later.

At the trial the vital point of dispute was whether appellant or deceased *Page 1125 was the aggressor. Appellant's plea was self-defense. He introduced substantial evidence tending to prove that deceased advanced towards him with his hand raised; that deceased struck him over the head with a flashlight and continued striking him; that during this time he, appellant, cut the deceased with a knife to prevent further assault. The State introduced substantial evidence tending to prove that appellant was the aggressor; that he stabbed deceased before deceased struck him with a flashlight. The State also introduced evidence of statements made by appellant immediately after the altercation, which indicated that he was the aggressor. Appellant denied having made such statements and introduced evidence supporting his denial. It was shown by the defense that a number of the State's witnesses had, on previous occasions, that is, at the corner's inquest and at the previous trial, given testimony much more favorable to appellant than that given at the trial in Phelps County. A number of witnesses testified that deceased's reputation as being a turbulent and quarrelsome man was bad.

Tracy died on the fourth day of December. On that day he made a statement concerning the manner in which he was cut by appellant. The statement was reduced to writing by the prosecuting attorney and signed by deceased. It was introduced by the State as a dying declaration.

Appellant has briefed five points upon which he seeks a new trial. It is alleged that the trial court erred in admitting the alleged dying declaration. It is asserted, by appellant in his brief, that this statement is beyond the scope of the rule concerning the subject matter of dying declarations. It reads as follows:

"My name is Bert E. Tracy and I live at Lynchburg, Missouri. On the 24th day of November, 1934, my wife and I and Arthur Williams and his wife all went to church at Lynchburg. We got there about six o'clock P.M. and were at the store until church began about seven thirty. After church was over Marion Williams came to me in the churchhouse and asked me to go outside with him. I went. Also Ollie Matthews, Marion Williams and my wife, Pearl Tracy, went outside. When I got out I said `I know what you are outside here for to prove by Ollie that you never tried her.' I then noticed Max Matthews out there and when he heard Marion and I talking he said to Marion that he knew he was a liar. About that time Max Matthews stabbed me with a knife in the stomach. I hit him with a flashlight after he cut me the first time and tried to grab him. He then stabbed me in the leg and could not pull the knife out. He said while he was knifeing me that he had told me he was going to cut my guts out."

[1] It is evident that the above statement contains only statements of facts and does not contain any conclusion as appellant *Page 1126 contends. To be admissible such statements should be restricted to the circumstances immediately attending the act and form a part of the res gestae. [State v. Clift, 285 S.W. 706, l.c. 707 (4).] Upon a retrial the forepart of the statement, relating to matters which transpired before the parties left the church building, while not vital or material should not be admitted. The rule was concisely stated in State v. Peak, 292 Mo. 249,237 S.W. 466, l.c. 469 (3, 4):

"The rule here as elsewhere in regard to dying declarations is that they should be restricted to the identification of the accused, the act of killing and the circumstances immediatelyattending the act, forming a part of the res gestae, and to render them admissible, that they should be made in the presence of an impending realization of death and in the absence of a hope of recovery." (Italics ours.)

In State v. Kyle, 225 S.W. 1012, l.c. 1017, and State v. Jamerson, 252 S.W. 682, l.c.

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Bluebook (online)
111 S.W.2d 62, 341 Mo. 1121, 1937 Mo. LEXIS 548, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-matthews-mo-1937.