State v. May

43 S.W. 637, 142 Mo. 135, 1897 Mo. LEXIS 377
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedDecember 22, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 43 S.W. 637 (State v. May) 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. May, 43 S.W. 637, 142 Mo. 135, 1897 Mo. LEXIS 377 (Mo. 1897).

Opinion

Sherwood, J.

George and Charles May, respectively uncle and nephew, appeal to this court from their conviction of murder in the first degree. "William I. Burdette is the name of the person killed, and the indictment charges the homicide to have been done on the ninth day of February, 1896, with a heavy wooden club, and that with it the skull of Williám I. Burdette was broken and crushed by the defendants.

Touching the circumstances attendant on the tragedy, there is the usual conflict in the testimony. About two weeks prior to the ninth of February aforesaid, Charley May, as he was usually called, arrived at his uncle’s house; he was a stranger in those parts. William I. Burdette had a son by the name of “Bill” Burdette, who was a prominent figure in this presently-to-be-disclosed drama of the countryside. The elder Burdette and the elder May lived on adjoining farms and between them, as is frequently the case between rival nations occupying contiguous territory, there existed feelings less calculated to “raise a mortal to the skies” than to “drag an angel down.”

Old man Burdette would not let George May set traps on his farm to catch skunks, and there was anticipatory trouble between them in case the elder Burdette compelled the elder May to work a certain piece of road. It does not appear, however, that May ever was compelled to do such work. But toward “Bill” Burdette the son George May entertained a special aversion, which in about October of the precedent year gave token of its existence by a fight occurring between the parties which, as May got the better of the combat, resulted in the defeated party causing the arrest of May, and in consequence of the latter being fined, [140]*140created a deficit in his exchequer to the amount of $17.50. This financial outcome by no means tended to soften George May’s asperity of temper toward “Bill” Burdette and toward his father. This increased ascerbity of feeling in May’s breast caused him to utter to several neighbors of his divers and sundry threats of a less or greater force against the persons and lives of the two Burdettes. It is in evidence that these threats occurred in the early and middle of October, in November, and also in December prior to the homicide, and prior to Charles May’s advent at his uncle’s residence. Of these threats a patient search of this record does not afford a trace or indication that the younger May knew anything.

Bill Burdette had formerly been a resident of Kansas, and while there placed a pretium affectionis on a set of harness (Vide, 4 Cent. Dic. 4714; 5 Jacob, Law Dic. 281; also, Jones v. Williams, 139 Mo. loc. cit. 37; 39 S. W. Rep. 486) ; and in consequence of its informal appropriation, he was for a time forcibly secluded from ordinary social intercourse. On his release he returned to Missouri. But Charley May had also resided in Kansas and was in this respect his peer, and could add the similiter to Bill Burdette’s unconventional method of acquiring property. Shortly after the expiration of Charley May’s prison sentence he, too, returned to Missouri. These preliminaries are necessary to an understanding of the previous biographies of the chief persons mentioned in this record and of their relations to and toward each other. Having disposed of these prefatory matters, we proceed to relate those things which have a closer bearing on the issue joined in this case.

On the morning of Sunday, the ninth day of February, 1896, George May, his two little girls aged respectively thirteen and eleven years, and Charles [141]*141May, after suitably dressing themselves for the occasion, Charley May with his overcoat on, wended their way afoot to Sugar Creek church, a building about a mile or so from where they lived. Wm. I. Burdette and family, consisting of his wife and three daughters in the spring wagon, drawn by a pair of mules, and two daughters, one married and one single, on horseback, also betook themselves to the house of Cod. Claude Andrews also joined this cavalcade on its way to the objective point aforesaid, he being the attendant of one of Wm. I. Burdette’s daughters. Services being over, and a portion of the congregation still remaining in the church, some of them gathered around the two stoves. Among these, as “Bill” Burdette testifies, were George May and Charles May, as well as himself; that on this occasion George May pointed him out to Charley May (whom “Bill” Burdette did not then know) saying “there he is,” and Charley' May thereupon nodded his head; and that George May also pointed out at the same time to Charley May the father of the witness, and that this was done while about a dozen persons were gathered about the stove, and while witness was within some seven or eight feet of George May. No one else testifies to this designation of Bill Burdette by George May, although it would seem that others standing about the stove would of necessity have seen or heard it.

Pretty soon after this, George May, Charley and the little girls left for home, the road leading back to their home turning first west for about two hundred yards, and then turns south. On the east side of this road there was a hedge fence and a cornfield, and on the west side of this hedge between it and the road was a bank five or six feet high, and on this ran a path. At the corner where the road turns south there is a gate leading into Elliott’s field. Into this gate [142]*142defendants and the little girls turned as they proceeded south. Yery soon, however, Charley May and the two little girls got through the hedge, which it was easy to do, and walked in the path along the top of the bank. How soon George May got through the hedge and walked in the path does not clearly appear. Meanwhile Bill Burdette, who left the church a little after the Mays did, rode on his horse in the same direction in which they had gone. He overtook them soon after he had turned the corner, where the road, after proceeding west some two hundred yards, turns south. At this juncture he says he saw Charley May and the little girls just getting through the hedge and walking on top of the bank, about twenty-five yards from the corner; he says he did not see George then. Upon riding nearly opposite to them, he says Charley stopped, and said, “Hello, Wild Bill, never won a fight and never will.” Bill says he asked him what he knew about it, and he said: “ ‘Here’s one you can’t whip, you God damn son of a bitch,’ and I told him I didn’t know him and didn’t want any trouble, and George May says, ‘Catch him, God damn him, ■and kill him.’” That witness saw George May just before he spoke the words just quoted; that he was on the inside of the cornfield, coming up in a kind of a run; that immediately that George May uttered these words, Charley May jumped down the bank, there some three or four feet high; jumped off the bank into the road, pulled him off his horse, thumped him around and stuck a knife into him; that he did not see George May get clear through the hedge, but ' saw him with a club, and .that was the last thing before Charley May knocked him down again, etc.

A somewhat different version of this story is told by the little daughters of George May, who testified that after walking a short distance in the cornfield, they [143]

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Bluebook (online)
43 S.W. 637, 142 Mo. 135, 1897 Mo. LEXIS 377, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-may-mo-1897.