State v. Mayberry

272 S.W.2d 236, 1954 Mo. LEXIS 787
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedNovember 8, 1954
Docket44087
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 272 S.W.2d 236 (State v. Mayberry) 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. Mayberry, 272 S.W.2d 236, 1954 Mo. LEXIS 787 (Mo. 1954).

Opinion

DALTON, Presiding Judge.

Defendant killed Charles Talley in Frankclay, St. Francois County on the 23rd day of May, 1948, by stabbing him with a knife. He was charged with murder in the first degree and the cause went on change of venue tp the Circuit Court of Bollinger County, where defendant was convicted of murder in the second degree and his punishment assessed at 25 years imprisonment in the state penitentiary. He has appealed, but has not favored us with a brief. It is, nevertheless, our duty, to examine the record and, in doing so, we must look to the assignments in defendant’s motion for a new trial for his assignments of error, and consider such of them as are sufficient under Sup.Ct. Rule 27.20, 42 V.A.M.S., Section 547.030 RSMo 1949, V.A.M.S., to preserve anything for appellate review. Sup. Ct. Rule 28.02, Section 547.270 RSMo 1949, V.A.M.S.; State v. McCormack, Mo.Sup., 263 ,S.W.2d 344, 345. The motion contains 23 assignments covering numerous matters, such as the admission of evidence, the rejection of evidence, the conduct of the trial, the giving of instructions and the alleged improper argument of counsel for the state. There is no contention that the evidence was not sufficient to sustain the conviction of murder in the second degree.

This is the second appeal by this defendant. A prior judgment of conviction of murder in the second degree and a sentence of 55 years imprisonment in the state penitentiary was reversed and the cause remanded for a new trial. State v. Mayberry, 360 Mo. 35, 226 S.W.2d 725. Reference is had to the statement of facts in the opinion in that-case for the relationship of the parties, the surrounding facts and circumstances and a review of the evidence tending to support defendant’s theory of defense. Substantially the same facts as reviewed in that opinion appear in this record and they will not be further reviewed. Only a brief additional statement of the state’s evidence concerning the actual commission of the offense is required, together with a statement of certain other facts and circumstances.

The record indicates that defendant was jealous of Talley (the deceased) and was suspicious of the relations between him and defendant’s wife. Defendant thought deceased. “was messing around with her” and defendant was further suspicious of the reasons for her sudden trip to Frankclay only a few days before the occasion in question and of her failure to return to her home in St. Louis on Saturday evening before the difficulty on Sunday. The ground for these suspicions clearly appears from the testimony of defendant and his wife and certain corroborating evidence developed by the cross-examination of certain witnesses for the state.

The state’s evidence tended to show that defendant came to the home of his stepdaughter, Pauline Gilliam, in Frankclay between 9 and 10 p. m., Sunday, May 23, 1948, after all members of the household had retired. He opened the front door, stepped in the living room, turned on the electric light and saw and spoke to his wife who was sleeping on a cot in the living room. He said: “I warned you, God damn you.” The light in the living room aroused defendant’s stepdaughter, who was sleeping with her husband in the adjacent bedroom to the west. There was a six foot archway between the two rooms. The stepdaughter saw defendant go immediately *239 to the kitchen to the north of the living room, where he turned on the kitchen light and then opened the drapes covering the doorway between the kitchen and the bedroom to the west in which Talley, Pauline’s father and the former husband of defendant’s wife, was sleeping. When defendant entered Talley’s bedroom, he had an open knife in his hand. Talley was in bed, with his head to the west, lying on his left side, facing the north wall, with the bed covers over him. Without saying a word, defendant proceeded to the bed and stabbed him. Pauline testified: “He had a knife. * * * I seen him stab my daddy in the belly.” Talley had turned over and started to raise up when the stabbing began. Talley died a few minutes later of various stab wounds over his body, particularly over the chest and abdomen. Defendant then went outside and awaited the arrival of members of the Highway Patrol. Deceased’s body was found in the opening between the kitchen and living room.

When two patrolmen arrived in a patrol automobile, defendant approached and said: “Here I am and I am ready to go * * *. I killed him * * * this is the knife that I used to kill him with.” Defendant then handed to the patrolmen a pocket knife which had blood on both blades. Defendant-at their direction then took a seat in the patrol car. After defendant was seated in the front seat of the car he was talking to some men on the outside, and Sergeant A. G. White heard him “tell some of them that were standing beside the car that he had killed Talley and he stated he went inside the house and Talley was in bed and he stabbed Talley in the stomach before Talley could get the covers off of the bed, and after Talley got up he cut him several more times.” While still seated in the patrol car, defendant told his story to Trooper H. H. Barr. He said, “ ‘I killed him in cold blood murder, I don’t ask anything of anybody, and I am willing to take my punishment. * * * I came down here to kill the son-of-a-bitch if I caught them together * * *. I came down from St. Louis, and I came over here to Frankclay in a taxicab and went down to my daughter’s house and asked where my wife was, and they said over there’,-and he said he knew they meant over to Guy Gilliam’s house. He said he went over to Guy Gilliam’s home and opened the front door without knocking and switched on the light and saw Gretchen his wife sleeping on the bed there, and then he went on into the kitchen and switched on the kitchen light, and saw Charley Talley in the bedroom adjoining the kitchen. He said, ‘I went in and stabbed him in the stomach’, and he said, ‘he got up and threw something at me, and I thought it was a vase, and I really went to work on him then * * *. I didn’t think anymore about killing the son-of-a-bitch than I would a dog.’ ”

A blanket and a comfort, which a patrolman testified he found on the floor in the center of Talley’s bedroom were in evidence and the testimony shows that there were a number of cuts and holes in the blanket, one in the middle of it, and there were several holes in the comfort, “one hole going clear through the comfort and it had blood on it” and there were also several cuts on the side of the comfort. Other facts will be stated in the course of the opinion.

Defendant’s first assignment in his motion for a new trial is that the court erred in refusing.to allow James Mayberry, defendant’s brother, to testify in rebuttal that he made a statement, “why did you kill the dog and let -the bitch go.” Defendant offered, to show that James Mayberry made such a statement to defendant and others at the time defendant was seated in the automobile after his arrest. There is no evidence tending to show that defendant had made any such statement to anyone. The evidence referred to, which was offered and excluded, was not in rebuttal of any of the state’s evidence. It was immaterial, irrelevant and wholly incompetent for any purpose and was properly excluded. Defendant testified that he made no statements “at all” to Trooper Barr or Sergeant White and that he had not said in their, presence that he had no more regret than if he had killed a dog.

*240

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Bluebook (online)
272 S.W.2d 236, 1954 Mo. LEXIS 787, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-mayberry-mo-1954.