State v. McDaniel

80 S.W.2d 185, 336 Mo. 656, 1935 Mo. LEXIS 612
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMarch 5, 1935
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 80 S.W.2d 185 (State v. McDaniel) 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. McDaniel, 80 S.W.2d 185, 336 Mo. 656, 1935 Mo. LEXIS 612 (Mo. 1935).

Opinion

*659 ELLISON, J.

The appellant, a negro twenty-eight years old, was convicted of murder in the first degree in the Greene County Circuit Court and his punishment assessed by a jury at death. The charge was that he shot with a pistol and killed his paramour, a negress named Savilla “Billie” Scott.. His defense on the facts was an alibi. In his brief on this appeal, and in his motion for new trial in the circuit court, errors are assigned: (1) in the transcript of the proceedings at the preliminary hearing in justice court, which was filed in the circuit court as a basis for the prosecution; (2) because the circuit court permitted the filing of an amended transcript and an amended information; (3) in the admission of certain evidence offered by the State; (4) and on the grounds that the verdict was against the weight of the evidence and unsupported by substantial, credible evidence.

Appellant had served one term in the State penitentiary for burglary and larceny and another in the Federal penitentiary at Leavenworth for some violation of the liquor laws. At and for some timé prior to the date of the homicide he was unemployed, and the evidence indicates he spent most of his time loafing at a pool hall. *660 The deceased Savilla Scott was working as an elevator girl at a department store in Springfield. She and the appellant had been living together for about nine months prior to her death. He declared they got along together very well barring occasional minor spats and quarrels. But there was testimony for the State that the two had been having trouble for a long time over the appellant’s attentions to other women. Answering a question on cross-examination as to whether he had not given the deceased a black eye two or three weeks before the homicide, he answered, “I didn’t black her eye; I smacked her.” There was a negro dance in Springfield the night before the night of the homicide. Three witnesses for the State testified that the appellant and the deceased attended this dance but that he went home without her. She followed later with her sister and her sister’s husband, was crying, and started to take down the curtains in her bedroom with the announced intention of moving to some other abode. These witnesses testified the appellant said to “let her go; he didn’t give a damn.” The appellant admitted on cross-examination that the deceased did take down the curtains, but he said “she didn’t leave. ’ ’

The body of the deceased was found at the side of a country road about seven miles south of Springfield in Greene County early in the morning of March 29, 1933, by some farmers of the vicinity. The road was a dirt road running north and south parallel to and about a. mile east of a main road known as the south Campbell Street road. About one-eighth mile south of the place where the body was discovered a crossroad extends west from the dirt road to the Campbell Street road, and it seems there were other east and west crossroads connecting the two highways within two miles north of that point.

Dr. Fulton, a neighboring physician, was called by the farmers who came upon the corpse. He summoned the coroner, Judge Am-bar'ger, and the latter brought with him Dr. Murray C. Stone. They arrived within about two hours, around eight o’clock in the morning. In the meantime the body had remained under the observation of several persons, who testified at the trial, in the same condition and position as when discovered. Dr. Stone took four photographs on the spot, which were admitted in evidence over appellant’s objection. By these, in connection with his testimony and that of several other witnesses who had viewed the scene, it was shown that, there were two fresh automobile tracks along the east side of the road. The body lay across these and five or six feet north of it the tracks were ground deeper into the dirt, as if by the spinning of the wheels of the automobile. The ground was too hard to retain the impression of footprints.. None were found, and while other automobile tracks could be seen, they were further to the west in the traveled portion of the road or beyond, and did not appear to be fresh.

*661 The woman's clothing was not disarranged. Her hat was still on her head. She lay almost front downward, but rested a little more on the left side with the left check on the ground and the face to the south. She had been shot five times with a revolver of large caliber. One bullet had passed clear through the right thigh, ranging downward and striking the femur. It was still in the clothing. Four bullets had penetrated the skull, all within a small space about the right ear and temple — the side of the head which -was up as the body lay on the ground. Two of the bullets had entered through the same hole making it larger. All four passed entirely through the brain and ■were extracted at a post-mortem, and admitted in evidence without objection. A large pool of blood covered the ground immediately under the head and blood and brain substance had spattered to a distance of several feet. Unburned grains of powder were found in the hat.

It was Dr. Stone’s opinion that the woman had been dead several hours; that the bullets penetrating the brain had caused instant death; and that the revolver had been fired into the head at close range as she lay on the ground. He explained that the brain substance had probably been forced out and scattered to a considerable distance by the bullet which passed through the hole previously made by another bullet. He said there would not have been so much blood on the ground if the woman had been killed elsewhere and brought there; and that the blood and brain substance -would not have scattered to such a distance merely from the hurling of the body out of a moving car. That this was not done also seems apparent from the position of the body and the fact that the clothing was not disarranged. The conclusion drawn by Dr. Stone and the other eyewitnesses from the circumstance that the bods’- lay across the fresh automobile tracks a few' feet south of the scooped out places therein, was that the automobile which made the tracks had stopped while headed north; that the woman and the murderer had gone around behind it where she was shot and fell across the tracks, and the spinning of the back wheels in hurriedly starting the car forw'ard had caused the deeper marks in the road.

The appellant was picked up by the sheriff at a pool hall the morning after the homicide. He said he did not know Savilla Scott had been killed, and declared he had been at home all evening and all night. He also denied owning or having a pistol of large caliber. He testified at the coroner’s inquest and his story there was about the same. He said he called for the deceased at the store where she worked about noon on the day of the homicide and took her home. She prepared dinner, and after the meal he went back to the pool hall about two o’clock and remained until six, when he returned to his home. The deceased was there but they did not eat supper. About *662 eight o’clock she dressed and said she was going out and would be back after a while. About nine-thirty he put his car in the garage on the premises and went to bed. He said he was alone all that evening and night except that a man named Edward Warren came by and sat a while; and that occasionally the deceased would stay away from home all night.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
80 S.W.2d 185, 336 Mo. 656, 1935 Mo. LEXIS 612, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-mcdaniel-mo-1935.