State v. McGinnis

59 S.W. 83, 158 Mo. 105, 1900 Mo. LEXIS 61
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedNovember 12, 1900
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 59 S.W. 83 (State v. McGinnis) 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. McGinnis, 59 S.W. 83, 158 Mo. 105, 1900 Mo. LEXIS 61 (Mo. 1900).

Opinion

GANTT, P. J.

The defendant was indicted for murder in the first degree in the circuit court of Bates county at the Tune term, 1899. He was duly arraigned and pleaded not guilty. On his trial at the February term, 1900, he was found guilty of murder in the first degree and from the sentence on that verdict he appeals to this court.

The evidence tended to prove the following facts:

About 7:30 o’clock on Sunday evening, April 16, 1899, Frederick Borcherding, a German farmer living on his farm in the southern portion of Bates county, Missouri, went out of his house to look after his stock in the barn lot north of his dwelling. His wife, Margaret Borcherding, was left in the house and one Arthur Collingsworth, a man employed about the premises, was in bed asleep in the upper story of the house. While Borcherding was outside, his wife, as testified to by her upon the witness stand, heard a conversa[110]*110tion between her husband and some other party, at the close of which Mr. Borcherding ran excitedly into the house and slammed the door in the face of the said person who, it seems, was pursuing him. Immediately thereupon a shot was fired from a pistol through the window and Mr. Borcherding fell wounded upon the kitchen floor. This wound resulted in Borcherding’s death a few days later.

After the shot was fired a man came into the house and demanded money of Mrs. Borcherding. It was dark in the house at this time, the light having gone out at the time the pistol shot was fired. The robber laid his hand upon Mrs. Borcherding as if to silence her (for she was screaming), and, showing her a pistol, commanded her to be quiet. 'He turned her loose, however, and went into a room behind the kitchen. Mrs. Borcherding then lighted the lamp, which had gone out at the time the pistol shot was fired, and the hired man, who had been awakened by the shot of the pistol, the screams of Mrs. Borcherding and the cries of her wounded husband, came downstairs into the kitchen and, at the command of Mr. Borcherding, went into another room for a gun. The robber then entered the kitchen and looked at Mr. Borcherding as he lay wounded upon the floor, and taking hold of Mrs. Borcherding, took her out of the house into the yard where, as Mrs. Borcherding testified, he made repeated demands upon her for money. The hired man, stepping back into the kitchen, saw through the open doors the forms of Mrs. Borcherding and the robber on the outside, but could not distinguish the face of either and, upon the trial, was able to give no other description of the robber than that he wore a long coat.

Bailing in his attempt to get money, the robber soon left the premises, going out into the road in front of the place. It was a moonlight night and Mrs. Borcherding testifies that the robber wore a rubber coat, lined inside, a large slouch hat [111]*111of grayish color, and had his trousers in his boots. She further stated that while she was with him on the outside of the house he rolled together something in paper and lighted it. Other witnesses testified that defendant was a cigarette smoker.

A few days later the defendant was arrested and brought to Mrs. Borcherding’s house for identification and upon the trial she testified that he was the same man who had committed the crime. At the time of his arrest, defendant had on his person a thirty-eight calibre Oolts revolver, sixty-five dollars in money and a ticket to Nevada, Missouri. He was taken to the house of Borcherding and was identified by Mrs. Borcherding as the robber who shot her husband.

C. Kugler testified that just after the shooting he came to Mr. Borcherding’s house from a northwesterly direction and that as he reached the gate he heard the sound of the beating of horse’s hoofs along the road west of the place; that from the sound the horse must have been going very fast.

Something like a dozen witnesses testified that on the evening of the day on which the murder was committed, at about four or five o’clock, they saw three men riding along the road in the direction of. Mr. Borcherding’s house. These men were one B. Merchant and one Ed. Abel, who rode in a wagon, and the defendant, who rode a horse either along by the side of the wagon or behind it. The defendant wore a slouch hat of light color and had a bundle, apparently a coat, strapped behind his saddle. Some of the witnesses testified that his horse was gray, and others that it was white, but all agree that it was of light color. At-the turn in the road^ B. Merchant seems to have parted from Abel and the defendant, as indeed he testified that he did, for the witnesses who testified to seeing defendant at those points along the road nearest to Borcherding’s house say that they saw Abel [112]*112and the defendant riding together on gray horses along the road in the direction of Borcherding’s house, and made no mention of Merchant. Those witnesses who saw Merchant, Abel and the defendant together, testified to a gray horse being led behind the wagon in addition to the horse which defendant rode.

Robert Davis, who lived about half a mile from Borcherding’s house and on an adjoining farm, on the Sunday evening of the murder, from his house saw a man mounted on a gray horse enter the field of his neighbor, Mr. Euchs, and ride along the side of the orchard upon a private road of Mr. Euchs in the direction of his house. This was about six o’clock, and after seven o’clock 'that evening the witness heard a gun shot and scream in the neighborhood, Tjut could' not locate the sound definitely, although he said that it seemed to come from the direction of Mr. Borcherding’s.

The members of the family of Mr. Euchs testified that Ed. Abel came to their house by the road just described before the sun was down and did not leave the place until the following morning.

Peter Schilt testified that he was at the house of Mr. Euchs that evening and that Ed. Abel came to the place by the private road running along the side of the orchard at about half past five and that no one was with him..

On the morning following the murder the defendant was seen at Stumptown by different witnesses, where he had gone to sell his white pony to one Dr. Lusk. One Mrs. Callahan, who saw him there, testified that there was a large roll behind his saddle. Defendant wore boots, light coat, dark pants and Jrigh crowned hat, and carried in his belt a pistol, which was of a dull blue color.

The boots, hat and other clothes which the defendant wore and the revolver which he carried when he was arrested were in evidence before the jury.

[113]*113Dr. E. J. Yeidt was the physician who dressed the wound of Borcherding and took the bullet from his body. He testified that the bullet had been somewhat flattened by passing through the window pane and through the backbone of Mr. Borcherding’s body, but that the bullet was of the same kind as the one which was taken from the defendant’s pistol after he was arrested. There was further evidence that bullets of this size were made especially to fit pistols of the kind which the defendant had.

Witness Lester Phillips testified that upon the request of the prosecuting attorney he concealed himself in the jail after the defendant’s arrest and overheard a conversation between the defendant and Ed.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
59 S.W. 83, 158 Mo. 105, 1900 Mo. LEXIS 61, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-mcginnis-mo-1900.