State v. McKee

190 So. 325, 193 La. 39, 1939 La. LEXIS 1166
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMay 29, 1939
DocketNo. 35099.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 190 So. 325 (State v. McKee) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. McKee, 190 So. 325, 193 La. 39, 1939 La. LEXIS 1166 (La. 1939).

Opinions

HIGGINS, Justice.

Robert McKee (alias Bobbie Horn) and Eugene Ricker, defendants and appellants, with Frank Savoca, Sam Mason, Joseph Vaccaro and Henry Riehm, were jointly indicted and charged with the murder of James Douglas Acomb on October 3, 1927, between 9 and 11 o’clock in the morning.

The State requested arid was granted a severance and the defendants (appellants) were jointly tried, the jury returning a verdict of “guilty without capital punishment” against Robert McKee (alias Bobbie Horn) and “guilty as charged” against Eugene Ricker. The former was sentenced to the State Penitentiary at hard labor during the remainder of his natural life and the latter was condemned to be hanged on a date to be fixed by the Governor of the State.

The defendants have appealed from the verdicts of the jury and the sentences of the Court. They rely' upon five bills of exception in asking for the annulments of the verdicts of the jury and the judgments of the Court.

In order that the issues presented by the exceptions may be better understood, a brief statement of the facts is necessary.

• On the date and at the time alleged in the indictment, James D. Acomb, the cashier and paymaster for the Daily States, a newspaper corporation with its *43 place of business located on the uptown river corner of Camp and St. Joseph Streets, this City, in accordance with his usual custom, left the building with a black leather satchel and was driven in an automobile by Burrell Townsend, a colored chauffeur, to the Bank where he received $5,500 cash, which was to be used in paying the employees of the Company. At the time of his return there was a light rain falling and as he stepped out of the car on to the sidewalk with the satchel containing the money in his hand, a young man, without any word of warning, thrust a pistol at him and grabbed the satchel and after obtaining possession of it and while Acomb’s arms were lifted, shot him in the right side, inflicting a wound which caused his death two days later in the hospital.

Shortly after the robbery, the police arrested Henry Riehm and Robert McKee (alias Bobbie Horn), together with other suspects, all of whom were released for want of sufficient evidence and identification of either one of them as the party who robbed and shot the deceased. Later, the State charged Alex Morgante with the offense in question, but he was also released on a preliminary hearing because of the failure of identification and the lack of evidence. •

On April 30, 1937, almost ten years after the commission of the crime, the parties named in the indictment were indicted by the Grand Jury for the murder of Acomb, as a result of the evidence produced through the continued efforts of the police.

At the time of the trial on March 14, 1938, Frank Savoca was dead and Sam Mason and Joseph Vaccaro were confined to the Louisiana State Penitentiary for a crime committed by them subsequent to the offense in question and they, together with Henry Riehm, who was used as a witness for the State, were not tried, the State having been granted its motion for a severance.

Burrell Townsend, the colored chauffeur, and Mrs. Elsa Lea, a white woman who was a music teacher and who was standing at the entrance of the newspaper office about three feet from where the shooting occurred, identified Eugene Rick-er as the bandit and killer.

Henry Riehm, who was formerly employed in selling newspapers for the Daily States and who was familiar with the Company’s practice in handling its payroll, testified that at the suggestion of Robert McKee (alias Bobbie Horn) he and Eugene Ricker entered into an agreement to rob Acomb. In accordance with their plan, on the morning in question, the three stationed themselves on the streets near the Daily States Building and when Acomb left the building, Riehm tipped his cap to them as a signal to identify Acomb as the cashier of the Company. McKee (alias Horn) then moved away from the scene and Ricker was to take a position so as to intercept Acomb upon his return to the Company from the Bank. Riehm, according to instructions, immediately left and went to the home of a relative to be with his minor son so as to have evidence of an alibi, in the event he were arrested. He *45 and McKee (alias Horn) were arrested that night and held in jail for several days, but having' vigorously protested their innocence, they were released because of insufficient evidence. The witness stated that he received in various sums and at different dates $375 from McKee (alias Horn) and that he and McKee (alias Horn) jointly purchased an automobile for $150, which was sold in November, 1927, for $125 and the proceeds of the sale divided between them. He described how he and McKee (alias Horn) spent the money “having a good time and gambling,” and admitted that he had been arrested a number of times for various offenses previous to this trouble.

The State corroborated his evidence by the testimony of the seller and the purchaser of the automobile and supported the colored chauffeur’s testimony with character evidence given by reputable and outstanding white men.

The defense of McKee (alias Horn) was an alibi, his mother and sister testifying that he was home at the time of the robbery. In behalf of both McKee (alias Horn) and Ricker, testimony was offered tending to show that the State’s witnesses had contradicted themselves and the two eye-witnesses to the tragedy were uncertain as to the description and identity of. the killer.

Two witnesses testified, in behalf of Ricker, that they were in the immediate vicinity of the scene of the hold-up and that he was not the man who robbed and shot Acomb. The State sought to contradict these witnesses by the testimony they had given in the trial of Alex Morgante, who was released, on a preliminary hearing, from the charge that he was the one who had killed the deceased. In this hearing, Burrell Townsend and Mrs. Elsa Lea, the two witnesses for the State, who identified Ricker as the bandit and killer, would not identify Morgante.

The first bill of exception was reserved to the district judge overruling the defendants’ objection and permitting the district attorney to propound the following questions to . Burrell Townsend, the witness for the State:

“Q. Now Burrell, do you know * * * this man Horn? A. I have seen him, yes, sir; yes, sir, I have seen Mr. Horn.
“Q. Where did you see him? A. I saw him lots of times around Poydras; I saw ■him lots of times around St. Joseph and Camp.
“Q. Did you see him on the day of the killing? A. No, sir.
“Q. Did you see him at any time before the date of the killing? A. Yes, sir, I have seen him before the date of the killing, but I didn’t see him the day of the killing.
“Q. How long before the date of the shooting did you see him? A. Oh, say probably 15 or 16 days.
“Mr. Craven: I object, if your Honor please, how many times he saw Horn ot how many times he didn’t see Horn; it is not connected with the case.
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Bluebook (online)
190 So. 325, 193 La. 39, 1939 La. LEXIS 1166, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-mckee-la-1939.