State v. McLain

92 Mo. App. 456, 1902 Mo. App. LEXIS 496
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 18, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 92 Mo. App. 456 (State v. McLain) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. McLain, 92 Mo. App. 456, 1902 Mo. App. LEXIS 496 (Mo. Ct. App. 1902).

Opinion

GOODE, J.

The defendant was convicted of the malicious destruction of a threshing machine by causing a boy, who-was his ward, to hide pieces of iron in the shocks of wheat on the farm of a neighbor of the defendant, by the name of' Thompson, knowing that said wheat would be cleaned by the thresher, and intending that the machine should be injured or ruined by the iron being carried through it along with the bundles of wheat in which it was concealed.

A motion to quash the information was filed and overruled and this ruling is assigned for error, the theory of the assignment being that section 1959 of the Revised Statutes of' 1899 affords no basis for a criminal proceeding for malicious injury to a threshing machine or other similar property, as it only provides against the destruction of fruit and ornamental trees, shrubs or other growing things on inclosures, enumer-, ated in it, or others not enumerated but generically the same. But the last clause of the section embraces in its provisions the-willful destruction or injury of any goods, wares, merchandise or other personal property of another, which clause was added to the statute by an amendment to be found in the Session Acts of 1815.

The proper construction of the statute since the amendment was made, is that it covers all wilíful, malicious injuries to any kind of personal property belonging to another, and that the legislative purpose in amending it was to broaden its scope so as to protect all classes of property from destructive-acts inspired by spite or wantonness. Such acts are an indictable offense at common law in this country, and the present statute is declaratory of the common law in that respect. 2' Wharton on Criminal Law (2 Ed.), sec. 1066, et seq. and notes; [459]*459State v. Watts, 48 Ark. 56. We find tbe statute is a good foundation for tbe charge.

It is contended there was a failure of proof as to some of tbe acts stated in tbe information as a substantive part of tbe offense. We quote tbe information to show what these were:

“Now comes T. D. Hines, prosecuting attorney in and-for Cape Girardeau county, Missouri, and upon bis oath of office and tbe affidavit of James Thompson, gives tbe court to be officially informed and charges that George P. McLain at tbe county and state aforesaid, on or about tbe twenty-fourth day of July, A. D. 1899, willfully, unlawfully and maliciously did injure and break and partially destroy a certain ‘Russell Separator,’ threshing machine, tbe personal property of one Belle Elbacber, then and there being, by then and there putting and placing and causing to be put and placed, certain and divers large pieces of scrap-iron concealed within certain sheaves or bundles of wheat belonging to the said James Thompson, with intent, then and there, to injure and break the said machine, and then and there willfully, unlawfully and maliciously did cause the said bundles of wheat and the said pieces of scrap-iron to be run through the said threshing machine with great speed, force and violence, then and thereby breaking, injuring, and partially destroying, the cylinder and concave of the said threshing machine, contrary to the statutes in such cases made and provided, and against the peace and dignity of the State.”

Appellant’s contention in regard to the deficiency of evidence to uphold the verdict is, that there is nothing to show or tending to show defendant caused the pieces of iron to he run through the threshing machine, as he was not present at the stacking or threshing of Thompson’s wheat and had nothing to do with it directly or indirectly.

It appears that the iron was concealed in the sheaves of wheat by a boy named Vernie Ramsey, who was a nephew of the defendant’s wife, and had lived in their home for about [460]*460eight years. He was also a nephew of James Thompson, the owner of the wheat. Some time prior to the institution of the prosecution, the boy had become unfriendly to his uncle, the defendant, ahd had gone to live with another uncle, William Minton, who, it seems, was appointed his guardian in lieu of the defendant. The pieces of iron were put in the wheat during the month of July, 1899, and the information was filed nearly a year afterwards on the affidavit of James Thompson.

There was no testimony and not a single circumstance tending to prove the guilt of the defendant, except the testimony of the boy Yernie Ramsey, who swore he was coerced into hiding the iron in the wheat by the command of the defendant, and the latter’s threats to whip him if he didn’t. _ He says his uncle broached the subject to him some time before the act was perpetrated and brought it up afterwards on several occasions, finally telling him one morning if he did not do it that day he would stripe his back from nne end to the other. Through fear of the impending punishment, the boy says he took the pieces of iron from a pile of scrap-iron in a granary the following night, carried them to the wheat field and hid them in the sheaves. McLain admits he was on bad terms with Thompson, but that circumstance furnishes but slight, if any, motive for the commission of the crime with which he is charged. His motive must be found, if at all, in a statement of the boy that the defendant said to him he understood the Elbachers were going to thresh Thompson’s wheat before they did his, and if they did he would know how to fix them. In point of fact, the defendant’s wheat was threshed some time before Thompson’s and this evidence as to motive is certainly very weak.

But the uncorroborated testimony of an accomplice, while it is to be guardedly received, is held sufficient to sustain a conviction. State v. Jones, 64 Mo. 391; State v. Watson, 31 Mo. 361.

[461]*461Eamsey’s testimony was unquestionably competent, and we find tbe court gave an appropriate instruction to tbe jury to receive it witb great caution and not to convict on tbat testimony alone unless fully satisfied of its truth, or unless it- was corroborated by other evidence in tbe cause.

As Eamsey’s testimony was admissible and as tbe jury bad the right to return a verdict of guilty based on it alone, if they were fully convinced of its truth, it follows there was evidence tending to prove the defendant caused the iron to be run through the threshing machine with force and violence, breaking, injuring and partially destroying the cylinder, as charged in the information, unless appellant’s argument that, in order to have been guilty of causing this result, he must have been present and assisted in the threshing. But this reasoning runs counter to the whole theory of the criminal law in regard to the causal connection which an accused -must have sustained to a criminal act to render him guilty of it; which as we understand it, is that the result held to be a crime must have been the natural consequence of some act which the accused performed with the intention that it should produce such a result and adapted to produce it. It is not required that the accused should have personally done every act or taken every step leading up to a catastrophe which the law denounces as an offense, to be guilty of its commission; but it is only required that he should intentionally set in operation a cause or agency adequate to accomplish the crime and which finally did accomplish it.

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Related

State v. Weston
275 S.W.2d 601 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1955)
State v. Sargent
256 S.W.2d 265 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1953)
State ex rel. Smith v. Dykeman
134 S.W. 120 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1911)
State v. Shanks
130 S.W. 451 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1910)

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Bluebook (online)
92 Mo. App. 456, 1902 Mo. App. LEXIS 496, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-mclain-moctapp-1902.