State v. McMullin

71 S.W. 221, 170 Mo. 608, 1902 Mo. LEXIS 92
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedDecember 16, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 71 S.W. 221 (State v. McMullin) 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. McMullin, 71 S.W. 221, 170 Mo. 608, 1902 Mo. LEXIS 92 (Mo. 1902).

Opinion

SHERWOOD, P. J.

Twenty years in the penitentiary was the term of imprisonment awarded defendant for shooting to death with a revolver Albert S. Chambers on December 3, 1900, the jury having-found defendant guilty of murder in the second degree, when put upon his trial for the first degree of that crime.

The substance and effect of the testimony will be found adduced in the following statement and such additions as have been made thereto :

[613]*613The tragedy occurred on the sidewalk at the southeast corner of Broadway and Marietta streets in the city of Excelsior Springs, the same being the northwest corner of what is known as the Boston Store. Broadway, sixty feet wide, runs east and west, and Marietta street, forty feet in width, runs north and -south. The bank is located at the southwest corner of these two streets, and its front door is on the corner, so that any one coming out of the door will be facing toward the place where the shooting took place.

Defendant and Chambers, the deceased, were both residents of Excelsior Springs. They had had differences over business matters, and for some time had mot been on good terms.

The afternoon of the shooting, the defendant, in •company with Samuel J. Rowell, walked north along the west side of Marietta, street to Broadway, the bank corner, where they separated, Rowell going on north across Broadway, while McMullin turned east across Marietta, toward the Boston Store corner.

Chambers was walking west along the south side ■of Broadway, and the two met on the sidewalk at the Boston Store corner. They passed each other a step •or two, the deceased turning toward the south as if to .go down the east side of Marietta street. As they passed each other one of them called the other a son-■of-a-bitch. In his dying declaration, Chambers says McMullin said that to him. McMullin on the other hand testified that Chambers used the epithet toward him. At any rate, as soon as the word was used •Chambers turned on his left partially to McMullin and said, “Go on, I don’t want any trouble with you,” and McMullin fired. Chambers was standing with his hands down by his side, and when the bullet struck him he threw his left hand upon the wound in his breast, his right following immediately, but trembling in the air, as of it were partially paralyzed, and could be raised with difficulty, and then, with both hands clasping his breast, he staggered off the sidewalk diagonally across Marietta street, going in a south[614]*614west direction. McMnllin put Ms pistol in Ms pocket and turning continued Ms walk leisurely up the street, smoking a cigar.

The whole thing happened in an instant. Just time enough for two men to meet, turn, and the shot was fired. Rowell, who separated from McMullin at the bank corner, and who was walking across Marietta, heard the shot before he had gotten entirely across the street.

Five days later, Chambers died from the effects of his wound. Examination revealed the fact that the bullet struck deceased between the seventh and eighth rib, about one inch to the right of the breast bone. A slight impingement by the bullet upon the flesh immediately to the left of the bullet hole showed that it was undoubtedly fired from a point slightly to the left of deceased. TMs was also shown by the fact that the bullet, in passing through the vest, struck at the left edge of the button and passed under the button to the right without injuring it, which it could not have done unless it was fired from a point slightly to deceased’s left.

Before his death, Chambers made a dying statement or declaration as to what occurred at the shooting. He was informed by his physician and by Captain Moore, on the morning of the day he died, that Ms. death was certain and near at hand. After realizing fully that he was at the point of death, and had no hope of recovery, he dictated Ms dying statement and signed it.

Said statement being in words and figures the following, to-wit:

“I, Albert Chambers, realize that I am in a dying condition, I have no hope of recovery; realizing I am in the presence of death, make this as my last and dying statement: I was coming down the street; he, Mc-Mullin, said, ‘You damn son-of-a-bitch, I will kill you;’ when he said that I said, ‘You go along, I don’t want no trouble with you,’ I said, ‘Go on, you leave me [615]*615alone;’ he stopped, took aim and skot me; I said nothing else; I made no threat or demonstration and had no weapon; I had nothing in my hand. [Dr. Bogard took my knife from my pants pocket after the shooting.] I am positive I made no demonstration of any kind; McMnllin was walking fast and seemed to he mad. He shot me not two seconds after we met; he took the pistol out of his right hip pocket. He was standing on the out edge of the sidewalk, and I was standing near the middle. The first remark made when we met was MeMullin called me a damn son-of-a-bitch. This was in front of the Boston Store at Excelsior Springs, Missouri.
“A. S. CHAMBERS.
“T. N. Bogard.
“James W. Snapp.
“John King.
“Josephine Lashley.
“State of Missouri, County of Clay.
ss
“Subscribed and sworn to before me by Albert S. Chambers this 8th day of December, 1900, at 11:30 o’clock a. m. Term expires June 22, 1901.
“Harris L. Moore.
[Seal.] “Notary Public, Clay county, Mo.”

The words, “Dr. Bogard took my knife from my pants pocket after the shooting,” inclosed in brackets, were excluded by the court on its own motion and said words were not read to the jury.

About three-quarters of an hour later he expressed his absolute certainty that he was going to die very soon, and had no hope of recovery, and reaffirmed the declaration as it was read over to him sentence by sentence. A third time the statement was gone over with him, and he was asked if he was perfectly certain he was going to die soon, and if his declaration were true, and he again expressed his conviction that death was [616]*616soon and certain, and declared that Ms statement was true.

Again, just one hour and forty minutes before he died, in the presence of several witnesses, he said he was about to die and could not recover; and in this solemn moment, when adjured to tell the truth, the whole truth and nothing- but the truth, he reaffirmed Ms declaration sentence by sentence, and then as an entirety.

At the trial, self-defense was set up, the defendant asserting that the deceased drew a knife and was advancing upon him with arm upraised when he fired; and that, upon receiving the wound, deceased closed his knife, replaced it in Ms trouser’s pocket and turned away. A number of witnesses, in various directions from the two, saw what took place the instant the shot was fired. None of them, however, saw anytMng in deceased’s hands, except the defendant himself and Mrs. Henry, a servant in the family of the defendant’s mother. The latter testified that she was across the street and saw a knife in deceased’s hands. Her testimony, however, is contradicted by that of Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
71 S.W. 221, 170 Mo. 608, 1902 Mo. LEXIS 92, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-mcmullin-mo-1902.