State v. McQuerry

406 S.W.2d 624, 1966 Mo. LEXIS 675
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedOctober 10, 1966
Docket52081
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 406 S.W.2d 624 (State v. McQuerry) 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. McQuerry, 406 S.W.2d 624, 1966 Mo. LEXIS 675 (Mo. 1966).

Opinion

*626 STOCKARD, Commissioner.

Robert W. McQuerry has appealed from a judgment wherein he was sentenced to confinement for a term of four years for manslaughter.

At the trial appellant was represented by counsel of his own selection who filed a motion for new trial after the jury verdict and a timely notice of appeal following judgment. The transcript on appeal filed in this court was not prepared at public expense. It appears that appellant is not in confinement pending this appeal, and presumably he is free on bond.

On July 13, 1966, the attorney who represented appellant in the trial court filed a motion in this court to be permitted to withdraw as counsel on appeal. He alleged therein that appellant “owns a farm and livestock and is financially able to pay for this appeal,” but that although requested to do so he has refused and still refuses to pay a reasonable attorney fee and advance the cost of printing a brief. A copy of the motion was sent to appellant. On July 21, 1966 this court granted counsel permission to withdraw, and a copy of that order was sent to appellant with a copy of the docket for the September term in which the appeal in this case was shown to be set for September 15, 1966. No communication of any kind has been received by this court from appellant or from anyone in his behalf pertaining to counsel’s request for permission to withdraw or pertaining to the setting of this case. At the trial appellant testified that he owned a 253 acre farm. We conclude from the record and from the file that appellant is not an indigent, and that he has voluntarily submitted this appeal to this court without counsel and without a brief. In these circumstances we review upon the record those matters required by Criminal Rule 28.02, V.A.M.R., and we review the assignments of error in the motion for new trial which present an issue for appellate review.

The first two assignments of error in the motion for new trial are that the trial court erred in refusing appellant’s motion for acquittal at the close of the evidence for the State and at the close of all the evidence. Appellant offered evidence in his behalf after the close of the State’s case, and for that reason we need consider only whether the motion made at the close of all the evidence should have been sustained. State v. Shelby, Mo., 327 S.W.2d 873, 874.

On the evening of February 12, 1965, appellant and his wife left their home near Winona in Shannon County in a pick-up truck to feed some hogs they kept nearby. They passed the log house home of Willis Robinett, then past 85 years of age, and his wife Clara Robinett who was 54 years of age. The Robinetts kept some milking goats in a barn across the road from their house, and after they had finished milking appellant and his wife came back to the Robinett house. According to appellant he wanted to talk to Mr. Robinett about tying up two dogs so they would not cripple his pigs, but Mrs. Robinett stated that the dogs were pups about three months old, and that appellant had given the pups to them. Mrs. Robinett also testified that she had entéred the house and was straining the milk when she heard a loud shot. She ran out of the house and her husband was sitting by the gate, and he screamed “my leg’s broken.” Mrs. Robinett carried a .22 caliber pistol, and she shot into the air but she did not know how many times. She said that she ran toward appellant’s truck, and “he [appellant] run me around there three or four times” and then shot her in the side when she was “heading back to [her] husband.” She then heard the first and only shot from her husband’s pistol. She had not heard any conversation between appellant and her husband. She carried a .22 caliber pistol and her husband carried a .32 caliber pistol (sometimes referred to as a 7.65 automatic) when they had gone to do the milking because appellant and his wife had threatened them, and said they were “going to run us off our home.” Later that evening a highway patrolman found at the *627 scene four .45 caliber shells and one shell from “a 7.65 automatic” which is “about the same caliber as a .32” and is interchangeable. The next morning the patrolman found a fifth .45 caliber shell “on the ring of the cab [of appellant’s truck] just above the windshield.” The .22 caliber pistol was a nine-shot revolver type weapon with a cylinder. The following morning it contained four empty shells and five bullets, and the patrolman who examined it did not recall that any of the bullets had been struck by the firing pin without being discharged. However, the sheriff stated that all five of the bullets which had not been discharged had been struck by the firing pin. There was a bullet mark on the door of appellant’s pick-up truck apparently made by a .22 caliber bullet. The sheriff testified that the following morning there were no cartridges in the clip of the .45 caliber pistol, but he believed there was one in the barrel. He did not know how many cartridges were in the clip of the .32 caliber pistol but he said there was none in the barrel, and that “one shell had been fired out of it.” Mr. Robinett died shortly after the shooting.5 On his body were found bullet holes in his left leg, in his right hand, “under the right arm, across the wrist,” and in his chest.

Appellant and his wife both testified. Appellant stated that he had stopped to talk to Mr. Robinett about his dogs, and that Mr. Robinett had “hooked the gate and started on down to me” when Mrs. Robinett “run from somewhere, in my right rear, a-shooting, and Mr. Robinett then, he run his hand in his pocket and pulled his gun.” Appellant tried to start his truck, but Mr. Robinett “had fired two shots,” so appellant took his gun which he had on the seat of his truck and shot his “first shot” which he aimed “at his chest.” Mr. Robinett “spun around” and sat down. He was “trying to pull the gun off” and “was still pointing, trying to use it, but he never did pull it off.” Appellant stated that the shots fired by him other than the first one were aimed at Mr. Robinett’s gun which he had on his knee. As soon as Mr. Robinett dropped his gun, appellant “rolled out on the left-hand side” of his truck, Mrs. Robinett was standing on the right-hand side “snapping a pistol in the window,” and appellant ran behind the truck “and shot at her [Mrs. Robinett] when she was standing at the door.” Mrs. Robinett then “started around the truck in front” and appellant “reversed” himself to meet her, but she did not go around the truck. Instead, she went over to Mr. Robinett, threw her gun by the side of his, and said, “I quit.” The testimony of appellant’s wife was substantially the same as that of her husband, except she stated that Mr. Robinett said he was going to kill appellant when he pulled his gun and started shooting.

By the information appellant was charged with murder in the first degree. The jury was instructed on murder in the first degree, murder in the second degree, and manslaughter. Appellant admitted that he intentionally shot Mr. Robinett, and the evidence establishes that the death resulted from the gunshot wounds received from appellant. There was no contention that the shooting was accidental. There unquestionably was a submissible case on second degree murder. See State v. Finn, Mo., 243 S.W.2d 67; and State v. Chamineak, Mo., 343 S.W.2d 153.

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Bluebook (online)
406 S.W.2d 624, 1966 Mo. LEXIS 675, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-mcquerry-mo-1966.