State v. Medley

232 S.W.2d 519, 360 Mo. 1032, 1950 Mo. LEXIS 673
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJuly 10, 1950
Docket41694 and 41707
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 232 S.W.2d 519 (State v. Medley) 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. Medley, 232 S.W.2d 519, 360 Mo. 1032, 1950 Mo. LEXIS 673 (Mo. 1950).

Opinion

DALTON, J.

Defendants were jointly charged, tried and convicted of possession of burglar’s tools under Sec. 4449 R. S. 1939 and the punishment of each was fixed at five years imprisonment in the penitentiary. A single record has been brought up for review on writ of error.

An information was duly filed in the Circuit Court of Cole County on February 3, 1949, wherein it was charged that defendants Fithen and Medley and one Robert Charles Hand “at the County of Cole, State of Missouri, on the 5th day of October, 1948, did wilfully, un *1035 lawfully and feloniously have in their custody and concealed about their persons one 13 pound maul, one 1/4//x%//x9// punch, two hack saw blades, two dry cell flashlights and three pairs of gloves, all of which, said articles and tools, being then and there material implements, instruments and mechanical devices, adapted, designed and commonly used for breaking into any vault, safe, railroad car, boat, vessel, warehouse, store, shop, office, dwelling house, or door, shutter or window of a building of any kind, * * ”

A severance was granted to defendant Hand, the charge was subsequently dismissed as to him and he testified for the State in the trial of this cause. The State’s evidence tended to show that on the morning of October 5, 1948, about 8 a.m., Troopers R. E. Swaekhammer and J. C. Smith of the State Highway Patrol observed a Black and White Taxicab, bearing an Illinois license, parked beside U. S. Highway 50, just east of the city limits of Jefferson City. Defendants Fithen and Medley were seated in the taxicab (Medley in the front seat, Fithen in the back) and Hand was outside apparently fixing a windshield wiper. It was raining. Trooper Swackhammer inquired of defendants and Hand as to where they were from, what they were doing in Missouri and “who had authority to have a cab over here with an Illinois license.” Hand claimed possession of the taxicab. The men stated they were going to Arkansas squirrel hunting. Later, defendant Medley said they were just riding around for the ride, but that he didn’t own the automobile and had no control over it. The taxicab and men were taken to Troop F. Headquarters nearby, where an investigation was made as to violation of Public Service Commission regulations. The driver of the cab (Hand) was being investigated as to whether he had permission to have the cab in Missouri. The officers weren’t actually taking the defendants to Troop Headquarters but they were with the cab driver. It took about V/i hours “to run radio checks on the motor numbers and license numbers.” The motor number of the cab was examined. Only the first three numbers could be read, the others had been obliterated. The secret number was examined, it didn’t check, and the operator of the cab, Hand, was advised and his permission asked to look over the cab. Permission was granted. In the glove compartment of the cab the troopers found a 12 inch hack saw blade and a two cell flashlight. A case hardened steel punch % of an inch by % and about 9 inches long was found under the front floor mat. It appeared to have been used. One pair of jersey gloves lined with red woolen material was found under the front seat and another over the back seat by the back glass, where a second two céll flashlight was also found. Fithen claimed one pair of gloves and one flashlight, but denied the tools. A thirteen pound sledge or maul was found in the trunk of the taxicab. The wooden handle of the sledge (approximately 26 inches long) had been sawed off and there was wood *1036 fibre in the teeth of the hack saw blade. Subsequently, after defendants were arrested, a pair of gloves was found on Medley’s person and a hack saw blade about 5]^ inches long, broken in two, was taken from the fly of Fithen’s trousers on the following day, after Fithen was in the Cole County jail. The several items mentioned were identified and offered and received in evidence. No firearms were found in the automobile or on the defendants.

The testimony of Robert Charles Hand tended to show that he resided in Bast St. Louis, Illinois; and that in October 1948 he was a cab driver operating a Black and "White Taxicab in that city. He had known defendant Fithen about 2 weeks prior to October 5, 1948 and defendant Medley about 9 months. He saw Medley and Fithen on October 4, 1948 across the street from the cab office. Fithen said he wanted to use a cab to go to Springfield, Illinois, that he was going up there to look over a lumber yard, he “said he heard it would be a good place to go up there and burglarize.” He told Hand that defendant Medley would go with him. Hand later picked up Fithen and went to a drug store in East St. Louis, where Fithen bought a two cell flashlight (later found in the cab). Fithen told Hand he wanted to buy a three cell flashlight, but it showed too much light, that “he covered it with his hands, and the light showed through the cracks between his fingers.” Hand also wanted Fithen to buy a big flashlight, but he bought a small one. At Fifth and Summit streets in East St. Louis, they picked up defendant Medley, he was waiting for them there in an open field. He had some tools, a punch (like the one subsequently found in the car) a hack saw blade and a flashlight wrapped in a shop towel. In the taxicab, Medley placed the flashlight in the glove compartment and the hack saw blade there also, but between two license plates. They then drove to Tenth and Pickett, where defendant Medley cashed a check and paid witness $5.00. Prior to that time defendant Fithen had paid $11.50 and witness was to be paid additional money. Hand had first seen the sledge or maul at Salem, Arkansas, in the possession, of Hand’s brother. Two weeks before October 5, Hand saw the maul in the possession of defendant Fithen at Moko, Arkansas. Fithen obtained the maul from Hand’s brother. Defendant Medley was present at the time. The maul was left in the back of No. 14, Chevrolet, Black and White Taxicab on a parking lot at Eighth and State streets in East St. Louis until October 4, 1948.

After Medley cashed the check on October 4, 1948, and Hand advised his mother he was making a trip, Hand, Fithen and Medley started for Springfield, Illinois. Before they left Fithen had told Hand to “go get the maul” and Hand got it from the other taxicab before he went for Fithen. On the trip, Fithen and Medley got the hack saw blade out of the glove compartment and started to saw off the handle of the maul. While on the way to Springfield, Illinois *1037 defendant Medley said to Hand that “if they found a place they liked they would get out” and he-“should drive twenty miles, and then turn around and come back, and they would put some cornstalks and wheat across the road so” he would know where to pick them up. On the way they stopped at a garage and Fithen or Medley said the garage probably had a vault in it. Hand had heard Medley speak of “squirrel hunting” before they were stopped by the patrol on U. S. Highway 50, near Jefferson City. At a Pontiac garage on the left hand side of Highway 50, Medley had said “that would be good squiirel hunting. ’ ’ Hand disclaimed ownership of the ' mentioned items which were found in the taxicab. He said he drove the taxicab where Fithen directed him from East St. Louis to Springfield, Illinois, then to Hannibal, Mexico, and to Jefferson City. Hand had been convicted of larceny in-1942 and served two years in the Illinois penitentiary.

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Bluebook (online)
232 S.W.2d 519, 360 Mo. 1032, 1950 Mo. LEXIS 673, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-medley-mo-1950.