State v. Miles

98 S.W. 25, 199 Mo. 530, 1906 Mo. LEXIS 331
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedDecember 4, 1906
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 98 S.W. 25 (State v. Miles) 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. Miles, 98 S.W. 25, 199 Mo. 530, 1906 Mo. LEXIS 331 (Mo. 1906).

Opinion

GANTT, J.

On the 9th day of December, 1904, the prosecuting attorney of Pemiscot county filed an information charging the defendant and one Luther Erankum with murder in the first degree. At the July term, 1905, the case was dismissed as to Frankum and [540]*540the defendant was tried and convicted of murder in the second degree, and his punishment assessed at thirty years in the penitentiary. After taking the proper steps he appealed the cause to this court. .

The evidence on behalf of the State tended to prove that the deceased, George Bradley, and his wife and three small children lived as a tenant in a house on a farm owned by the defendant, Miles, which farm was situated some two or three miles from the town of Game or Stubtown in Pemiscot county. At the time of the homicide defendant was marshal of the said town and had been for two years. The wife of the deceased had been away from home for a few days visiting at her .mother’s and had taken with her a sewing machine, trunk and bed. Early on the morning of December 7th, Bradley, the deceased, drove his wagon to his mother-in-law’s, and brought his wife and children and the said furniture back to his home, on defendant’s farm. When he reached home, he left his team at the gate and moved the trunk and machine to the porch of the house, and then went in the front room to kindle a fire. The house consisted of two front rooms with a hall between them, and the porch in front of the hall and the two rooms. The deceased, it seems, was cropping on shares for the defendant, and had raised a crop of potatoes and had cut some wood, and the defendant had moved some of these potatoes and put the others in the ground and covered them up. Early on the morning of the difficulty, Frankum, who was in the employ of the defendant and doing some work on this farm, said to one Summers, in the presence of the defendant, that Bradley had said the day before that defendant was taking too much authority down there at the farm, and that he, Bradley, would rather defendant would not do the like any more. To this the defendant replied, “Well, when I get down there, me and Bradley will have a settlement; you see if we don’t. ” This was said in an angry tone. Soon after breakfast, the defendant [541]*541and Frankum and Felix Noble got into a road wagon, and drove from Game to tbe defendant’s farm, where the deceased was living. The defendant took his pistol along with him. When they reached the farm, they stopped the wagon near the lot gate and the defendant and Noble got ont of the wagon and walked to the yard gate. While the deceased was trying to make the fire in the front room, the defendant called to the deceased’s wife, who was on the front porch, to tell deceased to come out there, that he wanted to settle. After being told of this message, the deceased got his account book and walked ont towards the front gate, which was about twenty-seven feet distant from the house. As the deceased walked along he opened the account book and was looking at it and was turning the leaves; when he got near to the gate, defendant said to him, “George, you have been blowing too much, ’ ’ and the evidence on the part of the State tends to show that the defendant at once drew his pistol and began striking the deceased on the head and face, and then fired at the deceased twice. The first shot took effect in the left wrist of the deceased, and the second in the left side, coming out at the back. The deceased ran towards his wife, who was standing on the front porch, and there was evidence that as he ran the defendant fired three more shots at him, one of which took effect in the back just under the left shoulder blade and came out over the left collar bone, the bullet ranging upward. Two of the shots fired by the defendant struck the trunk on the front porch. As the deceased ran by his wife he stumbled, but regaining his balance ran into the house, got his gun, returned to the front porch and fired at the defendant, who was then retreating down the road. Deceased soon became weak and fell to the ground. He was carried into the house by his wife and Mr. Jones and expired in about thirty or forty minutes.

The foregoing facts were testified to by Mrs. Brad[542]*542ley, and she was corroborated by Felix Noble and Mrs. Martha Hearn.

The State’s witnesses also testified that the de- ■ ceased was inside of the house when the defendant called for him and did not have any gun in his hand until aftér the defendant had fired five shots and wounded the deceased1.

On behalf of the defendant the evidence tended to show that the. defendant and Frankum had been doing some work on this farm of the defendant for several days prior to this difficulty, without any opposition on the part of Bradley, the deceased, and that there was an unsettled account between them in regard to some wood and some potatoes. There was also evidence on the part of the defendant tending to show that Felix Nohle was intoxicated the day before and on the morning of the shooting, and was so drunk that morning . that defendant had to help him into the wagon and hold him down after he got him in, and that defendant took a drink with Noble just before leaving Game. The testimony on the part of the defendant also was to the effect that no threat was made hy the defendant that morning, and that defendant’s, pistol was not on the shelf in the same room with the defendant when Summers was present, as Summers testified. There was also evidence of threats made by the deceased, some of which were of a vague and indefinite character. Defendant testified that he had never heard any of said threats until after the shooting, and did not know of any ill-feeling existing toward him on the part of the deceased ,• that their relations were friendly and he had often taken dinner with the deceased and family and had shot craps with him in the saloon for cigars and drinks. Defendant and Frankum testified that the ill-feeling of the deceased toward defendant had been brought about by the fact that defendant had sawed up into firewood, and hauled away, some logs which had been lying in the barn yard occupied by the deceased, [543]*543and defendant had removed from the barn a lot of partnership potatoes and hilled them up on the premises to keep them from freezing, and had taken for his own use a sack full of them. The defendant’s testimony further tended to prove that defendant fired but three shots; that these shots entered the body of the deceased from the rear and ranged upwards.

Frankum testified in detail that when they reached the premises of the deceased that morning he drove the wagon up close to the lot gate and stopped, the defendant Miles got out and found the lot gate locked and called to Bradley to come out and unlock the gate, whereupon the deceased replied: “You come and make me. ’ ’ Thereupon the defendant then told him to unlock the gate and Bradley went in and got his gun and said, “You make me.” Bradley, the deceased, was standing on the porch holding his gun in his arms about half raised; the defendant then told him if that was the way he was going to do, to get his book and settle up. The deceased then went in and got his book and came out to the gate. When he came out with the book, the defendant went into the yard and witness saw them, they were fighting. He did not know who struck the first lick, but heard defendant say: “You got your gun to shoot me with awhile ago,” and deceased said, “Gr— d— you, I will kill you, ’ ’ and started to the house in a run; thereupon defendant shot him, fired three shots pretty fast.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
98 S.W. 25, 199 Mo. 530, 1906 Mo. LEXIS 331, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-miles-mo-1906.