State v. Miller

100 Mo. 606
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedApril 15, 1890
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 100 Mo. 606 (State v. Miller) 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. Miller, 100 Mo. 606 (Mo. 1890).

Opinions

Sherwood, J.

The defendant was indicted at the January term, 1889, of the circuit court of Audrain county for murder in the first degree, for shooting and killing one Samuel Apgar, in said county on the seventeenth day of April, 1888.

The indictment contained four counts. The first count charged murder in the first degree, by shooting and killing with a pistol, in the usual, formal and general manner; the second and third counts charged murder in the first degree, committed in the attempt to perpetrate a burglary; and the fourth count charged George Mortimer with the commission of the offense in perpetrating a burglary, and defendant as being an accessory after the fact. He waived formal arraignment and pleaded not guilty , and at the June term, 1889, of said court, was tried and found guilty; the jury returning a verdict of guilty of murder in the first degree. Thereupon he filed his motion for a new trial, [610]*610which was continued until July, when it was overruled and defendant sentenced, from which he appealed to this court. At the close of the evidence on the part of the state, the state entered a nolle as to the fourth count of the indictment, and this was done over the objection of the defendant.

At the time defendant was indicted, George Mortimer was also separately indicted for the same offense. Apgar was an old man about sixty-five years old, and lived with his wife in a house that fronts south, and on the same street, about six blocks west of the house which had been for a few weeks occupied by both Miller and Mortimer, with their wives. Miller and Mortimer, before moving to this place, occupied a house together in a different part of the town, and Miller conducted a sort of barber shop in both of these houses. Apgar’s house consisted of four rooms and a summer kitchen, which was connected with the northwest room of the main house by a platform. This northwest room had a door in the west through which one passed onto the platform, which was three or four feet wide, and on into the east door of the summer kitchen. A door was between this northwest room and the southwest rooms of the house ; and, on the night of the murder, Apgar had gone to bed with his wife in the southwest room. A day or two before the murder the summer kitchen had been brought into use, and at night, when Mrs. Apgar retired, the summer kitchen door was fastened and the drawers in the safe were in their places. Just immediately after the murder the doors of the northwest room and the summer kitchen were open, and the drawers of the safe in the kitchen pulled out and things in it disarranged, besides other things in the kitchen were removed and disarranged.

About two o’clock in the night Mrs. Apgar heard a pistol shot in the north room and a door slam. Immediately her husband returned into the room and said : “I [611]*611am shot. ” Presumably he had heard a noise and gone out to ascertain what it was, and in doing so met with the burglar, who shot him. Apgar was shot with a number twenty-two pistol, and a pistol of that size was found partly burned in Miller ’ s stove, and cartridges, of the same kind and size as those which would fit the pistol found in Mortimer’s possession, on his person ; and the pistol was proven and admitted to be his and the ball taken from Apgar’s body exactly fitted the empty cartridges found in Mortimer ’ s pistol. Three or four cartridges of the same kind were found in a box on Miller ’ s work bench in the northwest room of the house in which he and his wife stayed ; though that room was the common passway to the kitchen,Miller and his wife and child had a bed in the northwest room, and Mortimer, wife and child the southeast corner room, and both families lived in common; the respective heads of each alternating in furnishing provisions. The trial resulted in Miller being found guilty of murder in the first degree, hence his appeal.

Miller and Mortimer lived together in a house with four rooms in it. It fronted east and had one east front door. Passing in that door, you come into the northeast room; from that room you pass into a room directly south, with no outside door; also from that northeast room you pass into a room just west, and from that room into a kitchen south, being the southwest room of the house, which room had a door leading west onto the outside. These rooms were all used in com-' mon by both Mortimer and Miller. There were no outside doors to this house but the one in the east and the one leading from the kitchen in the west. Apgar was an ex-Pederal soldier and drew a pension, and this fact was known to Miller, who had spoken of it and had expressed ill-will against Apgar. The wife of Mortimer was introduced as a witness on the part of the state, as was also Mortimer himself.

[612]*612The testimony introduced was substantially as follows :

Mrs. Apgar, the wife of the deceased, testified: “I live now in St. Louis; before I went to St. Louis I lived in West Mexico; I have lived there seven or eight years; my husband’s name was Samuel Apgar; the house we lived in had three rooms, sixteen feet square, and one about twelve feet; it was on the north side and stood back from the street about twelve feet, maybe a little further; my husband’s death occurred on the seventeenth day of April, 1888, in Audrain county, Missouri; the first to attract my attention was a pistol -shot; I was in the west sitting room; there was a dining room north of that; it was a very small room; there was a passage from the room I was in to the dining room; my husband and I were sleeping that night in the west room, south of this dining room; the bed was in the west corner of the room, the head extending west; it stood against the wall next to the dining room; there was a small kitchen located about four feet from the dining room; there was a door which led out of the dining room west; there was nothing but a platform between the dining room and kitchen; it had no roof over it; it was just four feet from the west door of the dining room to the summer kitchen door; the door in the summer kitchen faced east; there was a safe in the summer kitchen; Mr. Apgar went to bed early that night; I closed all the doors that night; the door to the summer kitchen was closed with a bolt; the front gate was closed; the report of a pistol woke me up that night; I was in bed; the report sounded to me as if it was north of the dining room door; I heard the door slam against the safe and the dishes rattle; my husband came in soon thereafter and told me he was shot; he came in and got his pistol to go out, and he just stood there, and I went out to make the alarm, and when I came back he was dead; he knelt down at the foot of the bed with his left hand at the [613]*613bed post, he did not live more than two and a half minutes after he was shot; the drawers and doors of the safe were shut that night when I left them; the next morning they were pulled out and the things in the drawers were stirred around.

“Mr. Apgar went to bed that night about seven o’clock; he was old, infirm and sickly; he had been down town that day; he always kept a pistol, and slept with it; it was one of these big ones; I did not hear him when he got up; he always got up at that hour to take his medicine, had for years; he had nothing when he came in, but he came to get his pistol, and I would not let him; he was' in the dining room when I heard the pistol shot; it was a dark night—no moon shining; this occurred between two and three o’ clock in the morning.

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Bluebook (online)
100 Mo. 606, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-miller-mo-1890.