State v. Miller

20 S.W. 243, 111 Mo. 542, 1892 Mo. LEXIS 177
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedOctober 4, 1892
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 20 S.W. 243 (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, 20 S.W. 243, 111 Mo. 542, 1892 Mo. LEXIS 177 (Mo. 1892).

Opinion

Macfarlane, J.

An indictment was returned by the circuit court of Dent county at the April term, 1888, E. T. Wingo presiding as special judge, in which it was charged that defendant on or about the twenty-fourth day of February, A. D. 1888, at and in the county of Dent, in the state of Missouri, in and upon Effie McGuire, a female child under the age of’ twelve years, to-wit, of the age of nine years, unlawfully and feloniously did make an assault, and her (the said • Effie McGuire) then and there unlawfully and feloniously did carnally know and abuse, etc.

On the application of defendant, a change of venue was taken to Phelps county, in which he was [546]*546tried, convicted and sentenced to imprisonment for five years. From this sentence fie appealed to tfiis court.

Tfie record shows tfiat at tfie regular time and place of holding tfie April term, 1888, of tfie circuit ■court of Dent county, O. C. Bland, tfie judge thereof “being absent, an election was field by tfie clerk of said court to elect a special judge of said court, which resulted in tfie election of E. T. Wingo as sucfi special judge, there being more than five practicing attorneys voting at said election, tfie said E. T. Wingo was declared elected, who took and subscribed tfie usual oath in sucfi cases prescribed by law.”

Objection was made to tfie sufficiency of tfie indictment and its validity by proper motions. These were overruled and exceptions saved.

At tfie August term, 1891, defendant made an application for a continuance of fiis case, on the ground of physical inability to go to trial on account of sickness. He supported fiis application by tfie affidavit of a physician. In opposition to tfie application, tfie state filed affidavits contradicting defendant’s claim of physical disability. After a hearing by tfie court, a continuance was denied.

Of tfie panel of forty jurors, one was named James •T. Gideon. He was summoned, examined as to fiis qualifications, and accepted as one of tfie forty under fiis proper name. In tfie list furnished defendant, fiis name was given as H. E. Gideon, through mistake of tfie clerk in copying tfie names. Tfiis person was accepted as one of tfie twelve, and was named upon tfie record as H. E. Gideon. Upon returning tfie verdict, tfie jury was polled, and it was then discovered tfiat tfie juror’s name was James T. instead of H. E. Gideon. Objection was then and there made by defendant to receiving tfie verdict upon tfie ground [547]*547that he had not received a true list of the jurors from which to make his challenges, and that James T. Gideon was not the man selected by defendant as one of the jurors. The objection was overruled, and the clerk was ordered to correct the name of the juror upon the record, and the verdict was received and defendant excepted.

The evidence, on the part of the state, tended to prove that Effie McGuire was born August 1, 1877; that defendant was a shoemaker, and worked in a shop in Salem; that at his request the girl went to his shop on several occasions in February, 1888, and he had intercourse with her. Two or three witnesses saw through holes in the ceiling defendant go through the form of sexual intercourse with the girl on several occasions in the daytime. The girl made no outcry or noise of any kind. She testified that he had intercourse with her.

The evidence on the part of defendant tended to prove that the girl was born in 1876, and was over twelve years of age when the criminal act was charged to have been committed; that the girl said she never had intercourse with anyone before. There was no evidence of any bruises or laceration. Defendant was about seventy years old and was married.

Defendant’s wife testified that he was, and for five years before the criminal act had been, insane. Two physicians testified that, from the facts given in evidence, it was their opinion that Miller was insane, and the very acts testified to by the state’s witnesses were the acts of an insane man, and their judgment was upon hearing the whole of the evidence that he was insane at the time, and further that they had beard all of the evidence, and that it was practically impossible to have been any penetration by Miller, and if there had been the girl’s parts would have been lacerated' [548]*548and swollen, and she conld not have submitted to a second act without outcry, and would not likely have done so.

Defendant asked, and the court refused to give, three instruction on the law of insanity as applied to the facts in the case. Two of them told the jury in substance, that if defendant’s mind was so diseased that he could not and did not realize and understand that he was committing the crime charged, or that the same was a crime, or that he was legally responsible for the act, then they should acquit him. The third told them that if his mind was so impaired that he did not realize the enormity of the crime, or had not power of will sufficient to control his conduct, he was not responsible for his act.

The court on its own motion gave two instructions on insanity; one told the jury that if defendant’s mind was so diseased that he could not and did not realize and comprehend the nature of the act, or that as to the act, he did not have mental capacity to know that it was wrong, then he was not responsible for the act and the jury should acquit. The other told them that, though defendant committed the act charged, yet, if at the time he did so, he was in such insane condition of mind that he could not distinguish between right and wrong, or comprehend the nature of the act, then such act was not criminal. , '

OPINION.

I. It is insisted as the first error assigned that the proceedings should have been abated and the indictment quashed for the reason that it did not appear from the record, that the oath of office taken by the special judge who held the term of the circuit court of Dent county at which the indictment was preferred, was filed with the clerk.

[549]*549The record does recite the existence of certain facts, viz., the absence of the judge of the court, which authorized the appointment of a special judge to hold the term; the presence of the requisite number of attorneys;- that the election was held by the clerk in all respects as provided, and that E. T. Wingo was elected, and took and subscribed the proper official oath, but it does not recite that the same was filed with the clerk. Section 3328 requires every temporary judge thus elected, before he enters upon the discharge of his duties, to take and subscribe to the same oath, required to be taken by a circuit judge, which shall be filed with the clerk. Section 3329 provides that whenever a temporary judge be elected, an entry thereof shall be made on the records of the court, together with the reasons therefor, and the fact that the requisite oath has been taken and filed.

When the conditions upon which a temporary judge might have been appointed all existed, and the incumbent was duly elected, qualified and took possession of the office, be became a temporary judge of the court defacto, though the official oath was not filed as required, and the proceedings of the court, which were unchallenged during his incumbency, cannot be after-wards questioned collaterally.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
20 S.W. 243, 111 Mo. 542, 1892 Mo. LEXIS 177, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-miller-mo-1892.