State v. Murphy

90 S.W.2d 103, 338 Mo. 291, 1936 Mo. LEXIS 480
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJanuary 4, 1936
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 90 S.W.2d 103 (State v. Murphy) 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. Murphy, 90 S.W.2d 103, 338 Mo. 291, 1936 Mo. LEXIS 480 (Mo. 1936).

Opinion

ELLISON, J.-

The appellant was convicted of murder in the first degree in the Circuit Court of Howard County on change of venue from Randolph County and his punishment assessed at imprisonment in the State penitentiary for life. He killed his brother, Paul Murphy. The homicide was admitted and the sole defense was insanity. *295 The motion for new trial contains fifty-three assignments of error which have been condensed into twenty-two assignments in appellant’s brief in this court; but it will be unnecessary to consider most of these since we have concluded that the judgment must be reversed and the cause remanded.

At the time of the homicide the appellant was forty-one years old. He owned and operated a lumber yard, a garage and a hardware store at Higbee in Bandolph County, and with his family lived in the second story of the building in which the hardware store was located. Paul Murphy, the deceased, was about thirty-eight .years old. He and his two children were living with Mrs. Belle Murphy, mother of the deceased and the appellant, in her home in Higbee. About four-thirty in the morning of Tuesday, July 18, 1933, the appellant drove in his automobile from his home to the home of his mother armed with a pistol and a flashlight and went into the house through the back door. Thence by the aid of his flashlight he proceeded to the bedroom where his brother Paul Murphy lay asleep with his eight-year-old son and fired six shots into his back. Paul was found dead a few minutes later.

The State presented further testimony showing that the appellant had borrowed from a neighbor named Farris three days before the homicide the pistol with which he shot the deceased; and that he returned the weapon within half an hour after the shooting, giving as his reason for getting it that he “wanted a gun he could depend upon.” He admitted the killing to other neighbors, and to the officers of the law. To some of these he made the explanation that the deceased Paul Murphy four days earlier had threatened to kill him unless he made a settlement of their affairs arising out of a business relation hereinafter mentioned; and that he had scarcely slept since. The State further produced one expert witness, Dr. Francis Barnes, Jr., of St. Louis, and a number of lay witnesses who expressed the opinion that the appellant was sane at the time of the homiqide.

For the defense, the evidence showed that the deceased Paul Murphy had harbored a bitter feeling toward the appellant for about five years arising out of the fact that he had been forced to turn back to the appellant a hardware store at Clark, in Bandolph County, which he had previously bought from him. There was testimony that the deceased drank heavily thereafter and gave utterance to numerous threats and expressions of ill will against appellant, all of which were communicated to him by the persons who heard them. In some of these threats the deceased declared he would kill the appellant unless the latter made a settlement with him and paid him a stated sum of money, ten or fifteen thousand dollars.

According to the testimony of Mrs. Belle Murphy, mother of the two brothers, Mrs. Sophia Murphy, the appellant’s wife, and two former *296 employees, this strained relation between the deceased and the appellant became crucial on Friday, July 14, four days before the homicide. On the evening of that day the deceased went to the appellant’s store, drunk and armed, and demanded $10,000 in settlement of his claims, stating he would kill the appellant if the latter did not pay it. For the next three days both during the daytime and at night he stood watch for long periods across the street from the appellant’s store and living quarters. Also he climbed into a truck used in making deliveries from the store and declared to the driver, “Well Mark knows what to -expect. ’ ’

By one or another of these same four witnesses it was shown that after the deceased Paul Murphy and his two children moved into the home of the mother at Higbee in April, 1933, there was a great change in the appellant. He became absent-minded, forgetful and irritable. The demand and threats made by the deceased on the Friday night before the homicide threw him into a state of extreme nervous agitation. The next day he went to Moberly and consulted the prosecuting attorney who told him he could have the deceased put under peace bond; or confined in an asylum if it could be established that-he was insane; or, if he (appellant) were driven to the wall and in imminent danger of death or great bodily harm, he could use any force necessary to protect himself. The prosecuting attorne3 testified to this on cross-ekamination. The appellant went back to Higbee on thé evening of that day, Saturday, and borrowed from Mr. Farris the 'pistol with which he committed the homicide.

' It was further shown that during the four nights following the ultimatum delivered to him by the deceased Paul. Murphy, the appellant was nervous, brooded, watched for his brother Baúl-, out of the window of his apartment over the store, and slept very little. On the Tuesday morning of the killing he arose about four o’clock saying he was going fishing. He fixed a cup of coffee, left the house and returned about four-forty-five telling his wife, “It’s all- over. I shot Paul. I had to do it. It’s all over now.” Later whgn the prosecuting attorney had come to Higbee the appellant told him in the store: “ Well, Laurence, you told me to do it; ” and the prosecutor replied, “Yes, but I didn’t tell you to do it that way.”

The appellant’s mother testified that her father, the appellant’s grandfather, became insane and was confined in the State Hospital for the insane at Fulton for a year before his death in 1890. The records of that institution showed he was received on September 26, 1889. She also stated her father’s sister, Annie Jackson was insane, but this evidence was excluded. Mrs Murphy further testified that her husband Mark Benfrow Murphy, the father of the appellant, became insane prior to 1895 and since had been confined continuously in the asylum at Fulton. He was still there at the time of the trial. She said his type of insanity was such- that he was threatening to *297 kill his father. The records of the-State Hospital at Fulton showed that he was received on June 24, ■ 1895. For the appellant three expert witnesses, Dr. G. Wilse Robinson, Jr., of Kansas City, Missouri, Dr. W. A. Bloom of Fayette, and Dr. J. W. Winn of Higbee expressed the opinion that the appellant was insane. Eight lay witnesses testified to the same effect. The appellant did not take the witness stand. Further facts will be stated in the course of the opinion.

I. The first assignment of error complains that the trial court denied the appellant the right of cross-examining three witnesses. It will be recalled that the appellant borrowed from O. L. Farris the pistol with which he shot the deceased. Mr. Farris was called as a witness by the State and testified to that fact and to what the appellant said when he returned the weapon after the homicide. He had known the appellant intimately for thirty years. On cross-examination the appellant’s counsel asked him to describe how the appellant looked when he returned the pistol. The State’s counsel objected on the ground that the appellant could not cross-examine the State’s witness “for the purpose of showing an affirmative defense,” and the objection was sustained.

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Bluebook (online)
90 S.W.2d 103, 338 Mo. 291, 1936 Mo. LEXIS 480, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-murphy-mo-1936.