State v. Neibekier

83 S.W. 523, 184 Mo. 211, 1904 Mo. LEXIS 265
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedNovember 22, 1904
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 83 S.W. 523 (State v. Neibekier) 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. Neibekier, 83 S.W. 523, 184 Mo. 211, 1904 Mo. LEXIS 265 (Mo. 1904).

Opinion

GANTT, P. J.

On the eighth day of October, 1902, the prosecuting attorney of St. Francois county began the prosecution of the defendants for murder in the first degree of Harry Kowallio, by filing an information against them in due and approved form duly verified by his affidavit.

As the information is in all respects sufficient in form it is unnecessary to repeat it in this statement.

The defendants were arrested and afterwards, on January 15, 1903, in open court, were duly arraigned and entered their pleas of not guilty. On the sixteenth of January, 1903, a jury was duly empanelled to try the cause against all three of the defendants, and on the seventeenth day of January, 1903, the jury returned into open court their verdict finding each of the defendants guilty of murder in the second degree and assessing the punishment of each at ninety-nine years in the State penitentiary. Motions for a new trial and in arrest of judgments were filed in proper time, heard and overruled, and on the twenty-third day of January,

1903, each of the defendants were separately sentenced in conformity to the verdict. From those sentences they severally appeal to this court. The time for filing the bill of exceptions was extended by the court to August 10, 1903, and it was accordingly filed on that day.

The evidence tended to make a very simple case. The deceased and the defendants and nearly all of the witnesses were Hungarians. They lived in Hungarian Town, a section of the town of Desloge in St. Francois county.- One Peter Winosky and his wife kept a boarding-house in the village. On the evening of the homicide the deceased and others were at this boardinghouse, and together with the proprietor were drinking beer, and while thus engaged one of the defendants, John Neighbaker, appeared on the scene. After he had been there a short time, a controversy sprung up between Harry Kowallio and John Neighbaker about a board-bill. John commenced on Kowallio and cursed [216]*216him for not paying his hoard-bill, and they got into a dispute about it. This created such a disturbance that Mrs. Winosky came in from another room and requested John, one of the defendants, to leave, and because of indecent language to her she slapped him, and he returned her blow, and then the others present put him out and shut or locked the door. They marched him out. About half an hour later John Neighbaker and his two brothers, Anton and Henry, his codefendants, came back to Winosky’s.

They came into the. downstairs room where the witnesses were drinking beer with some others. Anton and Henry went upstairs. Harry Kowallio had preceded them and was on his bed asleep. Fifteen or twenty minutes after Henry and Anton went up to Kowallio’s room, John returned and burst a window out, and came into the house in that way. He inquired for Kowallio, the deceased, and ran upstairs. All three of them then were in Kowallio’s room. One of them took hold of Kowallio by the head and the other by the feet and held him down. He was asleep. He seems not to have been awakened by their handling of him. He was lying on his stomach or side, and while Henry and Anton held him, their brother John stabbed him with a long knife, about a foot or sixteen inches long. The two brothers Henry and Anton then left the room and house, and all 'the party except one. As John came down, he struck that witness with his fist and passed out. Several then returned and went into the room and found Kowallio had been stabbed in the side and was bleeding profusely. He died about ten minutes later. Three wounds were inflicted on Kowallio in his back, from the effects of which he died.

There was evidence that soon after the stabbing of the deceased the defendants John and Henry Neigh-baker returned to their house or cabin, changed their clothing, and took a small bundle of clothes, in a hand[217]*217kerchief, and bade Anton good-bye, and left, and were afterwards apprehended in St. Lonis.

Dr. English, the coroner, described the wounds he-found on the body of the deceased Kowallio, and testified they produced his death. There was some evidence-of loud and angry words in the room in which Kowallio was killed just prior to the stabbing; and of a tussle-between Kowallio and John Neighbaker after John had been put out of Winosky’s house and before he went to-his home and procured the large knife with which John killed Kowallio.

There was also evidence that the deceased was-named Kavalsky, and evidence that he was known and went by the name of Harry Kowallio among his associates and at the hoarding-house.

The defendants offered evidence that their reputation as peaceable men in the community in which they resided was good. There was also evidence that, witnesses heard noises as if a fight was going on in the house. There was also evidence that deceased was seen to shake his fist at John Neighbaker before John was put out of Winosky’s house. There was evidence that the defendants came from Galicia in the empire of Austria; that they had never been naturalized or become citizens of the United States of America.

At the close of the evidence, the court instructed the jury on murder in the first and second degree, reasonable doubt, and credibility of the witnesses.

The defendants prayed the court to instruct the-jury that under the pleadings and evidence they must acquit the defendants, which instruction was refused.

The defendants also prayed the court to instruct the jury that ‘1 if they believed and found from the evidence that the defendants were, on the twenty-eighth day of September, 1902, natives of Austria-Hungary and were on said day subjects of the empire of Austria-Hungary, then and in such event -the court declares the law, to be that the said defendants, under the treaties. [218]*218■existing between the United States and Austria-Hungary, are not liable to be proceeded against by information, and you must therefore render a verdict of not guilty,” which the court refused.

The grounds of the motion for new trial will be considered in the course of - the opinion.

I. The first assignment of error is 'that the defendants are charged in the information with having killed and murdered Harry Kowallio, and the proof is that the name of the deceased was Henry Kavalsky, and therefore there is a fatal variance between the allegation of the information and the proof.

On this point, the court instructed the jury as fol- ■ lows:

‘ ‘ 11. Although you may believe from the evidence that the correct name of deceased was Henry or Harry Kavalsky, yet if you further find from the evidence that he was usually known or called by the name of Harry Kowallio, then such variance between the two names is not material, does not affect the guilt or innocence of the defendants, and will not be considered by you in arriving at a verdict.”

A number of the witnesses while testifying identified the deceased by the name of Kowallio, and others testified that was the name by which he was usually known among his associates and at his boarding-house.

Under these circumstances the circuit court correctly held the variance immaterial, if the jury found as a fact deceased was ordinarily known as Harry Kowallio and this was the effect of its instruction.

Section 2531, Revised Statutes 1899, provides:

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Related

State v. Hart
274 S.W. 385 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1925)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
83 S.W. 523, 184 Mo. 211, 1904 Mo. LEXIS 265, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-neibekier-mo-1904.