State v. Parker

12 S.W.2d 428, 321 Mo. 553, 1928 Mo. LEXIS 483
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedDecember 18, 1928
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 12 S.W.2d 428 (State v. Parker) 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. Parker, 12 S.W.2d 428, 321 Mo. 553, 1928 Mo. LEXIS 483 (Mo. 1928).

Opinion

*557 WHITE, P. J.

In the Circuit Court of Grundy County, April 11, 1927, on a charge of murder in the first degree, the appellant was found guilty of murder in the second degree, and his punishment assessed at ten years’ imprisonment in the penitentiary. He w'as fifty years old at the time of the trial. The homicide occurred November 5, 1926. The victim was Jack Freeman, his stepson, the appellant having married Jack’s mother twenty-seven years before the trial when Jack was about ten years of age.

The appellant claims the evidence is insufficient to sustain a verdict and the jury should have been instructed accordingly. Therefore it is necessary to set out the evidence at" some length.

*558 It is a sordid story of loose morals and criminal practices. The principal witness for the State was Louise Freeman, wife of the deceased. This woman had been unfortunate. Her parents died when she was a small child and she lived for a time with her grandparents, and early in life it seems she earned her own living. She was a loose character; gave birth to two illegitimate children. Bach in turn she gave away in adoption and she never knew what became of either. Later she married a man and lived with him about three months and was divorced. After that she lived about from place to place and finally married the deceased, Jack Freeman. She was intimate with him for two years before their marriage in 1920. At one time before her marriage to Jack she had stolen eighty-six dollars from another girl, and escaped imprisonment because Jack put up the money to secure her liberation.. When she married Freeman she agreed that thereafter she would be a good woman, and apparently attempted to live up to that agreement. They went to live with the defendant Parker at his farm. At that time Parker’s wife, Jack Freeman’s mother, had died. Louise kept her agreement less than a year, yielding to Parker’s solicitation and thereafter sustained illicit relations with him until the time of the homicide. After a while she and Jack took a trip to California and were gone several months. They returned to Trenton and Jack opened a restaurant called the “Eatmore” in connection with which he conducted a gambling establishment. They lived in a small house in another part of town. Jack’s habits were unsatisfactory. He was diseased, one arm was lame, he drank heavily all the time and frequently was drunk. She said she was disgusted with him and desired to go off where she never would be heard from.

On the night before the fifth of November, 1926, the defendant Parker came into Jack Freeman’s restaurant, where they had some argument which seems to have been more or less a quarrel. Mrs. Freeman at home was awakened about 1:20 in the morning of November 5th, by someone knocking at the front door. She went to the door, opened it, and the defendant came in. He had some conversation with her, unnecessary to relate, expressed his resentment at Jack, and said Jack was “awfully drunk” and he was going to end it all that night, indicating his intention to kill Jack. Mrs. Freeman begged him not to. After further conversation he went out of the back door, saying, “Here is where it happens.” This was her story.

In a short time Freeman drove up to the garage, in the rear of the house. Presently she heard him shout, “Get to hell out of here!” and accompanied the words with epithets. This was followed by two shots and Freeman’s voice crying out, “My God, somebody help!” Another witness testified to hearing these outcries.

*559 She ran out of the front door in her night dress, barefooted, screaming for help; ran to a Mrs. Buster’s a short distance away, and as she did so she saw the defendant crossing towards his own home. Some men in the neighborhood being aroused took her to police headquarters in an automobile. Wiley Estes, fire chief, dressed and went to the Freeman home, stopping on the way at the defendant’s home, and asked him to go along. After a search they found the body of Jack Freeman in the back of the house near the kitchen door. The garage is at the west of the house and the body was on the south. Two bullets had penetrated his chest, fired from the front, producing death.

Her story' of these circumstances is corroborated by other witnesses except as to the.fact that Parker came to her house and room before the homicide, and as to his presence about the premises. After the homicide she went to Parker’s house and remained there while investigation was being made.

The defense attempted to break down her testimony by introducing her evidence given at the coroner’s inquest which began the following day and continued at intervals for two w'eeks. She appeared before the coroner three times. The first time she denied that anyone was about the premises. She said she had no idea who committed the homicide. She said positively that no one came to her house that night; that she went to bed at nine o’clock. A few' days later she appeared again before the coroner’s jury and repeated the statement. In her third appearance before the coroner’s jury she told the same story except that she said she saw a man leaving the premises as she ran down to her neighbor, Mrs. Buster.

She w'as arrested for the crime and put in jail w'here she remained several days. Afterwards Parker was arrested, and on a preliminary hearing she told the same story that she told at the trial about her former relations with him, and about his coming to her room after midnight on the night of the murder. It appears that she was more or less under his influence. She was staying at his house and was escorted by him to the hearing before the coroner. She testified that he told her not to tell anything.

Her evidence at the coroner’s inquest showed that she was keeping something back. She was there asked why she did not go to her husband’s assistance w'hen she heard his outcry. She said she didn’t know. She was asked why she did other acts mentioned in her story, and she said she did not know'. In repeated questioning as to her action that night she answered that she didn’t know. Mr. JLavson, the prosecuting attorney, said that in his opinion she was not telling all she knew about it; that she was holding'something back and she must tell it. She stuck to her story. It urns further show'n that when Parker’s name was mentioned while she was before the coroner’s *560 jury she would go into a fit of sobbing, which would last for several minutes.

After she went to the police department on the night of the homicide and was brought back home she wanted to go to Jack, and was not permitted to do so. She was told that it was no place for her. All this indicates that the woman was very much wrought up by Jack’s murder and Parker’s participation in it. There was no substantial evidence which would fix the actual killing upon her. One revolver was found upon her premises. It was a 22-caliber, and it had not been fired recently. The evidence showed that the shots ■which produced death were from a 38-caliber revolver. Several weapons were introduced in evidence as owned by Parker and by Freeman, but the evidence regarding them is so confusing and uncertain that it throws little light upon the case.

■ Parker’s defense was an alibi.

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Bluebook (online)
12 S.W.2d 428, 321 Mo. 553, 1928 Mo. LEXIS 483, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-parker-mo-1928.