State v. Pennington

47 S.W. 799, 146 Mo. 27, 1898 Mo. LEXIS 5
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedNovember 7, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 47 S.W. 799 (State v. Pennington) 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. Pennington, 47 S.W. 799, 146 Mo. 27, 1898 Mo. LEXIS 5 (Mo. 1898).

Opinion

Gantt, P. J.

The defendant appeals from a judgment, sentencing him to the penitentiary for twelve years for murder in the second degree. The indictment was preferred by a grand jury of Morgan county. The defendant was duly arraigned and tried at the April adjourned term, 1897. The homicide occurred at Proctor, a small village on the Osage river in Morgan county.

On the day of the general election, November 3, 1896, the defendant Pennington and the deceased Benjamin Wilson were both in the town of Proctor. About 8 o’clock in the night of that day they met in the store of Mr. Talbott. The evidence very conclusively establishes that Pennington began the difficulty by saying to Wilson, “You have been telling around that I have been bootlegging whiskey or selling whiskey.” Wilson replied that he had not. Pennington repeated that he had. Wilson again said, “I have not been telling anything of the kind. It seems like you-fellows have got it in for me this evening. I am not afraid of you,” and asked Pennington “Where is your proof!” Pennington replied “William Irwin.” Wilson asked, “Where is Irwin! Bring him here and I will prove to you that I did not tell him that.” Pennington then said, “You are a liar. You are a G — d d — n liar. You are a G — d d — n son of a bitch, you are,” and immediately began to shoot the deceased. He shot him four times; one bullet entered between the [31]*31fifth and sixth intercostal space, another entered under the arm in the axillary spaee, a third struck the tenth rib and a fourth went into the muscle of the arm. Death was almost instantaneous. The deceased made no resistance. He was wholly unarmed, save with an ordinary pocket knife, the long blade of* which was perhaps two inches in length. It appears that just prior to the assault on him by defendant, the deceased had his knife in his hand, cutting a piece of bologna sausage which he was eating. This knife was found under him, with the large blade open, after his death.

After shooting the deceased four times defendant “broke” his revolver and threw out the exploded shells and reloaded it. He then started toward the door and accosted William Irwin and inquired if he had friends enough there to bury him. Irwin said, “I think you have,” whereupon defendant said, “Allright; Ikilled this poor innocent boy, and I want to die with him,” and suiting his action to his words, he shot himself, but not seriously, we judge from the result. He then stepped out of the door and turned back, saying, “I want to go back and kiss that poor innocent boy that I have killed.” He got down on his knees, leaned over and kissed the dead man.

There was evidence that a few minutes before the shooting, the deceased came into the store, passing near where defendant and one Moore were talking, and remarked in a quiet but general way that “Nobody could run sandies on him that way,” apparently alluding to some conversation outside of the store. There was also testimony that on Sunday prior to the election, defendant had said that if Wilson, the deceased, had used the language that the defendant had heard, “he believed he would kill him.”

The defense was self-defense. Defendant in his own behalf, testified that he and deceased had several [32]*32conversations outside the store on different occasions during the day of the homicide; that at the well deceased said to him, “I have got it in for you;” that he made this same speech that night, out on the porch of the store, at which time defendant says he assured deceased he never said he would hurt him. He details the occurrence in the store, in this way: “Mr. Wilson came in again; and he walked up and got right in front of me and the cut-off in the counter. The cut-off runs straight from the east door to the north wall of the building. There is a cut-off in the west counter. What I mean is where you go behind the counter and where you go out at the door, going between the counter. And he turned round there to me. On that there was a word or two spoken; I disremember what it was; and he turned round there and he looked me right in the eyes and he says to me, £I have got no friends here,’ but, he said, ‘you can not run a sandy on me'.’ Just those very words is what he spoke, and, of course, I disremember what the conversation was after that but it occurred pretty shortly.. I disremember what it was. And when he said that, when he says, ‘you can’t run any sandy on me,’ the best I remember, he had his hand in his hip pocket, just this way. And he pulled his hand out of his hip pocket and stuck it , in this pocket.”

Q. “Coat pocket?”

A. “Yes, sir; and then he kind of turned this way, and he says again, ‘I don’t allow no damn man to run a sandy on me,’ and he drew the knife out of his pocket in his hand. There was a light on the west counter, something near four feet in the gateway where you go between the counter from the east to the west, and that goes way on the other side that goes out on the porch. And this lamp was sitting over there something near three or four feet from the end of the [33]*33counter. Mr. Wilson was standing on the north side of me, and he threw himself in a position like this, with that knife in his hand; I could see the knife very plainly, because I saw the light reflect on it from that lamp on the west side of the stove; and when he threw that knife back that way, Mr. Powelson jumped in and says, ‘Boys, I don’t want no fighting in this house.’ That is what Mr. Powelson said. And I saw the knife there, as he drew back this way, in a kind of position like this, and I saw him as he threw' his hand back there. I saw the lick was coming from the knife. I was not more than three feet from him. Powelson caught me, and this other fellow caught him. And this other fellow was on the east side of Wilson. He was on the east side of him as he turned around, and I drew my pistol out of my hip pocket and shot him.”

Q. “How rapidly did you shoot?” A.' “Well, I could not state how fast it was.” Q. “What kind of a revolver Was it?” A. “It was a double action.” Q. “Were you excited?” A. “Yes, sir; I was excited a little bit.”

The defendant further testified: “I had no intention of shooting him before 1 saw the knife; the excitement was so high with me that I don’t remember anything at all after the shooting occurred; I don’t remember shooting myself; I felt the shock, but do not remember it; I do not remember talking with Mr. Irwin; don’t remember when Mr. Thompson and Dr. Gibbs came; I think the knife blade was about two and one half or three inches long.”

Henry Bicknell testified that on the day of the killing he was standing at the well in Talbott’s barn yard with the deceased; that while there defendant passed by, and deceased remarked, “There is a s— of a b— that I have got it in for.” He testified to hearing [34]*34Pennington tell deceased to go away from Mm, lie was not looking for fights.

There was evidence that defendant’s general reputation as a peaceable man was good and that deceased had a bad reputation in that regard.

The court instructed the jury in writing on murder in the first degree, second degree, and manslaughter in the fourth degree, self-defense, reasonable doubt, the presumption of innocence, and the good character of defendant. Defendant asked certain instructions which the court refused.

I. This cause was well tried, and the exceptions are few.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

State v. Bunyard
161 S.W. 756 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1913)
State v. Bailey
88 S.W. 733 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1905)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
47 S.W. 799, 146 Mo. 27, 1898 Mo. LEXIS 5, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-pennington-mo-1898.