State v. Pepe

46 S.W.2d 862, 329 Mo. 774, 1932 Mo. LEXIS 768
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedFebruary 17, 1932
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 46 S.W.2d 862 (State v. Pepe) 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. Pepe, 46 S.W.2d 862, 329 Mo. 774, 1932 Mo. LEXIS 768 (Mo. 1932).

Opinion

*777 HENWOQD, J. —

By an indictment filed in the Circuit Court of St. Louis County, the defendant and Claude Gillman and Joseph Sinovich were jointly charged (under See. 4021, B. S. 1929) with kidnapping one Jacob Hoffman. Severances were taken, and at a separate trial the defendant w'as found guilty and his punishment assessed at imprisonment in the penitentiary for five years. He was sentenced accordingly and appealed. Gillman and Sinovich were convicted at separate trials and sentenced to imprisonment in the penitentiary for ten years and two years, respectively. Their separate appeals were submitted at the October term, 1931, of this court, and the .judgments entered against them have been affirmed. [State v. Gillman, 44 S. W. (2d) 146; State v. Sinovich, 329 Mo. 909, 46 S. W. (2d) 877.]

Jacob Hoffman, the victim of the alleged offense, testified, in substance, as follows: He conducted a cigar store at 112 North Broadway in the city of St. Louis. His office was on the second floor of the same building. About 6:30 or seven o’clock in the evening of Tuesday, February 18, 1930, while he and four other men were in the office, three men entered the office, each brandishing an automatic pistol and each masked with a handkerchief. These three men “robbed” him, placed taped glasses over his eyes, led him down the stairway to the street, and put him in the back seat of an automobile. Two of these men got in the back seat with him, one on each side of him, and the other got in the front seat with the driver of the automobile. The driver was seated behind the steering wheel, ready to start the automobile, when he (Hoffman) and the other three men entered it. The automobile was driven north to the first street corner, then west to the next street corner, then south, for thirty or forty-five minutes, to a house, “off of the hard roads,” where these men removed the taped glasses from his eyes, blindfolded him with a bandage, told him he “was held,” and kept him, as a.prisoner, that night and- the next day. The second night, Wednesday, February 19, he was taken in an automobile, after a drive of twenty or thirty minutes, to another house, where he was kept that night and the next day. Two men stayed in the room he w'as in that night, and one of the men “slept” with him. The third night, Thursday, February 20, he was taken in an automobile, after a drive of an hour, to a small room in the cellar of another house. Three men rode with him in the automobile on the trip to this house, and these three men were assisted by one or two other men in moving a bed and some other things into the cellar of this house. The bed was placed in the small room for his use that night. There w'as an opening in the partition between the small room and an adjoining room in the cellar, *778 but no door at the opening. He was given some bread and coffee that night. The man who brought the bread and coffee to him told him he could remove his blindfold while he ate his lunch, but not until “he [the man] had gotten out” of the room. With his blindfold removed, he observed that the only window in the room was covered, and that the .room w'as very dark. He heard men talking in the adjoining room that night. Some ham and eggs and coffee were brought to him about eight o’clock the next morning. Between ten and eleven o’clock that morning, he heard officers knocking and kicking on the cellar door, and heard an officer say, “Come out of there.” Thereupon, he removed his blindfold, and shouted, “I am Hoffman, I am coming with my hands up.” One of the officers grabbed him and took him out of the cellar into the-yard. He saw some of the officers taking Gillman out of the cellar. He saw the defendant out in the yard, where some of the officers “had him.” He was blindfolded from Tuesday evening, February 18, when he was taken from his office, until Fridáy morning, February 21, when he was released from captivity by the officers, except while eating his lunch in the cellar Thursday night, and throughout this period he was held against his will.

The sheriff of St. Louis County and two of his deputies and about twenty police officers of the city of St. Louis participated in the search which resulted in the release of Hoffman and the arrest of the defendant and Gillman. The sheriff and eight of these police officers were called as witnesses for the State. From their testimony, we gather the following: The cellar in which Hoffman and the defendant and Gillman were found was a part of the house occupied by Joseph Sinovich and his family as their home. It was a two-story brick house on Bayless Avenue, in St. Louis County. The house faced the south, and there was a porch on the north or rear part of the house which extended from the east to the west side of the house. Under the porch was an areaw'ay, and the space between the floor of the porch and the ground was enclosed with lattice work. There was an entrance to the areaway on the west side, consisting of drop doors and a stairway, and another entrance to the areaway on the north side, near the northeast corner of the porch. The cellar was divided into east-and-west sections by a rock wall. Doors in the cellar wall afforded an entrance to each section of the cellar from the areaway, and there was a stairway from the first floor of the house to the east section of the cellar. The west section of the cellar consisted of two rooms. The north room was about ten feet by twelve feet in size, and the south room about five or six feet by ten feet in size. The south room, apparently intended as a coal bin, was formed by a wooden partition which extended from the middle wall of the cellar to the west wall. An opening, about three feet wide, in the *779 wooden partition, furnished a passageway between these two .rooms. The search of Sinovich’s premises began between ten and eleven o’clock Friday morning, February 21. The sheriff and some of the other officers entered the areaway at the north or rear part of the house by raising the drop doors on the west side of the areaWay and going down the stairway at that point. The door to the west section of the cellar was locked or barricaded on the inside. The sheriff knocked on this door and announced that “officers” wanted to enter the cellar. Getting no response from the inside, he lf kicked it [the door] open about fourteen inches or so.” He “made one or two steps inside and ran into Pepe [the defendant].” One of the other officers “took charge” of the defendant, and the sheriff shouted, “police officers, stick em up.” Hoffman replied, “I am coming out with my hands up,” and as the sheriff took another step or two he “bumped into Hoffman.” About that time another officer “ran into Gillman.” The sheriff shouted, “I have got Hoffman,” and another officer announced that “he had Gillman.” The windows in this (the west) section of the cellar, in both rooms, were covered with heavy wrapping paper, and it was very dark in both rooms. In the south room or small room, there w'as a small iron bed, and on a box, near the bed, were some dishes. In the north room or larger room, there were several barrels and boxes, some dishes on one of these boxes, two folding chairs near the passageway into the south or small room, “two 45 automatic pistols — fully loaded” on the top of a barrel, near the folding chairs, and “a 45 automatic — fully loaded” on the top of another barrel, near the folding chairs. Neither the defendant nor Gillman had on a hat or cap when they were found by the officers in the cellar.

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Bluebook (online)
46 S.W.2d 862, 329 Mo. 774, 1932 Mo. LEXIS 768, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-pepe-mo-1932.