State v. Phelps

74 Mo. 128
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedOctober 15, 1881
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 74 Mo. 128 (State v. Phelps) 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. Phelps, 74 Mo. 128 (Mo. 1881).

Opinion

Sherwood, C. J.

The defendant was indicted for the murder of Elijah Keyton. On trial had, he was convicted, and now appeals here. The testimony upon which he was convicted consisted in a great degree of extrajudicial confessions, both oral and written. The latter is as follows:

State of Missouri, County of Saline,

ss.

I, John A. Phelps, do voluntarily make this, a full and complete statement in regard to the killing and murder of Elijah Keyton in Saline county, Missouri, on Saturday evening, April 23rd, 1881. I was born in Adair county, Missouri, eight miles southeast of Kirksville. My parents are both dead. My mother died in June, 1874. My father died on the 5th of April, 1878. I lived in Adair county until I was four years old. I went with my parents to Cedar cou ty, Missouri, and lived there until I was sixteen years old. I went back to Adair county and lived, there one year. I came to Saline county, and will have been here four years next September. I was born on the 14th day of September, 1859. I commenced work for Mr. Key-ton March 8th, 1880, on his farm in Saline county, near Arrow Rock. I worked for him up to September 27th, 1880. I then went to work for J ohn Durrett, and worked for him until J anuary 24th, 1881 I then went to work for Mr. Keyton again. Mr. Keyton said he could not get a hand up at his farm near Herndon (four miles southwest), and took me with him. This was on the 18th of the month we went out there. I drove the wagon and he rode horseback. I drove two bay horses. We got to the farm about half past seven o’clock in the evening. On the next day, Tuesday, we went to hauling posts. Mr. Keyton, myself and Charles Wood hauled the posts. Mr. Keyton put on thirty-seven posts, and I put forty-seven on my wagon — Wood put on fifty. My team could not pull the load up the hill, and I went to make a short turn and broke the wagon. Mr. Keyton hauled all his posts home, and [131]*131Wood threw all his off but thirty-seven. I went home without any load. When I got home Mrs. Wood asked why I did not bring a load of posts. I told her I broke my wagon and could not fetch them. Mr. Keyton said: “Yes, the helled fool went that far to break a wagon down this morning.” I said: “ Yes, sir, and I done it, too.” I went after the team, and Mr. Keyton said: “ You’ve got no team to haul posts.” After he hitched his team up he showed me where he wanted me to work. He put me to digging post holes and setting posts. I set posts until Thursday night. Friday morning he put me to flattening pickets, and Saturday he had Mr. Wood and myself to put the pickets in the wire. Mr. Keyton came out about eleven o’clock where we were at work. He asked us what was the reason we had not gotten any farther in putting in the pickets. Mr. Wood told him we had never made any fence of that kind, and Mr. Wood asked him if he thought we had not done enough? Mr. Keyton said: “ No, I think I could have gotten along faster.” Mr. Wood told him if he (Keyton) was not satisfied with his work, to say so, and he would quit. Mr. Keyton then went to putting in pickets, and I twisted the wire for him. When he would go to put in a picket I would have the wire twisted, and he would say: “Be dods, I want that wire twisted, and not be standing there doing nothing.” He put in twenty-five or thirty pickets, and said he would count how many they put in yesterday, and see if we had put in as many as they did. Mr. Keyton then left and went to Brownsville. After he left, Mr. Wood said he would take a club and knock his brains out. I just said to him: “Mr. Wood, you have not got nerve enough to do that.” I just told Wood if he would say nothing about it that I would knock Mr. Keyton in the head. Mr. Wood said: “ I wish you would; I have threatened to do it myself.” Mr. Wood said if I would knock Mr. Keyton in the head, that we would bury him, and tell his family and others that inquired about him that he (Keyton) had gone southwest. This was [132]*132Charley L. Wood I have been speaking of. Wood then .said : “ I will tell you a better plan than that.” I asked him what it was. Wood said, we will get him to go and watch the oats stack, and when we got him to the straw stack we would kill him and put him in the straw stack, and set fire to it and burn him up. This conversation took place while we were at work. We both went to the house together about seven o’clock Saturday evening, April 23rd, 1881. I stopped at the stable to feed, and Mr. Wood went to the mule lot. Mr. Wood returned from the mule lot about half past seven o’clock, and Mr. Wood said: “John, I want to have a talk with you,” and we went to the granary out in the yard, and Mr. Wood said : “John, you can go and get that axe; Mr. Keyton has gone to the far part of the pasture, and you can go up there to the mule lot, and when he comes along, you step up behind him and knock him in the head.” I went down to the barn and got the axe, and went around up the hollow north of the house on the outside of the fence, until I got within about 100 yards of the northeast corner of the wheat field, in which the house is situated. In crossing this hollow going up I jumped the ravine. I then crossed over this fence and went through the gate where Mr. Keyton was found dead —the gate into the pasture east of the house. I saw Mr. Keyton coming, and I got inside of the mule lot south of the gate, and when Mr. Keyton came along I stepped out behiud him, and when he got close to the gate I struck him on the right temple with the axe, and the lick knocked him down to the ground. He never made any noise of any kind. I then took his pocket books, both of them, out of his pocket. He had them in his left breeches pocket. I then took the money out of them and put it in my pocket. I then scattered the papers around his side. I noticed him making a little noise, like he was groaning or trying to get his breath. I then struck him on the left temple with the axe. I then started away, and thought he might not be dead, so I went back and struck him on [133]*133the top of the head with the back part of the axe. I then went through the gate and struck across the corner of the wheat field, and climbed the fence about the same place as I did going up, as near as I can recollect. I went around back to the barn and left the axe at the barn. J then went to the house and asked Mr. "Wood if Mr. Keyton had come back. He said he had not. I told Mr. Wood to come to me a minute. He put the child out of his arms and came. I told him I had killed Mr. Keyton. Wood said : “Let us go to the barn, John, and get the axe you left down there.” As we were going to the barn, Mr. Wood said: “ Let us take him to the straw stack and burn him up.” I told him I could not do that. I told him when we went back to the house we would call him. I went to the door and called Mr. Keyton. I asked Wood to let us go and see about him. Wood said: “We will tell them that Keyton had gone to watch his oats, and they will think that old Kinnikin killed him.” When we got there,Wood hallooed out, “ Lord, there he lies dead !” This was while we were on the inside of the gate, next to the house. Mr. Wood went in and shook Mr. Keyton, putting his hand on his back, and calling him Uncle ’Lijah. I picked the papers up, and while I was picking them up asked Mr. Wood whether I must do it or not. He says: “Yes, I’ll swear I saw you pick them up.” We then ran back to the house right down the road. When we got to the house I hallooed to Mrs. Wood, and told her that some one had killed and robbed Mr. Keyton. Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
74 Mo. 128, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-phelps-mo-1881.