State v. Pierson

123 S.W.2d 149, 343 Mo. 841, 1938 Mo. LEXIS 502
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedDecember 20, 1938
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 123 S.W.2d 149 (State v. Pierson) 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. Pierson, 123 S.W.2d 149, 343 Mo. 841, 1938 Mo. LEXIS 502 (Mo. 1938).

Opinions

* NOTE: Opinion filed at May Term, 1938, August 17, 1938; motion for rehearing and transfer to Court en Banc filed at September Term, December 20, 1938. Appellant, Ralph Pierson, and Robert Cotham and Andrew B. Meadows were indicted on April 4, 1930, on charges of murder in connection with the burning of the Buckingham Hotel Annex in the city of St. Louis, on December 5, 1927. Seven persons were known to have lost their lives in this fire, and eight indictments were returned, seven for murder and one for arson. Appellant asked and was granted a severance in all of the cases. He was tried in February, 1931, on an indictment charging the murder of May Frazer, was convicted and received the death penalty. From the sentence imposed he appealed. That case reached this court in due time and on December 14, 1932, the judgment of conviction was reversed and the case remanded for retrial because of improper cross-examination of appellant and improper argument to the jury by the prosecuting attorney. [See State v. Pierson,56 S.W.2d 120, 331 Mo. 636.] A second trial was had upon that indictment at the April Term, 1933. Appellant was again convicted, but at this trial he received a life sentence from which he appealed. On July 11, 1935, this court reversed that judgment and remanded the case for retrial. That judgment was reversed because during the trial appellant was denied the right to impeach a material witness whose evidence, given at a previous trial, was read to the jury. Appellant attempted to show that this witness, at the time she gave the testimony, was suffering from dementia praecox. The trial court refused this offer. [See State v. Pierson,85 S.W.2d 48, 337 Mo. 475.]

For some reason the State did not elect to try appellant a third time upon that indictment, but selected the indictment which charged appellant with the murder of Joseph J. O'Brien, who lost his life in the same fire as May Frazer. This trial began on May 19, 1936, *Page 848 and was concluded on May 26, resulting in a conviction of appellant and a sentence of life imprisonment. From this sentence appellant has taken this appeal. Appellant's motion for a new trial contained forty-five separate assignments of error, many of which were briefed. There are a number of duplications, and we will therefore dispose of the questions briefed without referring to the assignments by number. At the outset, and before stating the facts and discussing the assignments of error pertaining to the trial of the case, we will consider a number of preliminary questions which have been preserved for our review.

[1] Appellant filed an application for a change of venue, alleging that the Honorable Judges Williams, Connor, Joynt and Baron were prejudiced against him. The case was tried by the Honorable James M. Douglas. Appellant does not contend that Judge Douglas was prejudiced against him. Section 2127, Revised Statutes 1929 (Mo. Stat. Ann., p. 2682), provides in part, that when prejudice exists as to any two of the judges a change of venue may be allowed to some other circuit court. Section 2130, Revised Statutes 1929 (Mo. Stat. Ann., p. 2683), provides as follows:

"After said first Monday of January, 1897, changes of venue shall be allowed from said circuit court in any criminal case pending therein, for any cause for which such changes are or may be allowed from other courts of this state having criminal jurisdiction; but whenever such changes are asked on the ground of prejudice, interest, or other legal objection to any of the judges thereof who may have been assigned for the trial of such case, no change shall be awarded, but the case shall be transferred to another division of said court, to which the trial and disposition of criminal cases may have been allotted by the court." Since the case was transferred to a division of the court presided over by a judge who was not charged with prejudice, the appellant's rights under the statute were protected and the point is ruled against him. In the case of State v. DeShon,68 S.W.2d 805, 334 Mo. 862, this court reviewed at length the right of a defendant to disqualify all of the judges of that circuit, three in number. It was held that he was not entitled to do so.

[2] Appellant filed a motion seeking a discharge under the provisions of Sections 3696-3699, providing that if a defendant is not brought to trial within a certain number of terms of court he shall be discharged. Prior to the first trial appellant had been granted a number of continuances in all of the cases pending against him. During the time the case in which appellant had been convicted was pending on appeal to this court, the other indictments lay dormant in the circuit court. They were not upon the court docket or the clerk's docket. The second appeal was disposed of by this court on *Page 849 July 11, 1935. The parties filed a stipulation here disclosing what occurred with reference to the cases which lay dormant after the second appeal was disposed of by this court. The stipulation reads in part as follows:

"Mr. Sullivan: It may be further stipulated, and is agreed by Mr. Lacy and the State, that when this case was set, or this series of cases were set in the June Term, 1935, they were continued by the defendant upon his application. The case has been set each Term thereafter, at which time they have been continued for the defendant upon his application. We desire it to be stipulated, and it is agreed by Mr. Lacy, that it may be stipulated that at no time has the defendant asked this case be placed on the trial docket of this court; at no times other than the times which appear of record, has the defendant or has the State requested that the case be placed or set on the trial docket of the court; that each time the case has appeared on the trial docket of this court, a continuance has been sought and received by the defendant upon his application; at no time has the State sought application or sought continuance, received one, or asked for a continuance of these cases."

We must consider this question in light of the fact that all of these indictments grew out of the same alleged act of arson, that is, the burning of the Buckingham Annex. We find in the record that whenever the cases were on the docket for trial the State was insisting upon a trial and the defendant was asking for continuances. The cases lay dormant only after appellant had been convicted on one of the indictments and his appeal was pending in this court. The purpose of the statute is to prohibit a person from being held in jail, or on bail, without a speedy trial. The Constitution guarantees a speedy trial for a person charged with crime, and the statute, above referred to, was evidently enacted in view of that constitutional provision. In State v. Nelson, 279 S.W. 401, l.c. 403, this court in speaking on this subject said:

". . . the reason of the law being that, if the accused is ready and willing to put himself upon the country in answer to the charge preferred against him, he shall not be deprived of a speedy trial on account of the laches of the State. What constitutes laches within the meaning of these sections and the correlative section, 4041, has frequently been judicially determined.

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Bluebook (online)
123 S.W.2d 149, 343 Mo. 841, 1938 Mo. LEXIS 502, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-pierson-mo-1938.