State v. Pool

285 S.W. 726, 314 Mo. 673, 1926 Mo. LEXIS 713
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMay 28, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 285 S.W. 726 (State v. Pool) 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. Pool, 285 S.W. 726, 314 Mo. 673, 1926 Mo. LEXIS 713 (Mo. 1926).

Opinion

*677 WALKER, P. J.

The- defendant was charged by information in the Circuit Court of Dunklin County with-an assault with intent to kill. Upon his application a change of venue was granted to Stoddard County. A trial to a jury resulted in his conviction and sentence to three years’ imprisonment in the penitentiary. From this, judgment he appeals.

P. R. Smith, a cotton buyer, who. was assaulted, was standing on the street in the town of Senath, near a load of cotton, which he had just examined, when he was approached from the rear by the defendant and struck on the head with an iron bar in the hands of the latter and felled to- the ground. A second blow was given to Smith *678 while he was down, and after kicking him defendant drew a pistol from his pocket and ordered a bystander, who- started to Smith’s relief, to- “stand back.” Defendant, just before the assault, had driven up and stopped his ear immediately in front of the team hitched to the cotton wagon, leaving the motor running, near where Smith was standing. After the assault he drove rapidly to Kennett and surrendered to the sheriff. Smith was¡ rendered unconscious by the blows. The wounds inflicted were on the back and right side of his head. The first was superficial, as if made by a glancing blow; and the second indicated that it had been produced by a blow from a weapon with a knob or bolt on the end of same. The wound inflicted was deep and ragged, and there was a fracture- and depression of the skull for about two inches. The driver of the cotton wagon who- witnessed the assault stated, in confirmation of the foregoing, that it was committed by the defendant with an iron steering rod of a Ford car, about two and a half or three feet long. The witness further stated that the defendant approached Smith from the rear, struck him with the iron rod, and after he was down struck him again, kicked him, ran to his car and drove rapidly away. No words were passed between the defendant and Smith, and the only thing said by the former was, when he, with a drawn pistol, ordered a bystander, who attempted to go to Smith’s relief, to- “stand back.” The foregoing is., in the main, the testimony introduced by the State.

The defendant introduced testimony of numerous threats made by Smith against him; that he was a deputy sheriff, and came to where he saw Smith on official business.- Recalling the threats he had been told Smith had made, he took an iron pump- handle from his oar, and as he passed Smith the latter asked him what he intended to- do with the club, and he answered, “You have been •lying on me;” that after some words Smith raised his left hand in which he held a knife and appeared to strike at him, and that he struck Smith down with the iron bar *679 and gave the latter a second blow as he was about to rise to his feet.

About two hours after the assault, the defendant, in conversation with a witness named Griffin, said in an excited manner that people had been telling him that Smith was going to send a man to buy whiskey from him, so that lie might be sent to. the penitentiary; that when he (defendant) heard this he became angry, got into, his car, drove to where Smith was and struck him; that he knew it was no use for him to fight Smith fairly; that the latter was1 too much of a man for him. Smith’s open pocket knife was found lying on the ground near where he was assaulted. The witness to whom Smith was talking when the cotton wagon drove up stated that Smith was whittling and had the knife in his hand while he was examining the cotton. There was contradictory testimony as to Smith’s reputation for truth and veracity. Witnesses for the defendant were shown to have bad reputations, for truth and veracity.

. Information. I. The information is drawn under Section 3262, Revised Statutes 1919, and charges an assault with a ■ deadly weapon. It follows the language of ... , -, n , the statute and under numerous precedents is not subject to valid objection.

II. The defendant contends that the trial court erred in its ruling upon the application for a change of venue. No affidavits were'filed in support of the allegation as to the judge’s prejudice in conformity with either Section 3973, Revised Statutes 1919, as amended, Laws 1921, page 206, or Section 3993,. Revised Statutes 1919, and this phase of the contention does not demand further consideration.

Dunklin and Stoddard counties constitute the Twenty-second Judicial Circuit. The application for a change of venue, attested by the affidavits of residents of Dunklin County, only, alleged the prejudice of the inhabitants of both counties against the defendant. The court ordered the case transferred to Stoddard County. The de *680 fendant contends that it should have been sent to a county outside of the Twenty-second Judicial Circuit. In State v. Smith, 281 S. W. 35, in which it was sought to secure a change of venue to a county outside of the judicial circuit in which the affidavits, in support of the application, were made by citizens of one of the counties in the circuit, we held that without considering the propiriety of the action of the court in hearing the evidence of the supporting witnesses, it was clear that, by the terms of the statute, even if proof of prejudice had been offered as tO' the inhabitants of the other counties of the circuit, a granting of the application for a change of venue to some other judicial circuit was a matter within the discretion of the court. In a later case, State v. Dyer, 314 Mo. 608, 285 S. W. 101, we held the statute (Laws 1921, p. 206) to be directory, as indicated by the word “may” in the last sentence of same, and although the affidavits were made by citizens from each of the counties in the judicial circuit, the court did not err in overruling the application for a change of venue. We regard these cases as declaratory of, not only a correct, but a wholesome1 construction of this statute. We therefore find no merit in this contention.

III. The defendant contends that error was committed in permitting a witness, in testifying as to the reputation of Smith for truth and veracity, to answer, in response to the inquiry as to his knowledge of Smith’s ^P^ation, that “he did not know what it was generally, because he had never heard it discussed or attacked.” The witness had stated, before thus testifying, that he was personally acquainted with Smith. Chief Justice Sherwood, in that trenchant English of which he was a master, thus disposes of this contention: “While it is true that the usual formula as to such matters is to inquire if the witness knows the general reputation of the person in question, and what that reputation is (1 G-reenl. Ev. 461), yet the hackneyed and *681 stereotyped mode of answering such inquiry need not always be pursued. Frequently the hig’hest evidence which can be offered in this regard is of that negative character which the court below unwarrantably, as we think, excluded. That reputation may with justice well be called good which no slanderer has ever ventured to even so much as question. A blameless life, oftentimes, though not always, gives origin to such a reputation.

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Related

State v. Hammond
571 S.W.2d 114 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1978)
State v. Cook
428 S.W.2d 728 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1968)
State v. Cavener
202 S.W.2d 869 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1947)

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Bluebook (online)
285 S.W. 726, 314 Mo. 673, 1926 Mo. LEXIS 713, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-pool-mo-1926.