State v. Poor

228 S.W. 819, 286 Mo. 644, 1921 Mo. LEXIS 129
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMarch 7, 1921
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 228 S.W. 819 (State v. Poor) 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. Poor, 228 S.W. 819, 286 Mo. 644, 1921 Mo. LEXIS 129 (Mo. 1921).

Opinion

WALKER, J.

Edward Poor was charged with murder in the first degree by information, in the Circuit-Court of Madison County, in February, 1920, in having killed one Cleveland King in October, 1919. Upon a trial he was convicted of murder in the second degree, and his punishment assessed at ten years’ imprisonment in the penitentiary. From this judgment he appeals.

Cleveland King, frequently designated in the record as “Cleve,” had, with his wife Nora, formerly lived in the immediate neighborhood of the defendant. Gossip as to an improper intimacy between the latter and Mrs. King hid occupied the ever-busy tongue of scandal for some time before the separation of King and his wife, which occurred, in August, 1919. Upon this separation, *649 provoked, as admitted by counsel for appellant, by tbe scandal, sbe went to reside with ber mother and stepfather, who lived in the same neighborhood. On Saturday, October 25, 1919, she was in Fredericktown with her parents. As they went home that evening they met the defendant, who said he had heard that Cleve King had been telling some tales on him that he had to straighten np. The next day Cleve came to where his wife was staying. After a general conversation he and his wife went to the Trace Creek Church building in the vicinity (there being no services there at the time),.to discuss their differences. A half an hour or more after their arrival there they agreed to a reconciliation and a renewal of their marital relations, when the defendant appeared, carrying a gun. He demanded that Cleve accompany him to Charley Hawkins’s, who lived about two miles away, to straighten up certain tales he said Cleve had been telling on him. The wife testified that her husband denied the charges and went reluctantly; that the last time she saw him he was going down the road with the defendant toward the home of Andy Hale in the direction of Charley Hawkins’s. Soon after they left, two men, corresponding in size and general appearance with the defendant and Cleve King, were -seen by Andy Hale about one hundred yards or more distant, going down the public road which ran in the direction of Charley Hawkins’s place. Hale did not at the time observe them with particularity sufficient to identify them as King and the defendant, but did notice that one was a small man and the other a large one, and that the latter carried a gun. It was shown that King was a small man, while the defendant was a large one. It was a little later than three o’clock when defendant and King left the church. The latter has never been seen since that time. Andy Hale heard four gunshots that afternoon — three of them a short time after the men had passed his place, and the fourth about a half hour later. The location of the person firing the fourth shot seemed from the report to be a mile or more distant in *650 tlie direction of Charley Poor’s house, who was a brother of the defendant, and in which direction the two men were going when they passed Andy Hale’s. The other shots were in the same general direction, hut a little further north and west. Nora King, upon her return to her step-father’s house a half an hour or less from the time the defendant and her husband left the church together, told the members of her family of the defendant’s coming to the church and demanding that Cleve accompany him and of the latter’s reluctant compliance. The unaccounted absence of King under the circumstances occasioned neighborhood comment, and on Mon-dajr evening the defendant and a fourteen-year-old son of his came to the house of Creen Stacy. The latter’s wife, who was the grandmother of Nora King, told defendant what Nora had said, and asked him if he knew where Cleve was. Defendant said he did not'; that he had not seen him since the Saturday preceding at Mill Creek; that he (defendant) was not at the church on Sunday and if Nora said so she was “fibbing.” Green Stacy, his wife, defendant and a fourteen-year-old son of the"latter then went up the creek to Andy Hawkins’s, where Nora King was then staying. What occurred upon their arrival we give in the language of the record, Nora King testifying:

After stating that the- defendant came to the church building where she and her husband were and that defendant demanded that King accompany him and that they went away together, she was asked: “When did you next see Ed Poor, the defendant?” She answered: ‘ ‘ On Monday night at Uncle Andy Hawkins’s; ” that he came there a little after dark with her grandmother and grandfather Stacy and defendant’s boy. In reply to the inquiry as to what was said or done, she testified: “He (defendant) came in and sat down near the door; he appeared — his voice was very weak or something — he seemed like something was the matter with him. I did not know what was the matter. He came in and sat down close to the door, and then he got up and stepped to the door and said, ‘Nora, I want to speak to you,’ and we *651 stepped out on the porch and he says, 'I want yon to deny my being at the head of Trace Creek.’ I says, ‘What for.’ He says, ‘What for? It will cause people to talk about us.’ I says, ‘Ed, I can’t do it; I have told Mama and Papa and Sister Grace yon were there.’ And he says, ‘If you have ever done anything in your life, do it for me now.’ And I says, ‘I can’t do it.’ Grandma called me then and says, ‘Nora!’ I then called him into the kitchen and I says, ‘Ed, I want you to tell me where you left Cleve.’ He says, ‘He is over yonder.’ That’s what he first told me about him. I says, ‘Is it possible you have killed him?’ And he never said nothing. He never said he did nor fie didn’t.”

In answer to the inquiry as to what defendant said, if anything’, with reference to it being somebody else at the church on Trace Creek on Sunday afternoon, she testified: “Well, he says, ‘You tell it was Ed Smith instead of Ed Poor.’ I told him I couldn’t do it.” “What was said, if anything, that you didn’t tell?” “Well, I says, ‘Ed, Ma thinks you have killed Cleve: she is going to have a crowd hunt for him tomorrow.’ He says, ‘They can hunt, but they will never find him. He is gone and he will never come back. ’ I asked him where he had left Cleve and he says, ‘He is over yonder,’ and that’s the last talk I ever had with him.”

On Monday, October 27, 1919, at about midnight, the barn of Charley Poor, a brother of the defendant, was burned. On the Friday following, the sheriff of the county, with a number of others who had been searching for Cleve King, found among the ashes of the barn what was identified as the remains of a human being. The body had been reduced to ashes, except a part of the right hip and of the thigh. Prom the size of the bones and the length of the entire body, as outlined in the ashes before being disturbed, the remains indicated that they were those of a small man; an adult, say the experts. Remnants of clothing and what appeared to have been buttons, which crumbled upon being touched, and a metal belt buckle were found in the ashes with *652 the remains. This belt huclde was identified by a number of persons as having been similar in every respect to one worn by Cleve King the day of bis disappearance.

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

Related

Holtkamp v. State
588 S.W.2d 183 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1979)
State v. Stephens
556 S.W.2d 722 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1977)
State v. Brooks
551 S.W.2d 634 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1977)
State v. Richards
536 S.W.2d 779 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1976)
State v. Brandt
467 S.W.2d 948 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1971)
State v. Jones
384 S.W.2d 554 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1964)
State v. Malone
301 S.W.2d 750 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1957)
State v. Brown
227 S.W.2d 646 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1950)
State v. Stringer
211 S.W.2d 925 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1948)
State v. Simler
167 S.W.2d 376 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1943)
Edwards v. Business Men's Assurance Co. of America
168 S.W.2d 82 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1942)
State v. Londe
132 S.W.2d 501 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1939)
State v. Lloyd
87 S.W.2d 418 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1935)
State v. Kauffman
73 S.W.2d 217 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1934)
State v. Lewis
20 S.W.2d 529 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1929)
State v. Craft
253 S.W. 224 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1923)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
228 S.W. 819, 286 Mo. 644, 1921 Mo. LEXIS 129, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-poor-mo-1921.