State v. Post

30 P.2d 1089, 139 Kan. 345, 1934 Kan. LEXIS 285
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedApril 7, 1934
DocketNo. 31,574
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 30 P.2d 1089 (State v. Post) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Post, 30 P.2d 1089, 139 Kan. 345, 1934 Kan. LEXIS 285 (kan 1934).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Burch, J.:

Defendant, George Post, was convicted of murder in the second degree, and appeals.

About midnight of Friday, January 6, 1933, defendant shot and killed Forrest Woodring. That night defendant’s wife, Beulah Post, who was allowing Forrest to display an amorous disposition toward her, was brutally beaten. Forrest was thirty-three, and single. Mrs. Post was thirty-four, and her husband was nineteen years older.

Forrest’s father, Roy Woodring, and his wife, who was Forrest’s stepmother, lived a city block from the Posts, and on the opposite side of the same street. Forrest returned to the Woodring home after an absence of some three years. The next morning, Friday, December 29, 1932, Forrest was introduced to Mr. and Mrs. Post. That evening Mrs. Post drove her car over to the Woodring home and asked to “borrow the boy” to drive her down town. Her husband was sick, she wanted to go driving, and she offered to pay Forrest a dollar to drive the car, just no place in particular. Forrest ac[346]*346cepted, drove away with Mrs. Post, and they returned late that evening.

On Sunday morning Mr. and Mrs. Woodring left for a visit to relatives in Oklahoma. Forrest went over to the Post residence. He saw Mrs. Post on Tuesday, and was at the Post home on Wednesday and Thursday and Friday. Mrs. Post testified Forrest would make improper advances to her, said her husband was too old for her, and would ask her to go over to the Woodring house with him. On Friday afternoon Forrest wanted Mrs. Post to go with him, but finally left the Post home, saying he was coming back in the evening and would bring some alcohol and get George (Post) drunk. That evening Mrs. Post drove over to the Woodring house. Forrest was there alone. She asked Forrest not to come to her house that night and bring liquor, because George was mad and tired, and it wouldn’t do. She also testified she told Forrest she was going to the Graves home, a mile and a half away, which she did. She left her husband eating his supper and taking care of the baby. Mr. and Mrs. Woodring returned from Oklahoma about 9:30 that night. A light was burning in the house, Forrest’s supper was on the table, untouched, his overcoat and hat were gone, and he was not there.

Mrs. Post testified she stayed at the Graves home until 9 o’clock or a little later. She then told this story: As she left the Graves home, shortly after 9 o’clock, Forrest was standing at a corner, and forced himself into the car. He was drunk and mean, wanted her to drink with him, and she finally agreed to drink with him if he would then let her go home. They drove to a pop stand, the engine was stopped, and she sat in the car while Forrest bought some pop. He mixed a drink, she drank it, and she very soon became unconscious. She remained in a stupor several days. She did not know how or when she got home.

After Forrest had been killed, a doctor was called to the Post home. Mrs. Post had been struck on the head, her left eye was swollen and discolored, she had a lump over her right eye, and she had a discoloration over her hips and in the middle of her back. In the absence of evidence of what occurred, one interpretation of the injuries might be that she had been pommeled in the face and on the head, knocked down, and stamped or kicked.

Before his wife came home George had been taking an interest in the whereabouts of Forrest and of Mrs. Post. About 8 o’clock [347]*347George went to the Woodring home, where a light was burning, but found no one. About 10 o’clock he returned to the Woodring home, and found Mr. and Mrs. Woodring there. Mr. Woodring asked if he had seen Forrest. He said no, and his wife was gone, too. He described her movements when she went to the Woodring house to warn Forrest. He said he intended to wait at a certain place, he had a man waiting at another place, and he “was going to catch him, and smoke her up.” He exhibited a pistol, told of giving his wife $30, and said she just went to rooming houses to drink with other men. He was tired of it, and was sure going to smoke her up. He promised he would -not hurt Forrest if he was with her, because she was to blame.

Post went home, and Mr. and Mrs. Woodring went to bed. Later the Woodring telephone rang. Mrs. Woodring answered, and Post asked her to turn on the light in the dining room of her house. She turned on the light, and then went back to bed. Later, Post entered the Woodring house from a back porch, appeared at Mr. and Mrs. Woodring’s bedroom, and asked if Forrest had come in yet. Mr. Woodring answered that he did not know. Post left the bedroom, went through the living room, through the dining room, and passed through a door opening on a back porch which was screened and roofed. The screen door of this part of the porch opened on a small uncovered part of the back porch, the floor of which was reached from the ground by two steps. On the outer edge of the floor was a pile of stove wood some four feet high. Presently the Woodrings heard the noise of wood falling off the porch. They went right out, and saw Post standing on the porch with his back against the house, and with the pistol in his hand. Just as Mr. Woodring reached the door he heard Post say, “You God damned son of a bitch, I’ll learn you!” Forrest was lying on wood on the ground. Mr. Woodring said, “George, you have killed the boy!” Post said, “No, he isn’t; she is-lying over there in a pile, too.”

Forrest had a wound above the left ear, through the scalp to the skull, made by some blunt instrument. A bullet had entered the lower left region of the back of Forrest’s neck, had traveled through the muscles of the neck to the right side of the skull, and had there been deflected to the center of the brain. When Post went home, he hid the pistol behind his chicken house, but later showed the deputy sheriff where it was. The pistol was a 38-caliber Colt’s frontier model, and held six cartridges. There were five in the weapon. No other cartridge was found, and no empty shell was found.

[348]*348Forrest was unarmed. When his father went to Forrest’s body, he found in Forrest’s overcoat pocket a bottle of coca cola, and an implement about as long as a lead pencil with a bottle opener at one end and an ice pick at the other. Mr. Woodring threw the articles on the ground, where they were subsequently found. When the body was taken into the house, another bottle of coca cola was found in a pocket of Forrest’s overcoat. Post helped carry the lifeless body into the house.

George Post was a witness in his own behalf, and gave this account of his contrived meeting with Forrest:

“I started home, going out on the east porch, and there I met the boy coming up on the porch. He had something bright in his hand, I didn’t know what it was. He said, ‘out. a little late,’ and I said, ‘yes, a little bit.’ He said, ‘let’s have a drink,’ and I said, ‘no, I am looking for my wife.’ I had my gun in my hand, down like that, and he came up under my arms and threw the gun up and bumped my head against the building, the side of the house. We struggled, and went over the wood pile, both of us. I don’t know how he' lit, but I lit on my head, and it dazed me for awhile. When I got up I didn’t have the gun, and saw it lying down beside him. I picked the gun up, and went to tell Roy, but just as I got on the porch Roy and his wife came out. Roy asked what had happened, and I said, ‘why, the boy made a damned fool of himself.’ . . . When Forrest and I scuffled and fell over the woodpile, I didn’t hear any shot at all.

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490 P.2d 418 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1971)
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
30 P.2d 1089, 139 Kan. 345, 1934 Kan. LEXIS 285, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-post-kan-1934.