State v. Pyscher

77 S.W. 836, 179 Mo. 140, 1903 Mo. LEXIS 398
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedDecember 23, 1903
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 77 S.W. 836 (State v. Pyscher) 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. Pyscher, 77 S.W. 836, 179 Mo. 140, 1903 Mo. LEXIS 398 (Mo. 1903).

Opinion

FOX, J.

The body of the crime is laid in Saline county, the date of its commission being October 26, 1899.

Defendant filed a motion to quash the third amended information, ■ and upon consideration it was overruled by the court. After conviction, motions for a new trial and in arrest of judgment were presented and were overruled, whereupon an appeal was taken to this court.

The defendant, Simon Pyscher, worked for and lived at the home of a woman by the name of Katherine Kroecker for several years prior to December, 1899. Mrs. Kroecker owned a farm adjoining and comprising a part of what is known as the old part of New Prank-fort, Missouri, situated in Saline county. The farm consisted of something more than sixty-eight acres. Mrs. Kroecker died in December, 1899, leaving a daughter, Anna Kroecker, as her only heir. Defendant administered upon the estate, Anna Kroecker being surety on his bond as administrator. Defendant filed an inventory of the real estate belonging to the deceased, [146]*146Katherine Kroecker, and this inventory contained a list of the property claimed by defendant under the alleged forged deed. Defendant also had the real estate appraised for the purpose of obtaining an order of sale to pay the debts of the estate and no claim seems to have been made to the property by him until after the death of Anna Kroecker in February, 1901. After the death of Anna Kroecker, the probate court made an order requiring the defendant to give a new bond as administrator of the estate of Katherine Kroecker, deceased. Defendant failed to comply with the order requiring the new bond and the court made an order removing him and ordering the public administrator of Saline county, George M. Francisco, to take charge of the estate. Francisco, upon taking charge of the estate, went to defendant and asked him if he wanted to remain upon the place another year, evidencing a willingness to rent it to him. At the same time Dr. T. J. Sullivan went to see defendant to ascertain whether or not he wanted to remain on the place anothei year, stating to him that if he did not he (Sullivan), intended to rent it if he could. The defendant in both instances said that he did not intend to remain there, but expected' to remove to Oklahoma. No claim was made by him to any part of the land during either of the foregoing conversations.

Defendant talked freely to Francisco about the land that belonged to the estate and its value, his estimate being that its rental value was about one hundred and fifty dollars per annum. Taking defendant at his word, the public administrator rented the land to Dr. Sullivan, but when' Sullivan undertook to obtain possession, he was met by defendant with the proposition that the land did not belong to the estate, but that he (Simon Pyscher) held it by virtue of a deed, executed to him by Mrs. Kroecker. It appears from the record that two suits were instituted against the defendant, one by Dr. Sul[147]*147livan- for unlawful detainer, and one in ejectment brought by the public administrator.

It seems that the defendant made no claim to the property until after the death of Anna Kroecker in February, 1901, his claim being that Mrs. Katherine Kroecker owed him one hundred dollars and finding that she would not be able to repay him, executed the deed with the understanding that if the money was not paid the deed should become effective.

The deed claimed by the State to be forged was seen by Dr. Sullivan at the house formerly occupied by Katherine Kroecker and was described by him a.s being an old blank form, which contained nothing but the name and signature of Katherine Kroecker, with no description of land, grantor or grantee. It was shown by witnesses for the State that the body of the deed, including the acknowledgment, was written at a very recent time, while the signature, from the general appearance of the paper and the writing, had evidently been written for some time on account of the ink having turned yellow.

For the defendant, two witnesses, E. N. Snider and Clarence Pyseher, a brother of the defendant, testified that on the day before Katherine Kroecker died, they were at her home, and that she called to the defendant to bring her a certain deed, which he did, and she then announced in their presence that as defendant had been good to her, she intended to deed him a part of her land, and handed defendant the deed and told him to put it away. These witnesses testified that the deed introduced in evidence and alleged by the State to be forged is the same deed that Mrs. Kroecker had and gave to the defendant while they were at her home.

A. W. Thompson, Mrs. Caroline Zend, Joseph Zend, Joseph Denser, Mrs. Ellerbrecht, Emma Pyseher and Samuel Pyseher all give testimony tending to show that the deed was not a forgery.

The acknowledgment to the deed was in the name [148]*148of a man named. F. H. L. Miller, who was a notary public and lived in New Frankfort from 1866 to 1874, but his commission expired, as shown by the record in the county clerk’s office, in 1874, and very little had been heard of him since that date. It appears that Miller had lived in the home of Mrs. Kroecker and while there had left his notarial seal in her house, several persons having seen it a few days prior to the death of Mrs. Kroecker.

In addition to the testimony above given, two or three witnesses were introduced as experts to testify as to the handwriting in the deed in question and purporting to be forged. Those for the State testified that the body of the deed and the signature of the witness Snider, were by the same hand, while other witnesses for the defense stated that they were written by different persons.

In rebuttal of the testimony offered by defendant, the State introduced a number of witnesses, contradicting and impeaching the witnesses testifying in behalf of defendant.

At the close of the evidence, the court instructed the jury upon the law, as applicable to the facts developed from the testimony of the witnesses. The jury returned a verdict of guilty as charged in the second count of the information, and assessed defendant’s punishment at imprisonment in the penitentiary for ten years. Motions for new trial and in arrest of judgment were duly filed, and by the court overruled, and defendant prosecutes this appeal, and the record is now before us for review.

The instructions complained of will be given attention and discussed in connection with other contentions of appellant, in the course of the opinion.

The errors assigned in this cause are briefly stated as follows:

First.

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Bluebook (online)
77 S.W. 836, 179 Mo. 140, 1903 Mo. LEXIS 398, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-pyscher-mo-1903.