State v. Rebasti

267 S.W. 858, 306 Mo. 336, 1924 Mo. LEXIS 577
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedDecember 30, 1924
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 267 S.W. 858 (State v. Rebasti) 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. Rebasti, 267 S.W. 858, 306 Mo. 336, 1924 Mo. LEXIS 577 (Mo. 1924).

Opinions

*342 WHITE, J.

Appellant, in the Circuit Court of Jackson County, was found guilty of robbery in the first degree, and his punishment assessed at ten years imprisonment in the State Penitentiary. He was charged jointly with Ernest Hodges, but obtained a severance. He asserts here that a case against him was not made out, and therefore it is necessary to review the evidence.

The robbery was alleged to have been committed October 13, 1922, between eleven and tweive o’clock in the forenoon. On that morning one Thomas Crump, messenger for the Livestock State Bank, was carrying $9500 to his bank from the Continental National Bank in Kansas City. About 11:35 a. m. he boarded a street car at 12th and Main streets, and took a seat near the roar end of the car. Suddenly he was hit on the head and a gun placed at his stomach by a man who took the money out of his pockets and backed to the front door of the car and, with another man, got off at the front end of the car. The two men ran to an automobile which was about one hundred and fifty feet from the street car, and escaped.

On October 21, 1922, the defendant was arrested, taken to the police station and searched. The key to a safe-deposit box in the New England Safe Deposit Vaults Company, and a receipt for rent of same, were found on his person. Crump identified the defendant at the jail after the latter’s arrest, but later was not very positive of his identification. Pour other witnesses of the robbery also identified the defendant as one of those who perpetrated it. Lloyd Brashear, a window washer, was on the car. Pie testified he had a good view of Crump and of the man who robbed him. He identified the defendant and the other robber after their arrest. Eugene V. Comiant was on the street at the time and saw the two men running’ from the street car, a distance of thirty or forty feet; he later saw both in the county jail and identified them; the defendant was one of them. Griffith H. Connell, conductor of the street car on which *343 the robbery occurred, testified that he was standing within a few feet of Crump at the time. He distinctly saw the man who took the money, and in the court room positively identified the appellant as the robber. One W. C. Hoffman was on the street car at the time of the robbery. He saw the robber take the money away from the messenger; he also identified Eebasti in the court room, as the robber.

The Assistant Federal Eeserve agent at Kansas City testified to the printing and engraving and the sending out of Federal Eeserve notes; he testified that on the sixth of October, seven days before the robbery, he delivered to the Federal Eeserve Bank of Kansas City, two hundred five-dollar notes, giving the numbers. The paying teller of the Federal Reserve Bank testified that on the morning of the 13th he delivered to the messenger of the Continental National Bank a quantity of money, including $12,000 in five-dollar bills.

William E. Ricketts, manager of the New England Safe Deposit Vaults Company, testified that Charles Rebasti rented Deposit Box No. 1832, in his institution. Rickett was present afterwards when by virtue of a search warrant the box was opened.

Guy O. Seaton, vice-president of the Livestock State Bank, where Crump was employed as messenger, testified that he was in the New England Safe Deposit Vault when Charles Eebasti’s box was opened, and among other things it included one hundred and ninety-seven five-dollar bills, bearing numbers included in the five-dollar bills mentioned by the Assistant Federal Reserve agent as having been delivered by the Federal Reserve agent on the sixth at the Federal Reserve Bank.

All this evidence relating to the contents of the safe-deposit box and the renting of it, was objected to and exceptions saved.

Before the trial defendant filed a motion to suppress the evidence alleging that when arrested he was carrying a key to a safe deposit box, and that a receipt for the rental of the box was taken from his person, in *344 violation of his rights under Sections 11 and 23, Article II, of the Constitution of Missouri, and in violation of the defendant’s rights under the Fourth and Fifth amendments to the Constitution of the United States. That afterwards his safe-deposit box was broken into without warrant or authority of law, in violation of the said sections of the Constitution of Missouri and of the United States, and certain memoranda, written and printed, of the contents thereof taken by the State for the purpose of using the same against the defendant. The motion prayed that all such evidence be suppressed and the memoranda delivered to the defendant or destroyed. The court took evidence on the motion.

William Doran, a police detective, testified that he arrested the defendant October 21st, and took him to the station where the key to the safe-deposit box and receipt for the rent of it were taken from him. Doran after-wards called up Mr. Gregory, a Federal narcotic agent, who caused a search warrant to be issued by George D. Beardsley, United States Commissioner, directing Gregory, in the name of the President of the United States, to search the safe-deposit vaults of the New England Company. Gregory, in company with Mr. Greeson, also a narcotic agent, accompanied by Mr. Seaton, vice-president of the Livestock State Bank, and Mr. Doran presented themselves at the New England Company, aimed with the search warrant issued to Mr. Gregory, and demanded the right to search the box of the defendant. The Vaults Company delayed the matter until its attorney could arrive and then the search was made and the contents of the box noted in the memoranda preserved. Mr. Seaton gave the numbers of the five-dollar bills found there, which he afterwards testified to at the trial. The court on hearing this evidence overruled the motion and error is assigned to that ruling on several grounds.

*345 *344 I. Appellant claims that a case was not proven against him and earnestly urges that he be discharged *345 in this court From, the above brief statement the facts it is clear that the evidence, aside from that obtained by the search of defendant’s deposit box, was entirely sufficient to sustain a verdict of guilty.

II. No complaint is made as to the manner of the defendant’s arrest; he was lawfully arrested. Being lawfully arrested, the officers had a right to search him and his possessions in the room where he was arrested and take from him any article which might be used in securing his conviction. [State v. Owens, 302 Mo. 348; Holker v. Hennessey, 141 Mo. 527, 1 c. 539; State v. Laundy, 204 Pac. 1. c. 975-976; People v. Cona, 180 Mich. 1. c. 650; People v. Kalnin, 189 N. Y. Supp. 359; Territory v. Hoo Koon, 22 H. I. 1. c. 602; State v. Fuller, 8 L. R. A. (N. S.) 762.] The officers had a right to use the information they acquired in making that search in any way which would lead to the conviction of the defendant.

III.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
267 S.W. 858, 306 Mo. 336, 1924 Mo. LEXIS 577, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-rebasti-mo-1924.