State v. Rider

90 Mo. 54
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedOctober 15, 1886
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 90 Mo. 54 (State v. Rider) 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. Rider, 90 Mo. 54 (Mo. 1886).

Opinion

Henry, C. J. —

At the September term, 1885, of the Saline criminal court the defendant was indicted for murder for killing one R, P. Tallent, and was tried at the November term of said court, 1885, and convicted of murder in the first degree. From that judgment he has appealed to this court.

The evidence for the state proved that he killed the [59]*59deceased, and of that fact there is no question. It also tended to prove that he armed himself with a gun, and sought the deceased with the intent to kill him. The evidence tended to prove that the relations between the defendant and his wife were not of the most agreeable character, and that the deceased was criminally intimate with her, and on the day of the homicide had taken her off in a skiff to Brunswick. That defendant went in search of his wife to the residence of the deceased, armed with a shot gun, and met the latter near his residence. What then occurred no one witnessed, except the parties engaged, but defendant testified as follows: “ Well, me and Mr. Merrill went to this path that "was leading toward the river. When we come to that path Mr. Merrill stopped, and I went on in the direction of Mr. Tallent’s house, to see if I could learn anything about where my wife was, and I discovered no sign of her there, and I started back north on this path, going down on the slough bank ; after going down some distance from the bank I meets Mr. Tallent; I spoke to Mr. Tallent and asked him if he knew where my wife was, and he made this remark: I have taken her where you won’t find her; ’ and he says, ‘ God damn you, we will settle this right here.’ Tie started at me with his axe in a striking position, and I bid Mr. Tallent to stop; then he advanced a few feet, and I fired. I fired one time.” The axe of deceased, found on the ground, had a shot in the handle near the end farthest from the blade, and on the same side as the blade, and this evidence had a tendency to corroborate the testimony of the accused, showing that the axe was pointing in the direction from which the shot came, and was held in an upright position.

The court, for the state, instructed the jury as follows :

“The court instructs the jury, that if they believe from the evidence that prior to the killing of the de[60]*60ceased, the defendant prepared and armed himself' with a gun, and went in search of, and sought out, deceased, with the intention of killing him, or shooting him, or doing him some great bodily harm, and that he did find, overtake, or intercept, deceased, and did shoot and kill deceased while he was returning from the river to his home, .then it makes no difference who commenced the assault, and the jury shall not acquit the defendant; and the jury are further instructed that in such case they shall disregard any and all testimony tending to show that the character or reputation of deceased for turbulency, violence, peace and quiet was bad, and they shall further disregard any and all evidence of threats made by deceased against the defendant.”

The mere intent to commit a crime is not a crime. An attempt to perpetrate it is necessary to constitute guilt in law. One may arm himself with the purpose of seeking and killing an adversary, and may seek and find him, yet, if guilty of no overt act, commits no crime. It has been repeatedly held in this and nearly every state, in the Union, that one against whom threats have been made by another is not justifiable in assaulting him unless the threatener makes some attempt to execute his threats. A threat to kill but indicates an intent or purpose to kill; and the unexpressed purpose or intent certainly affords no better excuse for an assault by the person against whom it exists than siich an intent accompanied with a threat to accomplish it. The above instruction authorized the jury to convict the defendant even though he had abandoned the purpose to kill the deceased when he met him, and was assaulted by deceased and had to kill him to save his own life. It does not follow because appearances would have excused deceased had he killed the accused, that the accused had no right to defend his life against the deceased, if in fact at the time he had made no assault upon the deceased and intended none. There was evidence of threats [61]*61made by the deceased against the accused, and also of the turbulent and quarrelsome character of the deceased, and so much of the above, and of the third, instruction given for the state, as relates to those matters, is a little obscure. The jury had a right to consider the threats made by the deceased and his character as a turbulent, dangerous man in determining the question as to who was the assailant, he or the defendant, and whether defendant had reasonable ground to apprehend, and did apprehend, that he was in imminent danger of sustaining great bodily harm at the hands of the deceased. It is not clear whether the instructions direct the jury to disregard that evidence in determining the other question, or, after having given them due consideration, they find the other facts against him. If the latter they are unobjectionable, but, on a re-trial, they should be more precise.

The court permitted the wife of the deceased to testify that on the day of, and prior to, the shooting the reputed wife of defendant said to her “that she was-afraid Mart Rider would kill her,” and also that in December, 1883, Mrs. Rider came to her house and told her that Mart Rider had beat her up with a club, ' and that she was as bloody as a hog,” and that she said Rider would kill her, and she wanted Tallent to take her to Miami to get away from him. And that when she carné back from Miami in 1883 her face and side were black and blue. The court also permitted witness, Burruss, to testify that McGaw “-was pretty bloody and drunk; his face was all over blood; ” and Mrs. Rider to testify that she went with Tallent in December, 1883, to Miami because Rider had beaten her with a club.

This testimony was all inadmissible. Mrs. Rider,' the reputed wife of the accused, was not his wife, and was a witness against him, and, of course, what she may have said to third persons, even if material and relevant, is but hearsay. This disposes of the testimony of Mrs. [62]*62Tallent in regard to statements made by Mrs. Rider to her. As to her own testimony, that, in 1883/ nearly two years before this homicide, Rider beat her with a club, and she got Tallent to take her to Miami, it has no relevancy to the cause on trial. Suppose it to be the fact, would it have justified Tallent imkilling Rider, or Rider in killing Tallent, in 1885 ? What light did it throw upon the issues of fact which the jury had to pass upon? Again, supposing it to be true, that McGaw was bloody and drunk, what had that to do with the case ? He was a witness for the state, was not accused of participation in the alleged murder, and why the prosecuting attorney desired to establish the fact is inconceivable.

Mrs. Tallent Vas also permitted to testify that after her husband was shot he said to her, “Oh, hun, he has killed me!” or, “Oh, hun, he has shot me!” “Pray for me!” “Oh, my children!” This was after he had gone about two hundred yards from the place where he was shot, and called her, and she went to him, traveling one hundred yards. It was not admissible as part of the res gestae. 1 Greenl. Evid., sec. 108, and notes. It was not admissible as a dying declaration. She does not state positively what the exclamation of the deceased was. It was, as she states, either

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Bluebook (online)
90 Mo. 54, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-rider-mo-1886.