State v. Rider

95 Mo. 474
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedApril 15, 1888
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 95 Mo. 474 (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, 95 Mo. 474 (Mo. 1888).

Opinion

Brace, J.

On the twenty-third day of July, 1885, the defendant and one Rousey P. Tallent were living in the same neighborhood in the Miami bottom of the Missouri river in Saline county about six miles from the town of Miami. Both went to the town of Miami in the morning of that day, Tallent returning home about noon and Rider, the defendant, about four o’clock in the afternoon. During their absence, a woman who is sometimes called Mrs. Moore and sometimes Mrs. Rider, in the record, who was examined as a witness by the state [480]*480without objection, but whom Rider claimed to be his-wife, and with whom he had been living as such for three years previous, and by whom he had a child then about two years old, left Rider’s house with her child and went to Tallent’s. After Tallent ate his dinner, he rode to the river, procured a skiff, was met at the bank of the river by his wife, this woman, and another neighbor lady, and he took Mrs. Rider in the skiff across the river, leaving her on the other side. About an hour before sundown he started to re-cross the river, and returning to his home a little after dark, in a path leading to his house he was met by the defendant within a few steps of his door, by whom he was shot and killed. Rider, upon returning to his home, found his wife gone, and thereupon commenced making inquiries for her of his neighbors, satisfied himself that she had gone toTallent’s, that Tallent had gone away from home that afternoon, that she had been taken across the river, and that Tallent was the man who had taken her off.

The evidence for the state tended to prove that thereafter he armed himself with a double-barreled shotgun; afterwards procured a revolver, and about dusk proceeded towards Tallent’s home for the purpose of killing him. ,The evidence for the' defendant tended to prove that after he got the shotgun, at the house of' his brother-in-law, Mr. Cockrill, he went in search of his wife, going first to the home of a Mr. Merrill, who lives but a short distance from Tallent’s, and Rider, in his evidence upon the stand, gives the following account of what transpired after he got the gun: “I got me a shotgun there and came on back ; passed Mr.' Bristoe’s and went down to Mr. Merrill’s, and me and Mr. Merrill went to this path leading from the river to Mr. Tallent’s. When we came to that path which ran north and south, Mr. Merrill stopped and I went on in the direction of Mr. Tallent’s home, and went to the south part of his-house, and looked to see if 1 could learn anything about [481]*481where my wife was. I discovered no sign of her there and I started back north on this path leading towards the river, that I had come np, and going down the slough bank I niet Mr. Tallent. I spoke to Mr. Tallent and asked him if he knew where my wife was, and he made this remark, that ‘ I have taken her where you won’t find her, and Grod damn you, we might as well settle this right here.’ He started at me with his axe in a striking posish and he advanced a few feet when I fired; I fired one time. * * * Well, after that I started east towards Mr. Cockrill’s house; I met Mr. Merrill, came across him near his house, I reckon it was some two or three minutes after the shot, * * some two hundred yards may be from Merrill’s house; I am not certain of the distance, could not tell you.”

At the September term, 1885, of the criminal court of Saline county, the defendant was indicted for the homicide and in November was tried, found guilty of murder in the first degree, and was sentenced to be hanged.He appealed to this court, and at the October term, 1886, thereof the judgment was reversed and the cause remanded. 90 Mo. 54. At the March term, 1887, of the criminal court, defendant’s application for a change of venue on account of the prejudice of the inhabitants of Saline county was overruled, and in January, 1888, he was again tried in that court, and again found guilty of murder in the first degree, and from the judgment and sentence then rendered, after an unsuccessful effort for a new trial and in arrest of judgment, he again appeals to this court, assigning various errors that will be noticed in their order.

I. On application for a change of venue the weight of the evidence was that the defendant could have a fair trial in Saline county, nor is the action of the court in overruling the application urged here as error. On [482]*482that issue, in cases even where the evidence is conflicting, the action of the trial court will be held to be conclusive unless there has been a palpable abuse of judicial discretion to the prejudice of the defendant. State v. Hunt, 91 Mo. 490, and cas. cit.

II. It is urged that the court erred in failing to give the jury instructions defining any degree of homicide below murder in the first degree and in giving instructions two and three as follows :

“2. The court instructs the jury that if they believe from the evidence, that, prior to the killing of Tallent, the defendant, Greorge M. Rider, prepared and armed himself with a gun and went in search of and sought out Tallent with the intention of killing him or shooting him or doing him great bodily harm, and that he found, overtook, or intercepted Tallent while the said Tallent was on his way home from the Missouri river, in the county of Saline, and state of Missouri, and then and there did wilfully, deliberately, premeditatedly, and of his malice aforethought (as these terms are defined in the first instruction for the state), shoot at and kill Tallent, and at the time of said shooting Tallent was not then making any threats of violence against defendant and was not attempting to assault the defendant, and that defendant had no reasonable cause to apprehend immediate danger to his person from Tallent, then there is no self-defence in this case of which the defendant can avail himself and the jury should convict.”
“3. Although the jury may believe from the evidence that, prior to the time he was shot, the deceased had made threats against the defendant, yet this fact alone does not justify, excuse, or palliate the offence of murder, provided the jury shall further believe from the evidence that at the time deceased was shot he made no threats against the defendant, and made no attack or assault upon defendant, and made no demonstration of violence against defendant.”

[483]*483The supposititious passion or phrenzy which ingenious counsel argue swept through the mind of the defendant upon suddenly beholding before him the man who had inflicted upon him an injury that had wounded his tenderest sensibilities, enhanced by the gross manner in which that man avowed and emphasized it, and which, for the moment, shook the foundations of right reason in his mind, to the extent of depriving him of that coolness and deliberation essential to a mind capable of committing murder in the first degree, is not to be found in the evidence of either the state or the defendant.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
95 Mo. 474, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-rider-mo-1888.