State v. Robertson

77 S.W. 528, 178 Mo. 496, 1903 Mo. LEXIS 370
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedDecember 9, 1903
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 77 S.W. 528 (State v. Robertson) 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. Robertson, 77 S.W. 528, 178 Mo. 496, 1903 Mo. LEXIS 370 (Mo. 1903).

Opinion

GANTT, P. J.

From a conviction of murder in the first degree in the circuit court of Adair county, the defendant prosecutes this appeal.

The prosecution is by information filed by the prosecuting attorney verified by his affidavit.

The information, save in one immaterial point, is in the usual form, long approved, and it is unnecessary to set it forth at length. The arraignment was regular, and no complaint is made as to the selection and impaneling of the jury.

[500]*500The information charges that defendant on the 13th day of November, 1902, at the county of Adair in this State, willfully, deliberately, premeditatedly and of his malice aforethought, shot and killed George Conlde. The facts are in substance the following :

The shooting took place at the town of Brashear in Adair county! Deceased was defendant’s father-in-law, a man about sixty-five years of age, who resided on a farm about half a mile outside the corporate limits of the town of Brashear. Defendant married deceased’s daughter some years ago and lived with her until he left Missouri and went to Kansas several years thereafter. She then secured a divorce. In 1898, defendant enlisted in the service of the United States in the Spanish-American war. He returned by way of Washington to St. Louis and then to Kirksville. He went to Brashear and wrote a note to his former wife with the proposition that they should be married again.. His proposition was accepted, but not without the opposition of the deceased and his family. Shortly after-wards the defendant bought a piece of land near Kirks-ville. In order to secure the money with which to pay for the farm, the deceased became defendant’s security for one hundred dollars, while the balance was secured by deed of trust on the land. A short time prior to the 13th day of November, 1902, defendant and his wife concluded to sell the land and offered it to the deceased’s brother, but he, fearing that some trouble might arise, declined to entertain the proposition.

On the morning of the homicide, the defendant and his wife boarded the train at Kirksville and went to Brashear for the purpose of selling the property to the deceased. Before leaving Kirksville a conveyancer was obtained and a deed to the land drawn conveying it to deceased, which was signed and acknowledged by the defendant and his wife. On reaching Brashear defendant went to the bank and asked the cashier if a note for one hundred and fifty dollars signed by the [501]*501deceased was good. The cashier told him that it was. Defendant then said he would go out and secure the signature of deceased to the note and return. The note was made payable to the bank. The defendant and his wife left the bank and walked down the street about sixty feet when defendant noticed the-deceased in a hardware store. He requested his wife to go in and call her father out. This she did. The deceased, defendant, and defendant’s wife then walked from the hardware store to the corner, when defendant asked the deceased to sign the note, stating that they would then deliver the deed they had already executed to the land to him.

About this time Harvey Johnson, a witness for the State, came up and he heard the defendant say to the deceased, “How can you treat me so?” and the deceased said, ‘ ‘ Treat, hell, see what I have already done for you,” and in a moment thereafter the shooting occurred, the defendant stating that the deceased, then threatened to do him some violence and made an attempt as though to draw a knife, and he drew a revolver and shot. The deceased lived but a few minutes thereafter. The defendant was arrested in a short time, but not until he had endeavored to shoot himself and had cut himself badly with a knife in an attempt to take his own life. He was so weakened from the loss of blood that he became unconscious and remained in that condition for a considerable time.

In rebuttal, witnesses for the State testified that the deceased was in their full view during the conversation between deceased and defendant and that deceased at no time drew a knife or made any demonstration of an assault on defendant. The instructions will be noticed in the course of the opinion.

I. The first error assigned is that because the information alleges that the pistol with which defendant shot and killed deceased was “then and there loaded [502]*502•with gunpowder and a leaden bullet,” and that “with the leaden bullet aforesaid, out of the pistol aforesaid, then and there by force of the gunpowder aforesaid by the said John Robertson discharged and shot off as aforesaid,” the defendant “did strike, penetrate and wound him the said George Conkle,” and the proof disclosed that the pistol was loaded with at least kvo leaden balls, the State’s case must fail, because when the first shot was fired the only leaden ball alleged to be in the pistol had been discharged, and after this first fire there wias, so far as the information goes, no other leaden ball in it, and the State ought not to be permitted to show defendant shot and killed deceased at the second shot, as all the evidence shows he did.

This objection can not be seriously, considered. It matters not how many other balls were in the pistol, the information was sufficient to charge the one ball with which defendant shot and killed deceased. This is the one with which the information charges the pistol was loaded, and with which deceased was killed.

II. Among other instructions given by the court was the following numbered 8: “If you find and believe from the evidence beyond a reasonable doubt that on the day of the homicide proved by the evidence defendant went to Brashear with the intention or design of either compelling George Conkle to sign a note with or for defendant, or of killing said Conkle if he refused to sign such note, and that he requested said Conkle' to sign such note, and that Conkle refused to do so, and that defendant thereupon did kill said Conkle because of such refusal, then you should find defendant guilty of murder in the first degree.”

This instruction is urged as error, for the reason, as defendant insists, that there was no evidence that defendant went to Brashear with the intention or design of either compelling Conkle (the deceased) to sign [503]*503a note with or for him, or of killing him if he refused to do so.

S. M. Moore, a witness, testified to a conversation he had with defendant after the homicide in which witness said to defendant, “It was too bad that he went there and got into that trouble,” and he (defendant), said, “No, it is not too bad. I went down to kill Mm and did it. There’s nothing too bad about it. I feel better than I have for ten years.”

J. T. O’Bryan, another witness, testified, “I asked the question, did he go down to Brashear to kill that man, and he said, ‘Not necessarily.’ I asked him what he meant by ‘not necessarily.’ Does that mean if he did not sign that note you would Mil him? and he said, ‘Yes, that’s the way to put it.’ ”

John Musick, another witness, testified that he heard Mr. Johnson iask him (the defendant), “Did you tell Mr. Conkle before I came out of the store you would kill him if he did not sign that note?” and defendant said, “Yes, sir; I had no choice.”

Another witness, C. W. Gordon, testified that defendant asked him, “Is he (Conkle) dead? I said, ‘Yes, John, did you intend to kill him?’ and he said, ‘I did.’ I said, ‘Are you satisfied?’ and he said, ‘I have no regrets.’ ”

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Related

State v. Kenyon
126 S.W.2d 245 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1939)
State v. Weagley
228 S.W. 817 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1921)
State v. Miller
175 S.W. 187 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1915)

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Bluebook (online)
77 S.W. 528, 178 Mo. 496, 1903 Mo. LEXIS 370, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-robertson-mo-1903.