State v. Robinson

172 S.W. 598, 263 Mo. 318, 1915 Mo. LEXIS 153
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJanuary 4, 1915
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 172 S.W. 598 (State v. Robinson) 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. Robinson, 172 S.W. 598, 263 Mo. 318, 1915 Mo. LEXIS 153 (Mo. 1915).

Opinion

WILLIAMS, C.

Upon an information charging him with the mnrder of his wife, Mary Eobinson, the defendant was tried in the criminal court of Jackson county, found guilty, and his punishment assessed at death. Defendant duly perfected an appeal to this court.

Evidence introduced by the State tended to establish the following facts: At the time of the tragedy defendant lived at 2213 Michigan avenue, Kansas City, Missouri. His family consisted of his wife and her two daughters by a former marriage, Alma and Massie Felton. Alma was eleven years old and Massie was eight years old. The family occupied three rooms on the second floor of a two-story house at that number. A small shed was located a short distance back of the house. The tragedy occurred about midnight on the evening of April 11, 1913. Early that evening, the deceased, accompanied by her two daughters, went to the home of Jane Hill, a short distance from defendant’s home, apparently for the purpose of a social visit. Massie Felton in her testimony referred to Jane Hill as “Aunt Janie.” About 11:30 o’clock on the night in question, deceased and her daughter Alma left the neighbor’s home to return to their home. Massie remained over night with her Aunt Jane. The nest morning Massie returned home but did not find her mother or sister there. The defendant was there and the witness asked him as to the whereabouts of her mother and her sister and he replied that they had gone to work out on Gilham Eoad. Massie never saw her mother or sister alive after they left Jane Hill’s home at the time above mentioned.

A month later a woman telephoned the police station and told the policeman at the desk that it had appeared to her in a dream that a woman’s body had [320]*320been bnried in a shed back of a house located at 2213 Michigan avenue. There was some evidence tending to show that Jane Hill was the woman who telephoned the police. Three police officers were thereupon detailed to make an investigation of the premises in question. Upon arriving at the premises, the officers noticed something projecting from the ground in the shed. Some of. the earth was removed with a shovel and it was discovered that a woman’s body was there buried. The coroner was immediately notified and he, in company with an undertaker, arrived upon the scene and disinterred the body. The body was that of Mary Rob' inson, wife of the defendant. The arms and legs had been severed close to the trunk of the body. One leg was buried with the body but the two arms and other leg were missing. The body was later removed to an undertaking establishment.

The police arrested Jane Hill on suspicion and •seven days later arrested the defendant. At the time of his arrest the defendant was staying at a stone quarry camp on Mouse Creek, sis miles west and two miles south of Lee’s Summit, Missouri, at which place he was employed as a workman. The arrest was made about eleven o’clock at night by three policemen and the defendant was returned to police station No. 6 at Kansas City on the same night. Upon being arrested, the defendant gave some money to his tent mate and said: ‘ ‘ Charley, you can have this money, I won’t see you no more.” Upon his arrival at police headquarters, upon the night of his arrest, defendant was asked by the police officers as to the whereabouts of his stepdaughter Alma Felton. At first, defendant denied all knowledge as to her whereabouts, but later stated that Jane Hill had killed the little girl by choking her and that he had taken the body of the little girl down to a pasture and buried it. The defendant further stated to the officers that he had strangled his wife to death and that he and the Hill woman had [321]*321buried Ms wife that night but did not have time to bury the little girl so they waited until the next night to bury her. Defendant further admitted to the police officers that after his wife was dead Jane Hill held his wife’s limbs while he cut them off: with a butcher knife and that the same operation was performed on the body of the little girl and that they burned the amputated limbs in a stove at his house. It was about three a. m., on the night of the arrest, when the defendant made the above .confession, and immediately thereafter three police officers took the defendant to the pasture where he claimed the little girl was buried. A small lake was located in the pasture. Upon reaching the lake the defendant said: “You see that willow tree there, right there at the edge of the water 1 There is where the body of Alma is buried.” The officers returned the defendant to the police station and the next morning about ten o’clock took him back to the lake in the pasture and defendant again pointed out the spot where he said the little girl was buried. An excavation was thereupon made at the point indicated and the mutilated body of the little girl was disinterred. The legs and arms were missing.

Defendant’s trial was begun on the 14th day of July, 1913. Two or three days preceding the time of the trial the defendant was taken to the office of the prosecuting attorney so that the prosecuting attorney might interrogate him concerning the implication of the Hill woman in the murder. During the time that the defendant was present in the office of the prosecuting attorney, the following persons were also present and heard the conversation between the prosecuting attorney and the defendant: James McCormack, deputy marshall; U. K. Wallace, reporter for the Kansas City Post; C. H. Thompson, reporter for the Kansas City Star; and Prank Paris, the stenographer who took down the confession made by defendant. D'efend[322]*322ant there admitted that he killed both his wife and stepdaughter and stated that Jane Hill had nothing to do with the murder. Thereupon the prosecuting attorney began to ask the defendant questions and the defendant made answers to them. The questions and answers were taken down by a stenographer and immediately thereafter were transcribed into typewriting and handed to the defendant; the defendant stated that he could not read. The statement was then read to him by Mr. Thompson, the reporter for the Kansas City Star, and when the reading was finished, defendant said the statement was correct. The defendant was unable to write and he signed the statement by his mark which was witnessed by all of the above named persons. All of the above persons testified at the trial except the prosecuting attorney and Mr. Thompson. It appears that Mr. Thompson was en gaged in newspaper work in another state at the time of the trial. The attesting witnesses testified that., before the defendant made the statement, the prosecuting attorney told him that he was not compelled to make a confession but that if he did make a confession it would be used against him at the trial; that no threats were used nor were any promises or offers of reward held out to the defendant to induce him to make a confession but that his confession was voluntarily made. All of the evidence above referred to concerning the murder of the little girl was admitted in evidence without objection on the part of the defendant. Later when the State offered further evidence showing defendant’s implication in the murder of the little girl, the defendant objected,' and the court excluded any further reference to the murder of the little girl. The court also gave an instruction to the jury that they should not consider any evidence other than that concerning the death of the wife.

The written confession above referred to was properly identified and introduced in evidence over the [323]*323objection of defendant.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
172 S.W. 598, 263 Mo. 318, 1915 Mo. LEXIS 153, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-robinson-mo-1915.