State v. Rose

249 S.W.2d 324
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMay 12, 1952
Docket41851
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 249 S.W.2d 324 (State v. Rose) 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. Rose, 249 S.W.2d 324 (Mo. 1952).

Opinion

249 S.W.2d 324 (1952)

STATE
v.
ROSE.

No. 41851.

Supreme Court of Missouri, En Banc.

May 12, 1952.
Rehearing Denied June 9, 1952.

*326 Roy Hamlin, Hannibal, for appellant.

J. E. Taylor, Atty. Gen., Lawrence L. Bradley, Asst. Atty. Gen., for respondent.

ELLISON, Presiding Judge.

The appellant, 26 years old, a Navy veteran of the last World War, was convicted by a jury in the circuit court of Ralls county of a forcible rape upon Mrs. George S. Koch, a married woman 35 years old, in violation of Sec. 4393, R.S.1939, Mo.R.S.A., and his punishment assessed at imprisonment in the State penitentiary for 40 years. On this appeal his "self employed" counsel [meaning, as we understand, counsel who voluntarily serve without pay] makes fifteen assignments of error, severally complaining of: (1) improper separation of the jury and contact of members thereof with persons other than the sheriff and his deputies; (2) exclusion of proper evidence tendered in his behalf; (3) admission of improper and prejudicial evidence against him, particularly his written confession; (4) prejudicial remarks and comments by the trial judge on the failure of appellant's counsel to state whether they relied on the defense of insanity or on a plea of not guilty, and on other matters; (5) the verdict, which is claimed to be excessive.

In brief the basic facts introduced by the State were as follows. The alleged rape occurred after dark on the evening of April 10, 1948. The prosecutrix had been waiting in the family automobile at the Burlington railroad station in Hannibal for her husband, who was due on the return trip of his run to St. Louis as a locomotive fireman. She testified that as his train was backing in the appellant entered the rear door of the automobile without invitation, told her she had a gun at her back, punched her with it, and ordered her to drive to a place in the country over 10 miles southwest of Hannibal in Ralls county. There he had forcible sexual intercourse with her to the extent of penetration. She told him she was "draining from cancer" and he immediately discontinued the assault, and compelled her to take him back to a point in Hannibal where he jumped out of the automobile and disappeared. Mrs. Koch at once drove home, informed her husband of what had occurred, and they notified the police, she giving a description of her assailant.

Three days later on April 13, appellant was arrested by State Highway patrolman Burnett near Brookfield on State Highway 36 some 90 miles west of Hannibal, while riding on a beer truck. He was armed with a .38 caliber short barreled revolver and holster. When taken back to Hannibal the prosecutrix identified him. The next day, April 14, a special agent of the F.B.I. and local officers took his written statement in which he admitted the rape. Three days thereafter on April 17 the prosecuting attorney of Ralls county filed an information charging him with the rape; the court appointed counsel for him, and he entered a plea of guilty upon which the court sentenced *327 him to life imprisonment in the penitentiary. Forty days later present counsel for appellant filed a motion supported by affidavits to set aside that sentence and judgment on the ground that the appellant was of unsound mind. The motion was sustained but appellant refused to plead, whereupon the trial judge entered a plea of not guilty in his behalf. Appellant took a change of venue from that judge and Judge Hollingsworth of an adjoining circuit was called in to try the case.

At the second trial, beginning December 16, 1948, the appellant testified in his own behalf. In substance he said he arrived in Hannibal about noon on the day of the alleged rape and registered at the Windsor Hotel under an assumed name because he knew the Navy was looking for him as a deserter. Thence he visited an old acquaintance, Mrs. Huff, in west Hannibal. From there he proceeded to a tavern and did some drinking. At the tavern he called a taxi, the driver of which happened to be Bill Wooten, a boyhood friend and former Navy man. He took appellant back to the Windsor Hotel where they had one or two drinks. Appellant said he turned his pistol and holster over to Wooten for the purpose of having the latter obtain money on them for him. Wooten identified them at the trial by general appearance, and said he kept them overnight and returned them to appellant the next day [the alleged rape having occurred during that intervening time.]

Continuing, appellant testified that after Wooten's departure he left his hotel and went to a tavern in north Hannibal and had a few drinks. He was there advised the police were looking for him, and a little later at another place a friend of his told him the Navy was looking for him. At about the same place he saw some men in Navy uniform. Thinking they were seeking him he walked toward the railroad station to catch a train. There he saw the prosecutrix in her automobile. He said they exchanged greetings and he got in the back seat and asked her to take him outside of town so he could escape the Navy men. He had no revolver with him. After demurring a little because of the impending arrival of her husband and lack of gasoline, she drove him out into the country, parked the automobile, and voluntarily submitted to sexual approaches by him, not amounting to penetration because he desisted when he discovered she was bandaged and said she was afflicted with cancer. Then they drove back to the place in Hannibal where he had first got in the automobile, and he left.

Appellant further expressed doubt or ignorance whether the prosecutrix was the same woman as the one involved in the foregoing expedition. And he testified that on the night of April 13, just before he had made his written confession on April 14, he didn't sleep because the police kept bothering him and accusing him of raping a woman with a gun. And they threatened that if he didn't "sign papers" he would get four years, and they would turn him over to the Navy. Other evidence will be detailed in the discussion of the assignments of error in appellant's brief.

The first of these is that the trial jury was permitted to have contact with persons other than the sheriff and his sworn deputies during the trial in violation of Secs. 4071 and 4124, R.S.1939, Mo.R.S.A. The undisputed facts as sworn to by the sheriff were that the trial was held in the middle of December, 1948, at the county seat, New London, but for lack of sufficient sleeping accommodations the jury were quartered each night in the residence of a Mr. and Mrs. Yancey in the city of Perry, some 19 miles away. They were transported thence in three automobiles with a sheriff or deputy in charge of each. On Friday night during the trial a physician, Dr. Brown, was called to the residence to administer a "cold shot" to the sheriff and one of the jury, and either the day before or the next day a "flu shot" was administered to another juror in the evening at the court house by a Dr. Waters.

These treatments consisted of hypodermic injections of vaccine to prevent or arrest a cold. They were brief, and in each instance the sheriff or a deputy was present. The case on trial was not mentioned. Also, on occasion during the trial the *328 jurors were permitted to retire to a rest room in the judge's chambers, while other jurors remained in the hallway, but all were under surveillance of the sheriff or his deputies and the public was excluded. One or more of counsel for the defense unintentionally started during a noon recess to enter the hallway where the jury were, and were requested by the sheriff to retire.

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Bluebook (online)
249 S.W.2d 324, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-rose-mo-1952.