State v. Rudman

37 S.W.2d 409, 327 Mo. 260, 1931 Mo. LEXIS 731
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMarch 25, 1931
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 37 S.W.2d 409 (State v. Rudman) 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. Rudman, 37 S.W.2d 409, 327 Mo. 260, 1931 Mo. LEXIS 731 (Mo. 1931).

Opinion

WHITE, P. J.

— The defendant was charged by information in the Circuit Court of the City of St. Louis with arson in the second degree, in that, April 25, 1928, he set fire- to a certain storehouse at 4414 Natural Bridge Avenue in St. Louis, a building adjoining a dwelling house inhabited and occupied by one William Gruenekemeier and *264 bis wife Victoria Gruenekemeier. On a trial, October 29, 1929, defendant was found guilty as charged, his punishment assessed at three year’s imprisonment in the penitentiary, and he appealed from the judgment following.

The Gruenekemeiers lived in the second story of a two-story building at 4414 Natural Bridge Road on the south side of the street, fronting north. The first floor and the fixtures they had leased to the defendant, who conducted a retail shoe business there. Under the lease the defendant used a part of the basement. About 7 :30 o ’clock in the evening of April 25, 1928, Mrs. Gruenekemeier, upstairs, heard peculiar noises coming from below as if something were being thrown against the clothes chute which extended from the second story down to the basement. A stairway led from the second story to the first. She went down stairs, found the shade of one window down and another up a little way. Looking through she saw a man she did not recognize standing in the store tying up bundles and throwing them against the clothes chute. She went back upstairs and informed her husband. Then she placed her ear to the speaking tube which extended from the kitchen down to the lower floor and she heard a conversation between the 'defendant and Julius Hyken, a boy who worked for defendant in the store. She heard Mr. Rud-man say: “You can take a bigger box.” And the other man who was here said: ‘ ‘ The shoes in this box we can take them out and wrap them up.” Further she heard one of the men say, “I have a case of rubbers in the back there.” Then someone said, “Bring them here. ’ ’

A part of this conversation was in German. A little later Mr. Gruenekemeier went down to the first floor to investigate matters, and found only Rudman who was in the back of the store. Rudman came forward and “he was all sweated up and excited.” Gruenekemeier asked him where his clerk was. Rudman answered that it was his clerk’s day off. The stores in the neighborhood generally closed at 6:30. Gruenekemeier thought it was unusual that Rudman was in the store at that time of night. They had some conversation about the rent. Gruenekemeier then went out with Rudman and they walked to the corner and came back. Rudman went into the store and Gruenekemeier took position across the street. As Gruen-ekemeier came out of the store he saw two cartons near the door tied together. When he came back from down the street he got behind a telegraph pole and watched. It was then about twenty minutes to nine. Mr. and Mrs. Gruenekemeier testified that soon they saw a stout man and the defendant come out of the store and go to the defendant^ automobile. The other man took a large parcel of bluish white paper from the machine and then they walked west down the street. Defendant got in his machine and went east. Mr. Grueneke- *265 meier came across tbe street and went upstairs. About a quarter of nine all the lights went out, and about five minutes after the defendant drove away and after Gruenekemeier went upstairs he and his wife heard four loud explosions in the lower part of the building, which made vibrations throughout the house. All the windows on the first floor were blown out; flame and smoke immediately commenced coming upstairs in the rear of the building. The Grueneke-meiers then turned in a fire alarm.

William Rohlfing, captain of the fire engine, and other firemen testified that there were two distinct fires not connected with each other; one in the basement, and one on the first floor. From the smell and other appearances they judged the fires had been started by gasoline. There was a gasoline odor and there was an oily feel of things in the basement. The State presented evidence tending to show goods in the store were insured in several policies totalling eight thousand dollars; that the sound value of the stock of goods was about $2500, and the loss of the stock $980. The fire chief, Rohlfing, testified that in every ten to fifteen boxes he would find a box with a pair of shoes in it and the others all had tissue paper in them. The defendant offered evidence to show that the insurance also covered the fixtures belonging to Gruenekemeier, worth about two thousand dollars; the lease provided that the fixtures should all the time be insured by defendant for five hundred dollars. The defendant testified that the goods in the store were worth nine thousand dollars. Other witnesses were introduced by the defendant to show the value of the goods was approximately as much as they were insured for. Defendant also brought out that it was customary in shoe stores, when a pair of shoes is sold, to retain the empty box in the shelf to make a good appearance. The boy Julius Ilyken testified that he was not in the store at the time; that it was his day off. The defendant denied that he had anything to do with setting the fire, and offered evidence to show that he was a man of some property.

I. Defendant filed a demurrer to the evidence at the close of the State’s case, also at the close of all the evidence, and makes the point that the evidence was insufficient to make a submissible case. The evidence as briefly stated above shows that the defendant had an opportunity and the means for setting the fire, and that he had the motive. The evidence fails to show that anyone else had access to the building except the defendant and the Gruenekemeiers who had no motive in setting the fire. And if the jury believed the Gruenekemeiers the evidence also shows the unusual presence and unusual operations of the defendant about the store at a time in the evening after business hours, his presence with a stranger, his carrying away bundles of unknown contents, the explosions followed by the fire within a few minutes after his de *266 parture from tbe store, the apparent use of gasoline in causing the fire, and the absence of any assignable cause for it except human agency. The evidence was sufficient from which the jury could reasonably find that the defendant set fire to the store.

II. The principal point made by the defendant is that the evidence fails to show arson in the second degree. Section 3282, Revised Statutes 1919, defines arson in the first degree, so far as it affects the facts here, as where a person willfully sets fire to any dwelling house in which there shall be at the time some human being. Section 3283 defines a dwelling house as follows:

“Every house, prison, jail or other edifice, which shall have been usually occupied by persons lodging therein, shall be deemed a dwelling house of any person having charge thereof or so lodging therein; but no warehouse, barn, shed or other outhouse shall be deemed a dwelling house, or part of a dwelling house, within the meaning of this or the last section, unless the same be joined to or immediately connected with and is part of a dwelling house.”

Section 3284' defines arson in the second degree as follows:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
37 S.W.2d 409, 327 Mo. 260, 1931 Mo. LEXIS 731, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-rudman-mo-1931.