State v. Sansone

22 S.W. 617, 116 Mo. 1, 1893 Mo. LEXIS 262
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMay 16, 1893
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 22 S.W. 617 (State v. Sansone) 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. Sansone, 22 S.W. 617, 116 Mo. 1, 1893 Mo. LEXIS 262 (Mo. 1893).

Opinion

GIantt, P. 1.

The defendant was indicted at the January term, 1892, of the criminal court of Jackson county, for the murder of Joseph Marichirina, on the twenty-seventh day of December, 1891. He was duly arraigned and his plea of “not guilty” entered. He was tried at the same term and .convicted of murder in the second degree. A motion for new trial was filed and continued to the April term, and was finally overruled July 19, 1892, and the defendant sentenced to the penitentiary for ninety-nine years.

[7]*7At the time of the sentence the court stayed the execution of the sentence until July 29, 1892, to enable defendant to file a bill of exceptions.

On the twentieth day of July, 1892, and after having overruled the motion for new trial and sentenced defendant, the Hon. Heney P. White, the judge of said criminal court, died, without having had a bill of exceptions presented to him' by defendant for his approval. The term was kept alive by adjournment by the officers of the court, from day to day, for three days, as provided by statute, when the governor appointed Hon. John W. Woeeobd judge of the court to fill the vacancy so occasioned by the death of Judge White.

Judge Wofeobd, having been of counsel for defendant, was, of course, incompetent to pass upon his own bill of exceptions. Hpon the application of the defendant to this court, we awarded him a writ of mandamus to said criminal court to cause an election to be held for a special judge to settle and approve his bill of exceptions and grant his appeal. State ex rel. Sansone v. Wofford, 111 Mo. 526. Thereafter Geokge L. Walls was elected special judge and settled, signed and certified the bill of exceptions, presented by defendant, and the cause is here on his appeal, thus perfected.

On Sunday, December 27, 1891, the defendant, Antony Sansone, the deceased, Joseph Marichirina, and a cousin, of the deceased, Antone Marichirina, all Italians, met at Anton Citzo’s saloon on Third street in Kansas City, Missouri, about ten o’clock in the forenoon. After drinking together, they went to Basili’s saloon at Grand avenue and First street, where they ate lunch and drank wine. They remained at this saloon about one hour.

They went to Nuccio’s saloon on Third and Locust streets. During all the time they appeared friendly. [8]*8While in Nuccio’s saloon they drank and smoked and chatted with the crowd that was gathered there, some of whom where playing- cards and others looking on. The defendant left the room for a short time. Upon his return he proposed that the three should go, but the deceased demurred, and said he wanted to stay there. Thereupon the defendant took him by the coat and pulled him toward the door but all the witnesses thought it was a friendly act, until they reached the door. When they reached the door the defendant was in front, the deceased a step or so behind him and Antone Marichirina close behind deceased.

When deceased declined to go with defendant, defendant applied to deceased the Italian epithet, “Skifosa,” which was translated by-the interpreters in the case to mean, “contemptible, • mean, disgusting, low,” and vulgarly, a “stinker.” When they reached the door defendant was heard to repeat to deceased this expression: “You are a skifosa,” to which deceased retorted, “If I am a skifosa you■ are a skifosa. I am not afraid of you or Christ.” Immediately after saying this, and as they were ascending the three steps which lead up from the floor of the saloon to the level of the sidewalk, defendant having reached the top step, deceased having one foot on the floor and the other on the first or lower step, and his cousin following four feet to the rear, defendant turned, and aiming a revolver at deceased, shot him through the head, producing the wound of which he died that evening.

The evidence tends strongly to show there were three shots fired. Anton Marichirina fired one at defendant after he shot the deceased, his cousin, but did not hit him. The crowd in the saloon ran at the first shot, and the evidence of the bystanders is not very consistent after the revolver was exhibited by the defendant.

[9]*9There was evidence tending to show on the part of defendant that some days prior to the killing deceased had verbally guaranteed the payment of $100 defendant had loaned another Italian, and when reminded of this promise, deceased had denied the promise, and called defendant “a d — n liar,”.and attempted to draw his pistol but was prevented by his friends; that after this he had threatened defendant and the threat was communicated to defendant, but it did not seem to annoy him much.

There was also evidence that a revolver was found near deceased’s body and was taken away by his cousin. On this point the evidence was extremely contradictory, the state’s witnesses denying that defendant’s witnesses were present in the saloon at the time they claimed to have seen the pistol on the floor by the body of the deceased. There was also evidence impeaching the moral character of one of defendant’s witnesses.

The court instructed on murder in the first and second degree and self defense. The other facts will sufficiently appear in the discussion of the errors assigned by defendant.

I. The first assignment of errors relates to the impaneling of the jury. An inspection of the record discloses that it was necessary to summon twenty-five additional jurors after the list of jurors drawn by the county court had been exhausted, to make out the panel of qualified jurors, from which the jury of twelve should be selected.

By section six (6) of the act, prescribing the “qualification of petit jurors” approved April 1st, 1891, in countieshaving over fifty thousand inhabitants and less than three hundred thousand inhabitants, “When a jury for the trial of the cause cannot be made up from the regular panel, the judge of the court before [10]*10whom the cause is pending may make out and deliver to the proper officer a list of jurors sufficient to complete the panel, but such extra jurors shall be summoned only for the trial of that particular cause.” Laws 1891, sec. 6, p. 173.

It appears that in this cause, for his own convenience in the first instance, the judge of the criminal court by his written order required the marshal to summon twenty-five duly qualified jurors to appear in his court for the completion of the panel in this cause. The record recites that after these extra jurors came the judge in open court fully inquired into their names, places of residence, and business and having satisfied himself, then ordered the marshal to summon them. The list of jurors was then reduced to writing and the order containing their names signed by the judge, and the return of the marshal thereon, showing that he summoned them upon the order of the judge, was filed.

The only possible objection to this method that can be urged, is, that the judge did not in the first instance make out this list from his own memory, but it will be observed that the statute nowhere undertakes to prescribe how the judge shall acquire the information upon which he makes his order for the additional jurors, and in this case, he simply used the chief executive officer of the court to bring into his presence these citizens.

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Bluebook (online)
22 S.W. 617, 116 Mo. 1, 1893 Mo. LEXIS 262, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-sansone-mo-1893.