State v. Schmulbach

147 S.W. 966, 243 Mo. 533, 1912 Mo. LEXIS 377
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJune 1, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 147 S.W. 966 (State v. Schmulbach) 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. Schmulbach, 147 S.W. 966, 243 Mo. 533, 1912 Mo. LEXIS 377 (Mo. 1912).

Opinion

BLAIR, C.

Defendant was convicted of mnrder in the second degree and sentenced to thirty years in the penitentiary. He appealed.

The evidence for the State tended to show that on the night of November 15,1909, Officers Smith and Graney of the Joplin police force, acting under a general order to arrest all women of bad character, arrested defendant’s wife and one Minnie McDonald at 803 Main street in Joplin. When arrested the women demanded to know whether the officers had a warrant and were told they had not. They at first refused, on this account, to submit to arrest but changed their minds on condition that they be permitted to use the telephone to arrange for bond. This Mrs. Schmulbach did, leaving word with the prospective bondsman to inform her husband of her plight and have him also go to the police station. The message was delivered as requested. The officers and the women then left the place to go to the station, the former, at the suggestion of their prisoners, walking some little distance in advance in order that the fact the women were under arrest might not be advertised more than necessary. For the same reason the party proceeded westward toward Joplin street, a less traveled thoroughfare. As they crossed the street at the intersection óf Eighth and Main and after the officers hád passed some thirty or thirty-five feet west of and beyond the corner and the women had reached the corner and were on the sidewalk at the northwest corner of the street intersection, defendant, who had come south on Main street and reached a point near the corner,, called to his wife, who walked north on Main street to meet him, her companion remaining on the corner. The officers were attracted by defendant’s speaking to his wife, and by the fact their prisoners were no longer following them and one had started up another street, and started quickly back. Officer Graney testified that when he and Smith [536]*536reached a point five or six feet west of the door across the southeast corner of the building on the northwest corner of the intersection of Eighth and Main he heard some one say, “What’s the matter here?” or, “What the hell is the matter here?” and defendant’s wife replied: “They are taking us to jail and Graney struck me.” Graney stepped past and in front of Smith and defendant came into view, stepped off the sidewalk at a point about eighteen feet from the officers, fired three or four times, ran into Main street and fired three or four shots more. Another eyewitness testified that defendant commenced the shooting, firing three shots; that the officers stepped back toward the building and fell against each other and then two or three more shots were fired, the reports being louder than before and witness thought these shots were fired by one of the officers. He had seen officer Smith’s pistol in his hand before defendant fired. He heard no other shots. He heard some one say just before the shooting began: “There’s the son-of-a-bitch, shoot him,” and the firing immediately began. After firing, defendant ran and passed out of sight near the entrance to the alley next east of Main street. Graney was shot through both legs at the knee, and Smith was shot through the body, the latter dying of his wound on the following day'. The evidence further showed that the officers were both in full uniform, and were wearing helmets and the usual policeman’s badge. There were electric lights on the corner and the store buildings were lighted. There was also evidence tending to show that officer Graney’s pistol was not fired on the night of the tragedy. ■

Defendant fled and was arrested in 1911 in Seattle, Washington, where he was living under an assumed name. To the officers who arrested him he gave his name as Harry Nye.

Considerable evidence was introduced by the State to the effect that the reputation of defendant’s [537]*537wife and her companion, Minnie McDonald, for chastity was bad. This evidence was admitted over defendant’s objection and the trial court, at the close of the evidence, both orally and in writing instructed the jury that they must disregard it. The women mentioned did not testify in the case.

There was evidence for defendant tending to show that his possession of a pistol the night of the shooting was the result of circumstances which showed he carried the weapon for no evil purpose.

Defendant testified in his own behalf that when he was told of his wife’s telephone message and that she was under arrest he attempted to telephone her but could get no response. He then left the saloon in which the message was delivered to him and started to his home at 803 Main street, proceeding south until he saw the two policemen and his wife and Minnie McDonald following them. He called to his wife and she came north on Main street to meet him. She was crying and defendant asked her what was the matter. She replied that she was arrested. Defendant then asked her what she was crying about and she answered that “Tim” (Officer G-raney) had struck her. Just then the officers who had been just around the corner, “turned the corner with a rush” and as they did so one of them, according to defendant, said: “There is the son-of-a-bitch! Shoot him.” Officer Smith had a pistol in his hand. Defendant declared that both he and the officers then began to fire, and he was not certain who fired the first shot. He testified that he fired at this time five shots and the officers fired one, firing a second shot after he (defendant) turned to run. He said the reason he fired was that “when he made that remark I thought he was going to shoot me, that was the only thing I could figure out, and probably kill me.”

1. The information, with sufficient clearness and certainty, charges defendant with murder in the first [538]*538degree, and need not be set ont in this opinion, no •question concerning it being raised by counsel.

Neither need the exception saved in connection with the impanelment of the jury be discussed at length since, under the statute and the settled rule in this State, as counsel concedes, the action of the court in impaneling veniremen who had formed opinions solely from rumor and newspaper reports but who satisfied the court they could' give defendant a fair trial, is not ground for reversal in this case.

2. One of the grounds of motion for new trial is that the court erred in its instructions on murder and that as to the presumption arising from the use of a deadly weapon. These instructions are in a form heretofore approved (State v. Grant, 152 Mo. 57; State v. Hudspeth, 159 Mo. 178) and further comment is unnecessary, except to say that the evidence warranted the court in giving them.

3. Upon the subject of flight the trial court instructed as follows:

“The court instructs the jury that flight raises the presumption of guilt, and if the jury believe and find from the evidence that the defendant after the alleged shooting of William Smith, charged in the information, fled from the State of Missouri for the purpose of avoiding arrest and trial for said offense, you may take this fact into consideration in determining his guilt or innocence.”

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Related

State v. Martin
260 S.W.2d 536 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1953)
Nevarez v. State
196 P. 449 (Arizona Supreme Court, 1921)
State v. Herring
188 S.W. 169 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1916)

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Bluebook (online)
147 S.W. 966, 243 Mo. 533, 1912 Mo. LEXIS 377, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-schmulbach-mo-1912.