State v. Schooley

14 S.W.2d 628, 322 Mo. 234, 1929 Mo. LEXIS 584
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMarch 2, 1929
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 14 S.W.2d 628 (State v. Schooley) 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. Schooley, 14 S.W.2d 628, 322 Mo. 234, 1929 Mo. LEXIS 584 (Mo. 1929).

Opinion

*238 BLAIR, P. J.

After a change of venue from Jefferson County, appellant was tried in Wayne County and convicted of the crime of robbery in the first degree. He ivas jointly charged with others, but was separately tried. The jury assessed his punishment at imprisonment in the state penitentiary for a term of ten years and he has appealed from the judgment entered on said verdict.

At about 11:30 o’clock in the forenoon of Saturday, September 25, 1926, three armed men entered the Citizens Bank of Festus in Jefferson County. One guarded the lobby and overawed the customers, while the other two passed behind the bank counter and compelled the cashier to lie down on the floor while they scooped up several thousand dollars in' money and bonds. All three men then left the bank and were driven away rapidly in a waiting automobile.

Roger Elliott was a customer engaged in cashing a check at the cashier’s window when the robbers entered the bank. As a witness, he positively identified appellant as the robber who compelled him, at the point of a revolver, to lie down on the floor during the robbery. A Mrs. Moss entered the bank during the progress of the robbery and was detained in the lobby, but refused to lie down on the floor. She testified that appellant was not the man who guarded the lobby. She identified Smith, of whom we shall hear more later, as that man. She was quite thoroughly impeached in this respect by proof of several previous statements inconsistent with her testimony as a witness.

Upon the departure of the robbers, an immediate alarm was given and the officers of adjacent cities were notified and given a description of the robbers and the automobile driven by them. Edward Staat, a deputy sheriff, who operated a garage and sold farm machinery at Antonia, testified that, just after he received telephone advice of the robbery and a description of the automobile used by the i’obbers, an automobile answering such description passed rapidly through Antonia and he and others pursued that automobile in an automobile belonging to said Staat. They were not certain of the identity of the occupants of the fleeing automobile until a shot was fired by one of the men in the pursuing automobile and the fire was immediately returned by the pursued men. The fleeing automobile was halted temporarily, because of a collision with another automobile, and the pursuers came up close to them before the robbers’ ear could be extricated and proceed. Staat testified that appellant was one of the men at that point who opened fire on the officers in *239 the pursuing automobile and held them back until the robbers’ automobile could proceed. Staat’s identification of appellant at that time and place was definite and positive and on cross-examination was unshaken.

The fleeing automobile then succeeded in getting out of sight of the pursuers and evidently turned off the main highway while so out of view. The pursuers went on until they learned that the fleeing automobile had not passed the point where inquiry was made. Thereupon, they turned back and followed a dim road leading to a club house at House Springs on the bank of Big River. At about half way between the main road and the club house they came upon the automobile which they had been following. It was stalled in the mud. There appellant and one Ball put in an appearance. They came out from the club house to the stalled automobile. Ball opened the door of the automobile and looked in and took out and handed to the officers a box containing bonds, which were afterward shown to be the property of the bank and to have been taken in the robbery. In the subsequent search of the premises adjacent to the club house, a large amount of money -was found in a sack hidden in the weeds and covered from view. Some revolvers and a shotgun were also found. One of the revolvers was identified as one taken from the bank by the robbers.

There can be no question under the evidence that the automobile found stalled in the mud near the club house was the same automobile which carried the robbers from the bank and which Staat and his companions followed from Antonia. Two or three of the robbers escaped across Big River in a boat which they commandeered.

One F. L. Smith, an ex-convict, was found by the .officers in the club house. He was arrested along with appellant, Ball and others. The charge against Smith was disposed of by a nolle prosequi during appellant’s trial and he testified on behalf of the State. He said that the plan to “pull off a job” was made in the office of appellant in Wellston, St. Louis County, the day before, and that he and appellant and others drove down to the club house from Wellston early in the morning of the robbery, and that he was. left at the club house with the understanding that he was to stay there and drive some people back to St. Louis.

Smith further testified that Ball’s automobile had become stalled in the mud and that he was trying to get it out when the Nash automobile, carrying appellant and others, came along the road behind Ball’s automobile and was likewise stalled in the mud. He said that appellant told him the officers had been shooting at them .and that appellant directed him to hide out and lie low. Later appellant told him to go out in the timber and help himself to some money *240 from a sack hidden there. Before he was able to do this, he saw the officers coming and hid in the clnb house-, where he was afterward discovered.

Appellant offered himself, his wife and the before-mentioned Mrs. Moss as witnesses. He testified that he and Ball and Ball’s wife and one Weingartner and his wife drove to the club house the night before the robbery. Weingartner had a lease on the club house from the owner of the land whereon it was built. Appellant said he did not leave the club- house or its vicinity until arrested after the robbery. II,e denied knowledge of, presence at or participation in the robbery, or that he was in the fleeing Nash automobile which carried on a running fire with the officers from Antonia to the vicinity of the club house.

Appellant claimed that Weingartner’s lease on the club house was about to expire and that, during the forenoon of the day of the robbery, he walked down the river three or four miles fishing and looking for some other club house location. He said that he talked with some man on that subject and afterwards started back along the highway, where he met a man and his wife traveling in an automobile. He afterward learned their names- were Henry and Elizabeth Waldecker, who were at the time in business at 1616 Market Street, St. Louis, Missouri. They had lost their way and appellant gave them directions for reaching their destination. He resumed his -walk to the club house and later was picked up in an automobile by one J. P. Neaf and rode with him to a point on the river opposite the club house. He alighted and crossed the river in a boat and reached the club house about noon. He then laid down and'rested until he was disturbed.by the arrival of the Nash automobile. He denied having met Smith in Wellston the night before or driving out to the club house with him the next morning or leaving him there. In short, he denied knowing Smith at all.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

State v. Le Beau
306 S.W.2d 482 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1957)
State v. Pyle
123 S.W.2d 166 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1938)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
14 S.W.2d 628, 322 Mo. 234, 1929 Mo. LEXIS 584, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-schooley-mo-1929.