State v. Stewart

246 S.W. 936, 296 Mo. 12, 1922 Mo. LEXIS 145
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedDecember 9, 1922
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 246 S.W. 936 (State v. Stewart) 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. Stewart, 246 S.W. 936, 296 Mo. 12, 1922 Mo. LEXIS 145 (Mo. 1922).

Opinion

*16 DAVID E. BLAIR, J.

Tried for murder in the first degree for the killing of Walter Allison in Pike County on December 23, 1916, defendant was convicted of murder in the second degree and sentenced to a term of ten years in the penitentiary.

The case was here on former appeal. The opinion of the court thereon is reported in 278 Mo. 177. That, trial resulted in a conviction of murder in the same degree and a like punishment was imposed. The facts stated in that opinion are practically identical with those in the case before us. There is, however, some difference in details.

The undisputed facts are that the deceased, Walter Allison, and the defendant were farmers living in the same neighborhood in Pike County. Defendant had a wife and five children. Deceased was single and about thirty-nine years of age. He was about six feet in height and weighed between 170 and 180 pounds, and apparently prided himself upon his strength. Some trouble had occurred between the two men over the conduct of deceased with defendant’s wife. The testimony did not develop the nature of such relations, but defendant had objected to deceased’s conduct and he testified that he *17 asked deceased to cease.visiting Ms wife or talking to her. It may'safely be assumed that defendant thought deceased was paying improper attentions to his wife, or he doubtless would not have objected. Apparently the evidence on this point was more ample on the first trial than upon the last trial.

On the forenoon of the tragedy and shortly before twelve o’clock, the deceased and his nephew, Jarvie Allison, walked over from his home to the road nearby, where four rural mail boxes had been put úp close together for the convenience of the rural carrier. One of these boxes belonged to deceased, and another to defendant. When deceased and his nephewT arrived at the mail boxes, they found Mrs. Stewart, wife of defendant, and Ruby Stewart, his thirteen-year-old daughter there also. Some conversation ensued between deceased and Mrs. Stewart, in which she told Mm she was not supposed to speak to him. Defendant knew Ms wife had gone to the mail boxes to await the arrival of the mail for the purpose of transacting some business with the carrier. Defendant saw deceased and his nephew start toward the mail boxes. He thereupon secured a revolver and put it in his right coat pocket, and cut across a barn lot and approached them. Mrs. Stewart saw him coming, and said something about his coming and that there would be trouble. Upon Ms arrival defendant fired two shots, one of which took effect in deceased’s leg and the other in his right side about the eleventh or twelfth rib. Allison died six days later as a result of said body wound. His dying declaration, tending to show the above facts and other facts sworn to by his nephew, was in evidence.

Jarvie Allison was the only witness on the part of the State who testified to the facts attending the killing. His testimony, outside of the undisputed facts above detailed, was that deceased was standing near his mail box where he had been counting some money to put in the mail box, probably with a letter, to be taken by the carrier. He had dropped his gloves in the road. When defendant *18 approached, lie said “Hey, Jarvie; Hey, Walter, God damn yon,” and immediately began firing at the deceased, just as deceased was in the act of picking up his gloves. As deceased fell he said, “Boh, you have killed me. ’ ’ Witness did not see any rocks where deceased was standing, and was certain he was picking up his gloves, and not a rock, at the time the shots were fired, and that deceased did not draw back to throw any rock at defendant.

Mrs. Stewart did not testify.

The testimony of defendant’s daughter covered the undisputed facts, and also tended to show that when Mrs. Stewart told deceased her husband was coming, he said: “We will handle him;” that when defendant came up he spoke to the men and told deceased he had promised he would not speak to them and would shun them in a crowd. Deceased reached down and picked up a rock to throw at defendant, and said “that he would smash his God damn brains out.” Deceased was left-handed and drew back his left band to throw at defendant; that defendant then shot twice; that deceased’s gloves were on the mail box and not lying in the road; that defendant did not use any curse words.

Defendant testified that he had a conversation with the deceased the day before the killing concerning his conduct with his wife in which he asked him to cease visiting his wife or talking to her; that when he approached deceased he said: “Hey, Jarvie; Hey, Walter, what did you promise me yesterday?” That deceased started after a rock and said, “You God damn son of a bitch you, I will mash your God damn brains out; ’ ’ that he shot just as deceased started to throw a rock and it rolled nearly to his feet; that he shot simply because deceased was aiming to hit him with a rock.

Defendant admitted that he did not have the revolver in his possession when he saw deceased start toward the mail boxes, and that he procured it after-wards and started to the spot where deceased and his *19 wife were; that he went over there to get his wife away from the company of the deceased and his nephew. Defendant testified that he secured the rock he claimed deceased threw at him and delivered it to the justice of the peace. After taking his wife and daughter home defendant started to town to give himself up and met the constable on the way.

The trial court instructed upon murder in the first degree, murder in .the second degree and self-defense. We have examined the files in the case when it was here on the first appeal and find that the instructions given at the two trials were practically identical. The motions for a new trial and in arrest of judgment raised many of the same questions which, were decided on the first appeal. Appellant has apparently abandoned all the contentions made in said motions in the last trial, except two, and we deem it unnecessaiy to consider more than those two questions. In his brief appellant says: “Defendant appeals, and presses as reversible error in this case the instruction numbered 11 above referred to; and also the kinship of the juror to deceased.” In his formal assignment of errors appellant confines himself/ entirely to these two questions.

I. The court gave instruction numbered 11, which is as follows:

“The court instructs the jury that even though you may find and believe from the evidence in this cause that the deceased, Walter Allison, had been paying defendant’s wife improper attention, still such fact, if true, would afford no excuse or justification for defendant shooting and killing the deceased, Walter Allison.”

This instruction in identical language, except in one or two unimportant respects, was fully approved in Paragraph III of the opinion on the first appeal, 278 Mo. l. c. 190. All the judges en banc, except Boxd, 0. J., not sitting, and WoodsoN, J., absent, concurred in said para *20 graph. • The correctness of the instruction may therefore he safely assumed, provided the evidence at the second trial was sufficient to warrant giving it.

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Bluebook (online)
246 S.W. 936, 296 Mo. 12, 1922 Mo. LEXIS 145, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-stewart-mo-1922.