State v. Stidham

449 S.W.2d 634, 1970 Mo. LEXIS 1102
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedFebruary 9, 1970
Docket45537, 54674
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 449 S.W.2d 634 (State v. Stidham) 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. Stidham, 449 S.W.2d 634, 1970 Mo. LEXIS 1102 (Mo. 1970).

Opinion

BARRETT, Commissioner.

In 1952 James William (known to one and all as “Slick”) Stidham was sentenced to 25 years’ imprisonment for his part in the armed robbery of the Grapette Bottling Company in Joplin. For the details of that crime see State v. Stidham, Mo., 258 S. W.2d 620. On October 3, 1955, after a jury trial and verdict in July 1955, Stidham was sentenced to life imprisonment for his participation in the slaying of fellow-inmate Walter Lee Donnell on September 22, 1954, at the height of the riot of approximately 800 inmates of the main prison in Jefferson City. In the trial of the latter case and now, at the behest of Father Clark, he has been represented by a distinguished lawyer, Mr. Mark M. Hennelly, then a successful and experienced criminal lawyer, now a vice-president and general counsel of one of the larger railroads. The murder conviction was appealed upon a full transcript of three volumes, there was a complete appellate review, the opinion was turned into twenty-three headnotes, after counsel raised what he deemed, no doubt every conceivable point and error. That conviction of murder was affirmed on September 9, 1957, in State v. Stidham, Mo., 305 S.W.2d 7. In view of some of the problems now raised it should be pointed out that before the murder case reached trial stage Stidham’s diligent counsel filed every conceivable motion and plea, including the right to a change of venue which accounts for the trial in Butler County, many miles from Jefferson City. Over the years, following the affirmation of the life sentence, Stidham has lodged in this court innumerable letters, communications and pro se motions and they have all been responded to. In June 1966 he personally filed and argued an appeal from a 27.26, V.A.M.R. proceeding in Butler County in which he attempted to present several of the issues now before the court. State v. Stidham, 403 S.W.2d 616. In the meanwhile the court en banc revised its post-conviction procedure, and Stidham having unsuccessfully instituted another 27.26 proceeding, this court set aside its affirmance of the prior post-conviction judgment and remanded the cause for an amendment of the motion to vacate “which includes every ground known to the prisoner,” and in the spirit of the rule for “a full evidentiary hearing” on all questions of fact. The order and judgment in that opinion is reported in State v. Stidham, 415 S.W.2d 297. And on that proceeding, on Stidham’s behalf, there has been a change of venue from Butler County and there has been a new and complete hearing before Honorable Michael F. Godfrey, a circuit judge in St. Louis. Furthermore, in response to what was deemed to be the spirit of the Bosler cases, (Bosler v. Swenson, 8 Cir., 363 F.2d 154 and Swenson v. Bosler, 386 U.S. 258, 87 S.Ct. 996, 18 L.Ed.2d 33) the court en banc set aside the judgment of this court upon the original appeal, 305 S. W.2d 7, and again appointed Mr. Hennelly to represent Stidham in both cases. As indicated, there was a full hearing on the 27.26 proceeding, all issues were found against Stidham and he has appealed the judgment in that case. In the order setting aside the original submission the two causes were consolidated and are to be disposed of in this opinion. It should be stated in this connection that Mr. Hennelly has raised, extensively briefed, and orally argued every conceivable claim of error in the original trial, all of which covers and includes every possible right to relief in a post-conviction proceeding.

One of the claims of infringement of due process is that the state was “allowed to prove and the jury was instructed to consider a crime not included in the indictment.” Const.Mo. Art. I, Sec. 18(a), *637 V.A.M.S. Thus, it is said, he was indicted for the murder of Donnell, but he “was not, however, indicted for participating in a conspiracy to kill Donnell.” Therefore, it is urged that the court erred in admitting in evidence conversations and conduct on the part of others engaged in slaying Donnell. By the same token it is contended that the court prejudicially erred in instructing the jury in referring to and hypothesizing a concert of action, an aiding and abetting in slaying Donnell. In the first place the argument overlooks not only the theory but the specific allegations of the indictment. And in the second place it ignores the facts of Donnell’s killing, the circumstances in which he was savagely murdered. While Stidham, as well as his codefendants, was given a severance, the indictment charged that “William R. Hoover, Jackie Lee Noble, Paul Edward Kenton, James William Stidham, Rollie Laster, Don Wm. DeLapp and Joseph M. Vidauri 1 * * * did then and there fe-loniously, wilfully, deliberately, premeditat-edly, on purpose and of their malice aforethought, make an assault upon one Walter Lee Donnell and then and there with dangerous and deadly weapons, to wit: a sledgehammer, and a knife, and another sharp instrument or dagger * * * a wooden table leg, and other blunt instruments * * * and their fists and hands and feet * * * strike, hit, stab, cut, beat and stomp” and thereby kill Donnell. The testimony was that Kenton held Donnell while Laster stabbed him with an ice pick, Stidham “slashed” him with a knife, and two others hit him in the head with a sledgehammer. In addition to other bruises and contusions an autopsy on Donnell’s body revealed “a severe mashed in, or compressed area in the right side of the face approximately just underneath the right eye, that extended back, involving the right ear with separation of the lower part of the ear, lower part of the ear was torn away from the body about a third of its normal attachment area.” There was a multiple, crashing, “eggshell type fracture” of the skull, two knife-cut wounds of the neck, five puncture or stab wounds in the chest and four stab wounds in the back. The doctor said that two of the stab wounds had entered the heart cavity and of course were fatal. The testimony showed that until the three doors to Death Row were forced and Stidham and Laster released and Stidham furnished a knife De-Lapp led the group bent on killing Donnell. As soon as Stidham was released DeLapp put his arm around Stidham’s shoulders and said, “Gentlemen, I have brought you this far, this is your leader from here on.” And shortly this group gained entrance to Donnell’s cell and killed him. Prior to the riot Stidham had repeatedly threatened to kill both Donnell and James M. Creighton.

This briefly narrated record completely refutes the appellant’s claim of an invasion of due process in submitting “a crime not included in the indictment.” The indictment did not in terms charge the misdemeanor offense of conspiracy (RSMo 1959, §§ 556.120, 556.130, V.A.M.S.), even though inherent in the circumstances it may have been an incidentally included offense. Principal instruction number 4 hypothesized that the seven named defendants “entered into a conspiracy and agreement” and “acting in concert and together” and “aided, abetted, assisted or encouraged” in slaying Donnell but, as indicated, the evidence supports the hypothesis. There was a separate conventional instruction defining “conspiracy” stating that “all persons are principals who are guilty of acting in concert and together in the commission of a crime.”

The latter instruction was not only warranted by specific statute (RSMo 1959, *638 § 556.170), upon this record, as the court held on the previous appeal, State v. Stid-ham, 305 S.W.2d 1. c.

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Bluebook (online)
449 S.W.2d 634, 1970 Mo. LEXIS 1102, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-stidham-mo-1970.