State v. Taylor

168 S.W. 1191, 261 Mo. 210, 1914 Mo. LEXIS 251
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJuly 14, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 168 S.W. 1191 (State v. Taylor) 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. Taylor, 168 S.W. 1191, 261 Mo. 210, 1914 Mo. LEXIS 251 (Mo. 1914).

Opinion

FARIS, J.

Defendant was convicted in the circuit court of Franklin county of murder in the second degree, for that, as it was charged in the indictment, he and one Jake Hoffman at the town of Pacific in [215]*215said county on the 8th day of August, 1910', killed an unknown man. Both defendant and Hoffman being found guilty defendant herein was sentenced to imprisonment in the penitentiary for a term of ninety-nine years, from which sentence he has, after the usual motions, perfected this appeal. Hoffman was granted a new trial upon his motion to that end, therefore so far as the law of this case is concerned and except only as the facts in the testimony may make necessary references to him, he falls out of it.

The trial of defendant was concluded on the 20th day of December, 1912. On the next day thereafter he filed his motion for a new trial and his motion in arrest. The trial court continued these motions-until January 10, 1913, at which time leave was given defendant to file affidavits in support of his allegation of newly discovered evidence, and the motions aforesaid were held by the court under advisement until the 13th day of March, 1913, at which time the court overruled them and this appeal followed.

The points which are ur,ged upon us as error by defendant render necessary a statement of the facts as we glean them from the voluminous evidence in the case. The deceased, whose name was to'the jury which preferred the indictment unknown and who continues yet to be unknown, came into the town of Pacific, in Franklin county, on a train from St. Louis on Sunday, August 7, 1910, at about two o’clock in the afternoon. He inquired of the railway agent at Pacific touching the time at which he could get a train either for Cuba or Rolla, Missouri, and was advisee ’ that he. could .get such train at about the hour of three o’clock and thirty minutes. He asked permission to leave and did leave his suit case with the agent. Thereafter the deceased was seen by a negro, William Yancey, who was a witness in the case, in company with two men, who are -identified by said Yancey as the defendant Floyd Taylor and the said Jake Hoffman. [216]*216This witness Yancey saw the dead man, together with the defendant and Hoffman going into a saloon at Pacific. Yancey further says that defendant, Hoffman and the deceased went over.to a hotel at Pacific and that he saw the deceased sitting on the porch of this hotel in a chair, and that defendant and said Hoffman walked down the track of the Frisco railroad and he heard either defendant or said Hoffman say they would get the grip and would thereafter he ready. Later this witness, Yancey, saw the taller one of the defendants Hoffman and Taylor with a brownish grip. The evidence does not disclose clearly which of the two, whether Hoffman or Taylor, was the taller, but by inference it appears that the defendant was the taller man to whom the witness referred.

The above in substance is the testimony of the negro William Yancey upon his examination in chief. It is but fair to say that upon his cross-examination his testimony becomes uncertain and obscure and upon many points so rambling as to create thick doubt as to its credibility, touching which we shall have more to say when we come to express our views upon the case.

The State offered two colored women who were employees of the Wunderlich Hotel, at which hotel deceased is said by some of the witnesses to have eaten his dinner and supper and at which he is also said to have engaged a room. Beyond the fact that one of these negro women, called in the record Pinkie Lew-right, claims to have seen one of the defendants eating dinner at this hotel with the deceased, the testimony of neither of these witnesses throws any light upon the case or affords any aid in the solution of the mystery, save it may be that one of these women says that the bed in the room said to have been assigned to deceased bore no evidence of having been slept in.,

The city marshal and constable at Pacific, one Ignatz Zieger, testified that on the night of August 7, [217]*2171910, lie saw three men go behind a box car in the railroad yards, at a distance of about a half a block from the place at which the body of the deceased was after-wards found. Neither of these defendants nor the deceased man was identified by the marshal as being either of the three men whom he saw in the vicinity of the place of the subsequent homicide.

On the following morning, August 8,1910, at about eight or nine o’clock, the deceased was found dead in the westerly part of the railroad yards at Pacific in a small creek which runs through these yards. His body was lying in the mud and water of the creek, which was at this point only some two or three inches in depth. The body was partially concealed by some telephone poles or piling which were at this point laid across the creek and under which the body of deceased had been rolled or thrust, while resting upon his body was a wide and thick piece of timber, some five feet long, called by the witnesses a “stringer.” There were wounds upon the face of the dead man and his skull was found to be crushed in at the back thereof, as though with a heavy three-cornered weapon. Large pools and spots of blood were found between the railroad track and a fence in the vicinity, together with marks upon the soft ground nearby as if a number of men had engaged there in a struggle. There was blood, not only upon the fence and ground, but upon a peach tree in the vicinity and blood from the shoes of persons who had made bloody footprints on the telegraph poles, apparently in crossing the creek. The pockets of the deceased were turned inside out and one of his shoes, the witness Zieger says his left one, had been taken off. Near the body and some five feet distant therefrom an iron rod, about three quarters of an inch in diameter and a foot long, was found, also near was a heavy wooden club. At the end of this rod there were two iron nuts, forming a weapon which, with the nuts, weighed some three pounds. On the end [218]*218of the rod and on the nnts thereon, and upon the wooden club, blood and hair resembling the hair of deceased, were found.

A,witness for the State, one Rachel Caveness, a girl some thirteen years of age, testified that on Sunday afternoon preceding the finding next morning of the body of deceased, defendant and Jake Hoffman were together at the house where the witness Rachel Caveness was staying and borrowed from her sister a torch with which to light a cave into which defendant and Hoffman desired to go. She further testified that some little time thereafter defendant returned this torch to them. She identifies, in a fairly conclusive way, both the defendant and said Hoffman. Neither is her testimony at all seriously shaken by the rigid cross-examination to which she was subjected.

The defendant was arrested a little more than two years after the dead man was found. His arrest was effected at Duquoin, Illinois, by the deputy constable of Pacific, one Deatherage. Deatherage brought the defendant back to Franklin county, and on the way back held him for a time in jail at St. Louis. While in jail at St. Louis and in the presence of Assistant Chief of Detectives Schmidt and Officer Fleming and of the witness Deatherage he made a voluntary statement relative to the charge against him, to the substance of which all three of the above named witnesses thereto, who testified in the case, practically agreed. He said, according to these three witnesses, that he and Hoffman had fallen in with the dead man in the mid-way of the Union Station at St.

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Bluebook (online)
168 S.W. 1191, 261 Mo. 210, 1914 Mo. LEXIS 251, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-taylor-mo-1914.