State v. Taylor

238 S.W. 489, 293 Mo. 210, 1922 Mo. LEXIS 15
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMarch 18, 1922
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 238 S.W. 489 (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, 238 S.W. 489, 293 Mo. 210, 1922 Mo. LEXIS 15 (Mo. 1922).

Opinion

WALKER, J.

— In an indictment preferred by the grand jury of Jackson County in June, 1920, the defendant was charged under Section 3307, Revised Statutes 1919, with robbery in the first degree. Upon a trial he was convicted and sentenced to fifty years in the penitentiary. From that judgment, this appeal is perfected.

At the beginning of the trial the defendant asked a continuance, based, in part, upon the fact that one Roy Wilson, who had been tried and convicted for participation in the crime, had, upon a separate trial, received a sentence of fifty years’ imprisonment in the penitentiary, and because the trial panel in defendant’s case had been present at the hearing of a robbery case just finished which had been submitted to a jury and was then under consideration. The court, overruling this application, found the facts as stated therein not to be true, and that there was no one on the trial jury that had hoard either of the cases referred to, and that there was no evidence of prejudice in the community against defendant.

The facts are as follows: In January, 1920, an employee of a millinery house in Kansas City was on his way from a bank with cash in the sum of more than three thousand dollars to meet the payroll of his employers for that week. He was attacked by two men at Tenth and Broadway, who assaulted him and compelled *215 him to turn the money over to them. Upon the crime having been consummated, they mounted a waiting’ automobile and started away at a high rate of speed. A motorcycle policeman, a short time thereafter, saw an automobile in which there were three men rapidly turn the corner of Admiral and McGee streets. The speed at which the car was being run probably attracted his attention and he turned and followed it. From time to time he signaled the driver of the car to stop, who, instead of doing so, increased his speed. Between Fifteenth and Sixteenth streets, however, the officer pulled up along side the car, the driver of which was subsequently identified by this policeman as the defendant. Just as this occurred, the car collided with another car and the impact diverted the court of the car in which the defendant and the other men were riding, causing it to collide with still another automobile. In this last collision, the men in the car, as well as the police officer, were thrown to the ground. Two of the men ran away and were followed on foot by the officer, who called to' them several times to stop, and upon their refusing to do so, he shot at them and, as- was subsequently shown, struck the defendant in the right wrist. The pursuit was continued and shortly thereafter the defendant was apprehended at Eighteenth and Oak streets. Upon being taken to the police station, his face was found to be bleeding, evidently having been cut by the broken glass of the windshield when his car collided with the other automobiles, and that he had a gunshot wound in his right wrist.

When the collision occurred, a package was seen to fall out of the wrecked car in which the defendant and the two others were riding. This package was picked up by someone who was passing and was subsequently identified to be the money which had been taken from the messenger of the millinery store and which remained intact in its original package. A chauffeur, for an auto-repair company located near the scene of the collision, saw a third man run from near the wrecked car with bleeding *216 face. He came to the chauffeur and asked to be taken to a hospital. The latter took him into his car to comply with his request when they ran into a blocked street which was undergoing repair. When the car stopped, the injured man leaped out and started to run, but was apprehended by police officers. He was identified as one Roy Wilson, and was subsequently shown to have been one of the three men who were in the car driven by the defendant at the time of the collision. Every person who witnessed the collision and saw the defendant after his arrest at the police station identified him as one of the three men that were thrown from the car. The messenger of the millinery company, however, who had been robbed, was unable to identify the defendant as one of the men who had assaulted him.

The defendant took the stand as a witness, but introduced no testimony except to state that his real name was Henry E. Kuhn, and to offer what purported to be an honorable discharge from the United States Army. Upon the exclusion of this offer, the defendant rested his case upon the demurrer to the State’s evidence.

The points stressed by the defendant in his brief are: (1) Insufficient evidence to sustain a conviction; (2) the admission of prejudicial testimony; (3) improper remarks of the attorneys for the State and the court; (4) refusal to admit in evidence the discharge of defendant from the United States Army as proof of previous good character; (5) the giving of instructions for the State numbered two and three; and (6) that the verdict is excessive.

Demurrer to Evidence. I. There was substantial testimony as disclosed by the statement of facts to sustain the verdiet. Under these circumstances the demurrer to the evidence was properly overruled.

Improper Remarks. II. While certain remarks of the attorneys for the State were improper, objections thereto were promptly sustained, the attorneys reprimanded and the jury admonished not to consider them in rendering their verdict.

*217 The testimony elicited by the State from the witnesses Porter and Kritser in regard to one Roy Wilson,afterwards shown to have been one of the three men who were thrown from the car, was wholly irrelevant, bnt a careful analysis of same in the light of all of the testimony fails to disclose in what manner its admission could have been prejudicial to the defendant. Only when the testimony objected to is supplemented by the construction given to it by able counsel for the defendant can it be construed as having the effect attributed to it. '

The objectionable questions propounded to the defendant on cross-examination by counsel, for the State were excluded from the consideration of the jury, and, hence, not error.

Discharge From Army. III. It is elementary under our procedure that proof of good character may be offered by a defendant in a criminal case to lessen the probability of guilt. This rule, however, has a well-defined limitation that the nature of the proof offered should be restricted to the traits of character involved or which may affect the offense charged.' [State v. Beckner, 194 Mo. l. c. 292, and cases cited.]

The evidence here sought to be introduced consists of the honorable discharge of the defendant from the United States Army for the purpose of proving his good character. Leaving ‘ out. of consideration the question as to whether traits of character necessary to constitute a good soldier may be reasonably construed as strengthening the presumption of defendant’s innocence when charged with highway robbery, we are confronted, as necessarily preceding such a discussion, with the question as to whether the evidence of-this particular nature is primarily admissible. This matter has not been ruled upon in this jurisdiction, but has elsewhere.

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Bluebook (online)
238 S.W. 489, 293 Mo. 210, 1922 Mo. LEXIS 15, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-taylor-mo-1922.