State v. Thomas

99 Mo. 235
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedOctober 15, 1889
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 99 Mo. 235 (State v. Thomas) 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. Thomas, 99 Mo. 235 (Mo. 1889).

Opinion

Brace, J.

At the March term, 1888, of the criminal court of Saline county, the defendant was indicted for murder in the first degree. The indictment, in two counts,' charges him with having murdered John Lowry on the eleventh of October, 1884, in said county. He was arraigned, plead not guilty, and the case was continued until the September term, when it was set down for trial on the second day of January, 1889, at which time he was tried, found guilty of murder in the first degree, and sentenced to be hanged. His motion for new trial, and in arrest of judgment, having been overruled, he appeals, the circuit court staying the execution until his appeal be heard.

So far as the personal knowledge of any of the witnesses who testified in this cause goes, the last time that John Lowry was certainly seen alive, was on the evening of Saturday the eleventh of October, 1884, when “the sun was about a half an hour high.” The evening was “dark and rainy;” he was in his pasture driving a cow, and had on a “gum coat and overalls.” About sunset of the same day, or, a little before, a man was [239]*239-seen standing in the front door of Lowry’s house, whom one of the witnesses supposed to be Lowry, but, as he was at a distance, and the view obstructed by trees, it may, or may not, have been he. On Monday, the thirteenth of October, the mother and sister of John Lowry’s wife, about two o’clock in the afternoon, went to Lowry’s house. They found a cow in the house, in the east room used as a dining room and kitchen, the table was set, chairs around it, the dishes indicating .that a meal had been eaten. On the window sill there was a coal oil lamp, the oil consumed, the light gone out. In the adjoining room, on the bed, freshly ironed clothes were found lying. No living soul was found. The daughter went to the door, hallooed two or three times, when Lowry’s bird dog came to them. “He acted strangely, went to the door and looked back, -went down the steps and looked back again, ran to the fence, hopped over, and waited.” The daughter followed him, to the dead body of John Lowry clothed in a gum coat and overalls, about one hundred and fifty yards northwest of the house, and about twenty or .thirty feet northwest of the barn, lying on his breast, with his skull crushed in on the right side, just above the ear, and above a puncture as if made with a blunt instrument, and “two small cuts on the left side of his neck,” his hat lying, also punctured, eight or ten feet southeast of him.

The alarm was given, some neighbors came, and, soon afterwards, the body of John Lowry’s wife was found dead, behind an old hen house about fifty pi sixty feet north of the house, her head crushed, the back of the skull split open as if with a sharp wedge-shaped instrument, after the body had fallen; decomposition had set in when the bodies were discovered, and the physician, who examined them soon after their discovery on Monday, expressed the opinion that “the .wounds on both Mrs. Lowry and John Lowry were made [240]*240on the Saturday evening before.” He testifies that he formed this opinion from the condition of the wounds- and the circumstances surrounding the case at the time,, the bodies having been rained on since they had fallen, and there having no rain fallen after Saturday night. “I remember there was no rain between that time and the time I made the examination of the bodies. He (John Lowry) must have been killed Saturday evening, there had been a rainfall since the body had fallen. The blood had been washed away from the lower part of the face.” Another witness testified: “ It had rained on the body where it laid. The mud had been washed off his shoes, and the wrinkles in the gum coat showed it had rained 'since the body fell.”

The other evidence tended to show that it commenced raining Saturday evening between two and three-o’ clock, continued in showers, until after dark, probably until about eight o’clock, when it ceased, and did not rain any more until after the bodies were found. The whole evidence tends to show that John Lowry and his wife w’ere murdered between sundown and eight or nine o’clock Saturday evening, October 11, 1884.

At the time of the murder, Lowry and his wife were living alone in their little two-roomed house. About fifty yards south of their house, was a public road running east and west. -North and east of the house, and near along by the barn, ran Straddle creek. Southeast from the barn, it crossed the public road west of and between Lowry’s premises and a neighbor by the name of Wm. J. Adams, whose home was east of the creek, and of Lowry’s, about a quarter of a mile. Northeast of' Lowry’s house, across the creek, and distant about three-fourths of a mile, was the home of John Thomas,, defendant’s father. The defendant, then a youth between nineteen and twenty years of age, was living-with his father, mother, two brothers and two sisters.

[241]*241The discovery of the murdered bodies of Lowry. and wife created great excitement, and, in a short time, almost every man in the neighborhood was there. No further developments seem to have been made on that day, or the next. On Wednesday, however, in the creek, northeast of the barn, and close to it, an axe, and a part of a wagon brake, being an iron bar, about two feet long, one inch wide, and one-half inch thick, were found, both having blood on them. They were fished out of the creek by witness Miller, who says he found tracks near the edge of the water, at the place where the axe and bar were found, as if some one had walked up to the creek and stepped back. The track was about the size of a No. 8 boot. There had been a good many people there. Thinks there had been rain since the track was made. He followed the track to a foot-log, crossed over creek and found same track; followed it out of the timber, going north. About two hundred yards from the place where the axe and rod were found, he measured the track with a stick, 'which he notched, but afterwards lost. Doesn’t know whether he got the exact size .of the track or not. About a week after-wards, in Marshall, he measured tracks of the defendant, and says they “corresponded very well.” About a week after the murder, a witness found a white handkerchief, with a red border, “with blood on it,” which looked like hands had been wiped on it, about ten steps from a road, and about a quarter of a mile northwest oí Thomas’ house. In the summer of 1886, a witness found a pair of drawers and overalls in some buck bushes that he was cutting, north of the creek, about a third or a fourth of a mile southwest from Thomas’ house. The drawers were cotton flannel, and “pretty much rotten.” “The drawers were dirty. Can’t say they were bloody.” •

[242]*242The foregoing statement contains substantially the positive and direct evidence for the state. The connection of the defendant with the murder is sought to be established by his extra-judicial confessions, criminating admissions, conduct and contradictory statements, which will be now given as briefly as possible.

On Sunday, after the murder, and before the bodies were discovered, the defendant took dinner at the house of the said William J. Adams. In a conversation, which he then had with Mrs. Adams, in regard to a noise which she heard on the creek the night before, she said to him: “Rid., was you out coon-hunting, Saturday night ? ” To which he replied, ‘ ‘No, he was in town, Saturday night.

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

Related

Alfred H. Osborne, Sr. v. United States
371 F.2d 913 (Ninth Circuit, 1967)
State ex rel. Clagett v. James
327 S.W.2d 278 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1959)
State ex inf. Dalton v. Moody
325 S.W.2d 21 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1959)
Mannon v. Frick
295 S.W.2d 158 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1956)
State v. Smith
209 S.W.2d 138 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1948)
State v. McDonald
119 S.W.2d 286 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1938)
State v. Gregory
96 S.W.2d 47 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1936)
State v. Conley
164 S.W. 193 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1914)
State v. Martin
129 S.W. 881 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1910)
State v. Clay
100 S.W. 439 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1907)
State v. Bateman
94 S.W. 843 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1906)
State v. Barrington
95 S.W. 235 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1906)
State v. Hottman
94 S.W. 237 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1906)
State v. McGinnis
59 S.W. 83 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1900)
State v. Kindred
49 S.W. 845 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1899)
Kennedy v. Holladay
105 Mo. 24 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1891)
Meyer v. Lewis
43 Mo. App. 417 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1891)
State v. Whelehon
102 Mo. 17 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1890)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
99 Mo. 235, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-thomas-mo-1889.