State v. Thomas

157 S.W. 330, 250 Mo. 189, 1913 Mo. LEXIS 143
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMay 20, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by38 cases

This text of 157 S.W. 330 (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, 157 S.W. 330, 250 Mo. 189, 1913 Mo. LEXIS 143 (Mo. 1913).

Opinion

BROWN, P. J.

Defendant and six others were jointly charged with the crime of murder in the first degree. From a judgment of the criminal court of Jackson county sentencing defendant to the penitentiary during his natural life he appeals.

On the night of October 3, 1911, two white boys (George Johnson and his brother, Elmer Johnson) were out on the streets of Kansas City until a late [197]*197hour viewing the “Priests of Pallas” parade. At the hour of 11:30 p. m., they were walking along Fifteenth street where the same intersects the Paseo, a locality inhabited by negroes, when they were accosted by a dozen or more negro boys who announced that the white boys had no business in “their territory.” According to the testimony of Elmer Johnson, he and his brother kept on walking at a rapid pace until they were surrounded, assaulted and knocked down by the negro boys.

As quickly as they were permitted to do so the white boys escaped from their assailants and ran to a passing street car, when it was found that George Johnson had been stabbed in the heart by one of his assailants, from which wound he died a few moments later. When the street car arrived the negro boys all ran away and disappeared in the darkness. At that moment a man came along in an automobile and chased the negroes, but whether he found out who they were is not known as he was not called as a witness.

Neither Elmer Johnson nor the persons on the street car recognized defendant as one of the parties who assaulted and killed deceased.

Witness Dudley Jackson was sitting with a lady beside the street one block from where the tragedy occurred. He testified that about the time the killing occurred he saw and recognized defendant running past him — running very rapidly from the direction where the killing took place. Jackson was partially corroborated by the lady who was with him, but she did not identify the defendant. She saw three negroes pass; one was walking and two running. According to her testimony the two negroes who were running passed behind her and Jackson, while Jackson testified that defendant ran in front of them.

Prank Coleman, a ten-year-old newsboy, testified that he walked up behind defendant and another negro boy while the latter were standing on another street [198]*198about an hour after Johnson was killed, and heard defendant say to his associate: “If the police catch on to what we did to those two white boys they will kill ns.”

This was all the evidence directly tending to connect the defendant with the killing of Johnson, except some admissions and confessions alleged to have been made by defendant after his arrest, which will receive attention in the course of our opinion.

Defendant testified in his own behalf denying that he was on Fifteenth street and the Paseo when Johnson was killed. He denied that he took any part in the assault or killing, and also denied that he confessed his guilt to the police officers. He admitted going out to the parade on the night of October 3rd and remaining out until after midnight. He gave the names of three negro boys who, he says, were with him part of the time he was out, but he did not call them as witnesses.

Defendant’s counsel have assigned thirty-three alleged errors in their motion for new trial, and several others in their motion in arrest but, notwithstanding this formidable attack on the judgment below, they have neglected to favor us with even a typewritten brief.

However, we have examined the voluminous transcript and will consider all the assignments which are worthy of serious attention.

Juvenile Courts. I. Under section 6 of an act establishing juvenile courts in certain counties (Laws 1911, p. 181) it is made the duty of the criminal court and circuit courts to transfer causes to the juvenile court of Jackson county when it is found that the party charged with crime is under the age of seventeen years. Defendant insisted that the trial court pass upon his application for a change of venue before determining the age of defendant. The court did not err in overruling this insistence. The Juvenile [199]*199Court Law of 1911 (Laws 1911, p. 177) was clearly intended to oust the criminal court and circuit courts of Jackson county of jurisdiction in all cases wherein the defendant was under seventeen years of age.

The criminal court heard the evidence of the mother, grandmother and aunt of defendant, and also admitted a Bible which purported to be the record of defendant’s birth. The testimony of these witnesses was somewhat vague and unsatisfactory, and in the light of their evidence the birth record'was a palpable fake. The grandmother testified that she bought the Bible new -and had always kept it locked in her trunk. No one was allowed to write in it except her daughter, and she never wrote in it except to record the birth of defendant. However, on inspection the book showed that it had been extensively used and contained many marginal notations, evidently made by a minister of the gospel or theological student. The court found from inspection that the alleged date of defendant’s birth had been recorded in this Bible a very short time before it was offered in evidence, and that defendant was above the age of seventeen years. There is nothing in the record which justifies us in disturbing his finding on that point. The school enumeration which defendant asked time to procure would probably have been competent evidence of defendant’s age, but the defendant having failed to use reasonable diligence to secure a certified copy of that enumeration, the court properly refused to postpone the cause and allow additional time to obtain that evidence.

Change of Venue. II. On a proper application for a change of venue based upon alleged prejudice of the' inhabitants of Jackson county, embracing the 16th Judicial Circuit, the court heard twenty witnesses, having limited the number of witnesses to ten on each side.

[200]*200The witnesses called by defendant embraced a railroad passenger agent, a real estate agent, a feed merchant, a deputy clerk of the probate court, an ex-clerk of the circuit court, a physician, two employees of a social club, a shoe salesman and a grocer. Each of these witnesses testified to having talked with from fifty to one hundred citizens of Jackson county who had expressed extreme bitterness ag'ainst defendant. The evidence of the passenger agent, called by defendant, was to the effect that his work brought him in contact with a large number of people from all parts of Kansas City and from various stations in life, and that it was common talk among the people whom he met that the defendant should be hanged without a trial — that he ought not be allowed to live twenty-four hours, and that it would be a waste of money to try him.

The other nine witnesses called by defendant testified to hearing similar expressions of ill will against defendant, although some of them were not positive that defendant could not secure a fair trial in Jackson county.

In rebuttal of this testimony the State called two-deputy marshals, four deputy clerks of the probate court, one deputy recorder of deeds, one superintendent of the court house, the counselor for the police board and the professor of an automobile school, who-each testified, in effect, that they did not know and had not heard of any widespread malice or prejudice against the defendant, and that they believed he could obtain a fair trial in Jackson county.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
157 S.W. 330, 250 Mo. 189, 1913 Mo. LEXIS 143, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-thomas-mo-1913.