State v. Tripp

303 S.W.2d 627, 1957 Mo. LEXIS 554
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJune 10, 1957
Docket45666
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 303 S.W.2d 627 (State v. Tripp) 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. Tripp, 303 S.W.2d 627, 1957 Mo. LEXIS 554 (Mo. 1957).

Opinion

VAN OSDOL, Commissioner.

Defendant has appealed from a judgment and sentence of five years in the penitentiary upon conviction of robbery in the first degree by means of a dangerous and *629 deadly weapon. Sections 560.120 and 560.-135, RSMo 1949, V.A.M.S. The charge by indictment arose out of the robbery of approximately $12,000 from the custodian of money in the receiver’s cage at the Hodi-■amont Avenue shed of the St. Louis Public Service Company in the early morning ■of April 5, 1954.

The State has the theory that defendant ■was an accessory before the fact, and that, .as such, he was not improperly charged, tried and convicted as a principal. The State’s witnesses could not identify either ■of the two persons who were seen to have .actually participated in the consummation ■of the crime. The evidence introduced by the State was in large part circumstantial, although defendant had made admissions which are considered in tending to show ■defendant’s connection with the crime.

Herein, defendant-appellant initially .contends the trial court erred in overruling ■defendant’s motion for a judgment of ac•quittal. It is defendant’s position that the State’s evidence failed in tending to establish that defendant, or any other person with whom defendant was acting in con•cert or conspiracy or as an accessory before the fact, committed the crime as ■charged. It is argued it is essential to the •conviction of one as an accessory before •the fact that the fact be established. It ■is said that, although the State’s theory was that defendant and others, including •one Buckman, one Burbank, one Weaver, ■one Rosarno, and one Rosebaugh had planned the crime, none of these was shown to have been actually present as a participant. Additionally, defendant contends that the • evidence tending to show his association with Buckman, Burbank, Weaver, Rosarno ■and Rosebaugh was as consistent with innocence as with guilt. These contentions require an examination of the evidence; and other contentions will be examined in the course of this opinion.

As indicated, there was a robbery at the :St. Louis Public Service Company’s Hodi-amont shed in the early morning of April 5, 1954.

There was evidence introduced tending to show that Company’s night dispatcher, Roger Wolken, on duty at the cashier’s cage, had custody of Company’s money — receipts turned in by operators on Company’s lines. At about 2:55, Wolken heard a noise and presently saw that a man had come over the counter near the cashier’s cage. The man fired a revolver. The man wore a hat, a nylon stocking mask, a blue topcoat and gloves. He handed Wol-ken a pillowcase and told him to fill it with money and to carry it “out front.’1 As the man and Wolken moved through the outer office, Wolken saw another man wearing a stocking mask and carrying “what looked like” a sawed-off shotgun. Wolken was told to put the money in an automobile parked in front of the shed. The automobile “looked like a ’48 Lincoln, dark blue or black.” It had “candy-striped” seat covers. One Meyer, an “extra-board” bus driver in Company’s employ, had been asleep on a bench in the outer office awaiting a possible call for service at four. He was awakened by the shot, and saw a man with something over his head and a sawed-off shotgun in his hands. At 3:05 policemen found the bullet (which had been discharged from the revolver) on the floor of the inner office. The bullet was placed in an envelope and forwarded to the laboratories of the St. Louis Police Department.

. One Rosebaugh testified that he was the owner of a 1947 black Lincoln sedan with striped seat covers. He was at home in bed between one-thirty and two in the morning of April 5th. He and defendant are friends. Rosebaugh said he “slightly remembered” that defendant came to Rose-baugh’s home and “said something about using” Rosebaugh’s car. Rosebaugh’s Lincoln was then parked in the driveway with the key in the ignition switch. When Rosebaugh got up around seven or seven-thirty that morning the car was not there. *630 Within two or three days Rosebaugh saw defendant at a tavern on Taylor. Defendant gave Rosebaugh fifty dollars. Later, sometime after April 18th, Rosebaugh saw his Lincoln at the police station. On April 18th, the police had found a 1947 black Lincoln sedan parked in the 5300 block on Vernon Avenue. It was the Rosebaugh Lincoln. There was a stocking lying in the front seat. The stocking (State’s Exhibit 17) had been cut off and tied at the top forming a stocking cap.

One Seithel, a police officer, was at his home on Maffitt the evening of April 20th. He received a telephone call, and then went out on the front porch where he found a brown paper bag or package. The package contained a pair of gloves, a greasy rag, a nightgown, a blue topcoat (State’s Exhibit 14), a Ranger sawed-off shotgun (State’s Exhibit 15), and a Smith & Wesson 32.20 caliber revolver (State’s Exhibit 16).

April 21st, one Weaver was arrested at the First National Bank in Wellston. Weaver had a paper bag containing over $900 in currency which he had taken from his safety deposit box at the bank. Sixteen pieces of the currency bore blue-penciled “top count figures” identified by witnesses, Company’s teller and clerk, as having been made by them on bundles of currency when these moneys had been “turned in” by operators of vehicles after completing runs on Company’s lines.

Defendant was in custody April 26th. He was questioned by officers about the robbery of April 5th. Defendant said he had “furnished” the Ranger shotgun. He had taken it to the home of Burbank in an evening of early April. Burbank, Weaver and Buckman were in the kitchen of the Buckman home at the time. Defendant also said he went to Rosebaugh’s home in the early morning of April 5th, before the robbery. Rosebaugh was in bed. Defendant drove the Rosebaugh Lincoln to Cote Brilliante and parked it in the 5800 block. He then went to Buckman’s home and told Burbank and Weaver where the car was. Defendant said that he was in the kitchen of Buckman’s home the evening before the robbery. Weaver, Burbank and Ro-sarno' were present. There they discussed “this holdup.” Burbank had asked him to furnish an automobile. Defendant stated to other officers that he had “furnished the shotgun and the automobile.” Defendant also stated Rosebaugh had “gotten $50” for the use of the Lincoln, and Burbank had given him (defendant) $300 “for obtaining the shotgun and the car for that robbery.” He said the robbery was planned several days before at an inn owned or operated by Rosamo.

The witnesses for the State, Wolken and Meyer, testified that the weapons, State’s Exhibits 15 and 16, were similar in appearance to those in the hands of the robbers at the Hodiamont shed. The blue topcoat (State’s Exhibit 14) was said by the witness Wolken to be similar to that worn by the robber who fired the revolving pistol. Wolken testified the Lincoln at the Hodi-amont shed, April 5th, “looked similar to” the Rosebaugh car. The State’s Exhibit 17 was similar to the stocking masks worn by the robbers in the actual perpetration of the crime. An expert testified that technical tests of the bullet (found at 3 :05 after the robbery on the floor of the inner office at the Hodiamont shed) demonstrated the bullet had been discharged from the Smith & Wesson revolver found by the officer Seithel in the package on the front porch of the Seithel home the evening of April 20th.

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Bluebook (online)
303 S.W.2d 627, 1957 Mo. LEXIS 554, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-tripp-mo-1957.