State v. Vernor

522 S.W.2d 312, 1975 Mo. App. LEXIS 1960
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 15, 1975
Docket36145
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 522 S.W.2d 312 (State v. Vernor) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Vernor, 522 S.W.2d 312, 1975 Mo. App. LEXIS 1960 (Mo. Ct. App. 1975).

Opinion

NORWIN D. HOUSER, Special Judge.

George Vernor, convicted by a jury of robbery by means of a dangerous and deadly weapon and sentenced under the Second Offender Act to 17 years’ imprisonment, has appealed.

On September 12, 1973 one Frank Put-ney, a clerk in an A & P store in the City of St. Louis, noticed'a white Mercury automobile come into the parking lot. Two Negro males got out of the car. Their actions and demeanor aroused his suspicions. The engine of the automobile was left running. Putney made a note of the license number. The two men entered at the front and walked the length of the store to the manager’s office. One of them, later identified as this defendant, climbed over a ledge and entered the office of Donald Buhr, assistant manager. The other man, armed with a shotgun, remained outside the office. Defendant had a black revolver. He took money out of the cash drawer, ordered Buhr to lie down on the floor, left the office, proceeded to one of the check-out counters, ordered the clerk to lie down on the floor and took money out of the cash register. Then both men left the store. A total of about $800 in cash was taken. Buhr called the police. When the police arrived Putney gave them the license number.

On September 13, 1973 police officers went to the home of Mrs. Ozel Washington, owner of the automobile, and arrested her on a charge of robbery. Mrs. Washington testified to the following set of facts as a witness for the State: While driving on Delmar she saw defendant and another, both of whom she had previously seen at parties, standing at a bus stop. At their request she took them to the A & P store in question, where she parked and stayed at her car while the two entered the store. They were gone long enough to pick up a couple of items and check out. They came out walking, not running. She did not know what was going on. They did not tell her what they had done until just before they got out of the car, at which time they told her about the robbery (“heist” as she termed it). Defendant gave Mrs. Washington a brown bag, which she did not look at until she got home. The bag contained about $250 in “bills wrapped up.” She had the money when the officers arrested her. The police took her downtown, where she “told them everything.” She was charged with armed robbery, as the driver of the getaway car. The charges against her were dismissed when she turned State’s evidence.

*314 On September 14, 1973 five police officers went to a residence located at 1253 Amherst Street where, without an arrest search warrant, they knocked on the door, observed defendant at a second story window, told him he was under arrest and ordered him to open the door. He refused to do so. They forced the door open and found him sitting upon a bed, front room, second story. They placed him under arrest, handcuffed him and searched the entire premises, consisting of three rooms in addition to the front room where defendant was arrested. One officer found and seized five shotgun shells from the top of a dresser in the bedroom. Cash in the amount of $83.50 was taken from defendant’s pants pocket. These items were the subject of a motion to suppress, heard and overruled prior to trial. They were admitted in evidence at the trial, over objections that they were seized in the course of an illegal search and seizure; that the $83.50 had no probative value because it is currency and there is “no possible way they can tell this currency from any other currency.”

Appellant’s first point is that the court erred in admitting the cash in evidence because it was irrelevant, immaterial, of no probative value and clearly prejudicial because it raised the inference that it was taken at the time of the robbery. Appellant cites State v. Roswell, 153 Mo.App. 338, 133 S.W. 99 (1910), a larceny case. Roswell was charged with stealing $10, the property of one Sorrells. The State proved that a $10 bill was in Sorrells’ pocketbook, which disappeared from his pocket when pushed by defendant as he was boarding a streetcar, but there was no specific proof as to the ownership of the $10 bill. The conviction was reversed for insufficiency of proof of an essential element of the offense of larceny, namely, proof of ownership of the $10 bill. This case was severely criticized by the Supreme Court, which disagreed with the conclusion reached by the court of appeals, as “opposed to the universal experience of mankind.” The Supreme Court reasoned that ordinary possession of money, in the absence of proof to the contrary, is sufficient evidence of ownership in the possessor. State v. Starr, 244 Mo. 161, 148 S.W. 862, 864-865 [3] (1912).

More to the point is State v. Ball, 339 S.W.2d 783 (Mo. banc 1960), in which the Supreme Court reversed an armed robbery conviction for improper admission of testimony that defendant had $258.02 in cash on his person when arrested. A jewelry store was robbed of jewelry worth $4,455 and $140 in cash. Officers found a lady’s ring, a man’s wristwatch and $258.02 in cash on defendant’s person when arrested 19 days after the robbery. The jeweler could not identify either the jewelry or the money as having been taken in the robbery. There was no proof of “sudden affluence” — that defendant had suddenly come into possession of the $258.02. In these circumstances the Court applied the rule that “The mere possession of a quantity of money is in itself no indication that the possessor was the taker of money charged as taken, because in general all money of the same denomination and material is alike, and the hypothesis that the money found is the same as the money taken is too forced and extraordinary to be receivable.” 1 Wigmore on Evidence, Sec. 154, p. 601. Continuing, the Court said, “In the absence of proof or of a fair inference from the record that the money in Ball’s possession at the time of his arrest came from or had some connection with the robbery and in the absence of a plain showing of his impecuniousness before the robbery and his sudden affluence (State v. Garrett, 285 Mo. 279, 226 S.W. 4), the evidence was not in fact relevant and in the circumstances was obviously prejudicial for if it did not tend to prove the offense for which the appellant was on trial the jury may have inferred that he was guilty of another robbery. [Citing cases.] The admission of the evidence in the circumstances of this record infringed the right to a fair trial * * *. 339 S.W.2d 786.

In State v. Hampton, 275 S.W.2d 356 (Mo. banc 1955), the defendant was con *315 victed of larceny. Thirty dollars in cash, including a $5 roll of dimes wrapped in green paper, and 6 quarts of whiskey were stolen from a tavern. Defendant’s fingerprint was found on a bottle of whiskey near the place from which the 6 bottles had been removed. Defendant was arrested the same day the larceny occurred. On his person was found a $5 roll of dimes, wrapped in the same colored paper as the missing roll and like those normally used by banks to wrap dimes. This was a circumstantial evidence case and the Supreme Court held that the finding of the roll of dimes was a circumstance admissible in evidence, but since there was no evidence sufficiently identifying the roll of dimes as that taken from the tavern the circumstance was not substantial evidence inconsistent with a reasonable hypothesis of defendant’s innocence.

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Bluebook (online)
522 S.W.2d 312, 1975 Mo. App. LEXIS 1960, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-vernor-moctapp-1975.