State v. Warren

297 S.W. 397, 317 Mo. 843, 1927 Mo. LEXIS 629
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJuly 13, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 297 S.W. 397 (State v. Warren) 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. Warren, 297 S.W. 397, 317 Mo. 843, 1927 Mo. LEXIS 629 (Mo. 1927).

Opinion

*847 BLAIR, J.

Appellant was convicted of murder in the second degree ; was sentenced to imprisonment for fifteen years, in accordance with the verdict of the jury, and appealed to this court.

Appellant shot John C. Deskins with a German Luger pistol at a meeting of the trustees of the Mutual Rocky Mountain Club, held in one of the offices of the Scarritt building in Kansas City, on October 13, 1924. Thereupon appellant fired a shot into his own body, inflicting a dangerous wound near the heart, in an unsuccessful attempt to take his own life. Deskins died two days later as a result of said shooting.

The facts immediately attending the shooting are not in dispute. The sole defense offered was the alleged insanity of the appellant. Most of the voluminous record is filled with testimony bearing upon the issue of the mental responsibility of appellant at the time of the shooting. No contention is made in this court that the evidence was not sufficient to support the verdict of the jury. Nor is complaint made of the sufficiency of the indictment or the verdict or the propriety of the judgment rendered thereon, save as the judgment is attacked on the ground of alleged procedural errors. Even the instructions are not assailed in the brief of able counsel representing appellant in this court.

The testimony of appellant and his witnesses tended to show that, as a child of three, he suffered brain fever. Ile was twice kicked on.' the head by horses while a small child and suffered concussion and protracted unconsciousness. He suffered excessively from headaches from childhood to the time of the homicide, and much of the time could only get relief by having his father or others press both hands against the sides of his head. He sometimes even had spasms, Dur *848 ing his spells of headache, appellant was confined to a darkened room and demanded absolute quiet. The evidence tended to show malformation of appellant as to head, ears and hands. This fact was pointed, to by appellant's insanity experts as some evidence of paranoia. The State’s experts, on the other hand, repudiated the evidentiary value of such facts.

Appellant’s father died as the result of self-administered poison when appellant was thirteen years old. His mother died as a result of melancholia and headaches. Proof was offered tending to show that certain blood and collateral relatives committed suicide, but the same, was excluded.

Appellant was forty-five years of age at the time of the trial. At seventeen years of age he became a messenger in a bank and made some advancement. At twenty-one years of age he went to North Dakota and lived on a claim. At twenty-two he became assistant cashier in a bank. Thereafter he married and became the father of two sons, both being alive at the time of the trial. Afterwards he attempted, but failed, to organize a bank. He later succeeded in organizing a bank at Gardiner, Montana, and became its cashier. lie held that position three or four years. After trouble with one of the bank’s customers and a physical assault upon such customer, appellant left that bank and that community. He later served as deputy bank commissioner of North Dakota. After that he entered the mercantile business, which apparently prospered. He then had trouble with his wife and her mother, which resulted in his permitting her to have a divorce, while appellant kept the custody of the two sons.

After said divorce appellant appeared to be in bad health and drifted around from place to place. Later he became a.n insurance agent in St. Louis and remarried in that city. The marriage proved unsuccessful and he was divorced by his second wife.

In 1914 appellant went to Kansas City and became general agent for the Connecticut Mutual Life Insurance Company, with several counties included in his territory. He maintained that connection for about six years. In 1916 he married his third wife, of whom he seemed very fond. Her death in childbirth in 1921 and the attendant loss of the child caused appellant intense grief and he did no work for at least a year. His health and spirits were both at low ebb during that year.

Appellant’s evidence tended to show that he was emotional and nervous. He would be on the mountain top one day, in fine spirits, mentally exalted, self-satisfied and boastful. The next day he would be. down in the valley of despondency, grovelling in the depths, morose, melancholy and even weeping. He had threatened suicide on occasions previous to the homicide. He was suspicious'. • He always *849 laid bis misfortunes in business and loss of employment to double dealing and the persecution of others.

Appellant was exceedingly fastidious, eccentric and almost effeminate in dress and personal habits. He gave orders for suits of clothes to match shoes, ties and other articles. lie wore suede shoes. He (¡hanged Iris mind capriciously and frequently countermanded or changed his orders. lie appears to have been very sensitive to discordant sounds. lie complained of noises which were not noticed by others. He was known to throw articles at imaginary cats, and even bred his pistol out of his bed-room window at invisible dogs and cats, which he claimed were disturbing his rest by their noises. Even the billing and cooing of pigeons, which were not noticed by others, jarred on his sensitive nerves.

Appellant would frequently burden others with his woes when he was suffering with headaches or periods of mental depression. He would complain that his business associates and others were perecut-ing him and treating him unfairly. He would often cry over his troubles. At other times, when he was in a state of mental exaltation, he would boast of his financial prowess and would brag about his bright prospects of making a great fortune. His successes were always due to his own superior genius. His failures and disappointments were never occasioned by his own want of ability, foresight or industry. He attributed his failures to.double dealing and unfair tactics of those who were perscuting him and trying to take advantage of him and rob him of the fruits of his genius.

In sketching thus broadly, as we have done, the evidence offered by appellant upon the question of his insanity, we have not attempted to go literally into the evidence, but only to state its general effect. In short, the evidence offered by appellant, if it had been accepted and believed by the jury, justified a conclusion as stated by one of appellant’s witnesses, that appellant was “nutty as a hazel bush.-’ A finding at the hands of the jury that appellant ivas a physical and mental wreck, incapable of caring' for himself and an unwitting menance to society, totally irresponsible and incapable of knowing right from wrong, was authorized by appellant’s evidence.

Numerous lay witnesses called by appellant testified to acts and conduct of appellant coming within their observation, and to their belief therefrom that appellant was insane and incapable of knowing right from wrong at the time he fired the fatal shot. Other lay witnesses, produced by the State, were equally positive that appellant was sane. Appellant produced three expert alienists. They had visited appellant in jail and had there talked with him and studied him.

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Bluebook (online)
297 S.W. 397, 317 Mo. 843, 1927 Mo. LEXIS 629, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-warren-mo-1927.