State v. White

158 S.W. 32, 251 Mo. 178, 1913 Mo. LEXIS 198
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJune 17, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 158 S.W. 32 (State v. White) 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. White, 158 S.W. 32, 251 Mo. 178, 1913 Mo. LEXIS 198 (Mo. 1913).

Opinion

WILLIAMS, C.

Defendant was tried in the criminal court of Jackson county, Missouri, under an information charging him with robbery in the first degree, found guilty by the jury, and his punishment assessed at five years in the penitentiary. He appeals to this court.

[180]*180The evidence on the part of the State tended to show that on November 29, 1912, between 6:15 and 6:25 p. m., the prosecuting witness, Mrs. Cora Rogers, was going east on Thirteenth street, in Kansas City, Missouri, from her place of work to her home in said city. When she reached a point near an alley between Locust and Cherry streets, on Thirteenth street, she saw a colored man coming towards her, and she stepped to one side. The colored man, when he came up to her, grabbed the hand bag which she carried on her arms. The handle to the hand bag was of new ribbon, and did not break when the bag was grabbed. The man pulled at the bag and drew the prosecuting witness a distance of about twenty feet up the alley, where she fell down, and the bag was pulled loose from the handle, her assailant running away with it. It contained a small sum of money, also rings and jewelry, all -of the value of about two hundred dollars. While Mrs. Rogers was being dragged into the alley she cried for help. A Mr. Showalter, who at the time lived in a house adjoining the alley, rushed out of his kitchen door just in time to see the colored man run away and the prosecuting witness attempt to get up. Mrs. Rogers, at the trial, identified the defendant as the man who assailed' and robbed her, stating that the street light was ample to allow a good view of him at the time. Witness Showalter testified that he was within about ten feet of the man when he started to run away, and that he got a good look at hipa in the light from the kitchen window and door of his house, and that he is positive that the defendant was the man he saw running away. He gave chase to him for about a block, but was unable to catch up with him. This was the State’s evidence in chief.

The defendant testified that he was born at Sedalia, Missouri, going through the high school there, and later attended the Western Baptist College, at Macon, Missouri, where he graduated; that he then [181]*181attended' a law school at Topeka, Kansas, and that about ten months before the date of this alleged crime he came to Kansas City to assist his brother in the work of paper-hanging, so that he might obtain funds to enable him to start practicing law. He admitted that he had been arrested and fined for gambling since coming to Kansas City. He testified that a day or two before he was arrested for the crime charged against him he received information through his brother that the officers were looking for him, and that he then visited some of the police stations but was unable to discover what he was wanted for. He, however, did not visit station number four, the officers of which were looking for him. Defendant attempted to establish an alibi, testifying that he was at his home that evening from 4:30 until 9 o ’clock.

Witness Shline, a tailor, testified that he was at defendant’s home that evening to see about making a collection for clothing he had sold, remaining there nearly half an hour and leaving about seven o’clock, and that defendant was there at that time.

Witness Adolphus Ewing testified that he went to defendant’s home about fifteen minutes before seven o’clock that evening, and remained until about nine o’clock, and that defendant was at home during that time.

Defendant undertook to establish a good reputation by witness W. E. Connor, who, however, was unable to qualify as a character witness.

The State in rebuttal introduced five witnesses, including three police officers and the chief of detectives of Kansas City, who testified that defendant’s reputation for general morality in the neighborhood in which he lived was bad.

OPINION.

[182]*182uponmhis0n: Oath, [181]*181I. The information, which was filed December 3, • 1912, reads in part as follows: “Now comes Mord [182]*182M. Bogie, assistant prosecuting attorney ^or ^16 ^a^e Missouri, in and for the body of the county of Jackson, and upon his oath informs the court,” etc.

The information is signed and sworn to by said assistant prosecuting attorney. Appellant contends that the information is insufficient because it did'not charge that the prosecuting attorney informed the.court upon his “official oath” or “oath of office,” and furthermore that it does not affirmatively appear that the assistant prosecuting attorney had power to sign the information.

Prosecuting in Jackson County. As to the first contention, it is sufficient to say that the phrase “upon his oath,” as used in the information, is synonymous with “upon his official oath” or “oath of office.” [State v. Atchley, 186 Mo. l. c. 197.] The statute defining the duties of assistant prosecuting attorneys 0£ jac]jSOn county, applicable at the time this information was filed, is section 10738b, Laws of 1911, page 393. In that section it is provided that the “prosecuting attorney and his assistants shall institute ... all criminal actions in all courts of said county,” and “said assistants shall assist the prosecuting attorney generally in the conduct of his office, under his direction and subject to his. control,” etc. The language of the statute is sufficiently broad to invest the assistant prosecuting attorney with power to sign the information as such assistant prosecuting attorney. [State v. Speritus, 191 Mo. 24.]

on Testimony. II. The appellant next contends that the court erred in excluding defendant’s offer of certain testimony. The offer and the court’s ruling thereon are as follows “Mr. Bowron (out of the presence and hearing of the jury): The defendant offers to introduce Charles P. Wight, captain and manager of the Pinkerton De[183]*183tective Agency, in Kansas City, Missouri, to impeach the credibility of the prosecuting witness, Mrs. G. W. Eogers, for the purpose of showing a collusion between G. W. Eogers and his wife, the prosecuting witness in this case, making a tool of this defendant for the purpose of said G. W. Eogers making a record for himself as a detective and officer in order to get back on •the Pinkerton force of detectives of Kansas City, Missouri, the position that he once held, and was discharged from on account of bad conduct on his own part; the defendant’s contention being that said G. W. Eogers was the instigator of this whole affair, and that. the crime charged — in fact it never was committed, and that this defendant' knew nothing of it, and was not near the place where the crime is alleged to have been committed, and that said Eogers is the one that procured the officers and induced them to go and arrest this defendant several days after the alleged crime was committed.

“The Court (out of the presence and hearing of the jury): The court will permit you to show this contention, if you can. The court will not permit you .to assail the veracity of Mrs. Eogers by showing that her husband was discharged from the employment of the Pinkerton Detective Agency for drunkenness or misconduct. If you. can show that the prosecuting witness, Mrs.

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Related

State v. Rose
96 S.W.2d 498 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1936)

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Bluebook (online)
158 S.W. 32, 251 Mo. 178, 1913 Mo. LEXIS 198, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-white-mo-1913.