State v. White

51 S.W.2d 109, 330 Mo. 737, 1932 Mo. LEXIS 485
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJune 10, 1932
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 51 S.W.2d 109 (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, 51 S.W.2d 109, 330 Mo. 737, 1932 Mo. LEXIS 485 (Mo. 1932).

Opinions

Appellant was charged by indictment in the city of St. Louis with murder in the first degree by killing one Pinckney Hollis by means of blows with a hatchet on the head. Upon trial appellant was found guilty as charged and his punishment was fixed at death. From the sentence and judgment he has appealed.

Pinckney Hollis was about seventy years old, and was a man of color. Appellant, Emerson White, is about twenty-nine years old and also is of color. The killing occurred on January 1, 1930, in a one-room house in the rear of 2641 Pine Street, St. Louis, where Hollis lived alone. Appellant White, formerly lived at 2643 Pine Street, next door to Hollis, but when Hollis was killed, White was a janitor in a west end home in the basement of which he slept. Marshall Gaitor, living next door at 2639 Pine Street, a man of the same age as Hollis, had known Hollis for six years, and the two old men visited each other frequently. Gaitor saw Hollis every day in December, 1929, in the last three weeks of which Hollis was sick and in bed half the time. On January 3, 1930, Gaitor went to Hollis' room and knocked. There was no response. The door was locked and, so, Gaitor called a policeman who picked the lock, and entered the room. Pinckney Hollis lay dead upon the floor. Wounds estimated by the policeman at fifteen or twenty, were upon the head of the dead man. Beside the body lay a bloody hatchet, broken milk bottles, a bent poker and a bank deposit book in the name of Hollis. The pockets of the clothes of the dead man had been turned. The contents of a trunk were scattered about. The hasp of the trunk lid had been torn off and the lid forced open. The drawers of a wash-stand had been pulled out and were empty. The mattress and covers of Hollis' bed had been rolled and pushed aside. A piece of a watch chain hung from the dead man's suspenders but no watch was found. Clothes were strewn here and there. The place was in complete disorder. The coroner performed an autopsy on the body of Hollis and found on the head twelve wounds from one inch to two inches long. Two of the wounds extended through the skull and into the brain with no radiating fractures, showing, in the opinion of the coroner's surgeon, that the wounds had been made with a sharp instrument. Appellant White, testifying in his own behalf, said that, in self-defense he struck Hollis on the head only twice and with the hammer end of the hatchet. Although the body was not found until about 6:30 *Page 741 P.M., January 3, 1930, the time of the death was fixed at January 1, by a written statement of appellant.

The St. Louis police arrested appellant in the basement of the home where he attended to the furnace late in the night of the discovery of the body of Hollis. Several witnesses, all of appellant's own race, testified that he had been hanging about the Pine Street neighborhood where Hollis lived all winter. Appellant wore ragged overalls that winter, but he was appareled in a brown checked suit and a gabardine coat when he went to a Pine Street wake on January 2, and to the funeral the next day. The brown checked suit and coat were identified by several as having been the property of Pinckney Hollis for five or six years. The suit was a familiar sight in the community and the wearing of it by appellant caused much comment at the funeral. Leon Murphy, who rode in a funeral car with appellant, looked at him dressed up, instead of in ragged overalls and observed: "It looks like I know that suit," and appellant answered: "I bought it off a fellow." On the night of the wake at 2612 Pine Street, appellant sold to John Rodgers for a dollar a certain open-faced watch, which at the trial was identified by several as having belonged to Hollis. Leon Murphy was present at the negotiations between appellant and Rodgers for the sale of the watch. Murphy had seen the watch before, as it had passed from one colored owner to another, then to a pawnshop and finally to Hollis. So, in the conversation preceding the sale of the watch Murphy said to Rodgers and to appellant: "I said it didn't look good to me that watch with the chain broke. It looked like it had been snatched and the defendant said it was his."

The body of Hollis had not been found nor was the fact of his death known when appellant sold the watch to Rodgers and wore the brown suit and the gabardine coat to the funeral. When the death was discovered tongues began to wag. Appellant, when arrested, stated that he knew nothing about the death of Hollis. But two city detectives, colored men like appellant, went into the prison cell with him. One of these detectives had come from the same place in Mississippi as had appellant. He offered to help appellant by writing to the latter's parents. Appellant then began to tell things. He directed the police to the west end basement where appellant had worked. He told them that they would find Pinckney Hollis' brown suit and gabardine in a suit case there. The police found the suit and coat as appellant had said. Next appellant told the police that he had locked the door of Hollis' room on the night of January 1, 1930, and had thrown the key in the yard near by. The police found the key. After the police had made these discoveries, appellant made a written statement which the State offered in evidence. The part of the statement describing the affray in Hollis' room is as follows: "`About 8:30 *Page 742 o'clock P.M., on January 1, 1930, I was at McGee Hannah's house at 2607 Pine Street rear, I left there and went to the home of a man known to me as Hollis at 2641 Pine Street to get some whiskey. I went to the rear door and knocked on the door, Hollis let me in. I asked him for a half pint of whiskey which he gave me, I gave him a dollar bill out of which he was to take 25 cents the price of the whiskey, he gave me twenty-five cents in change, saying that he was taking out a half dollar that I owed him. I told him that I did not owe him a half dollar. We started to argue then and he ordered me out of his house, and I refused to go. He grabbed a hatchet which was on a box near the stove and struck at me with it. I picked up a milk bottle which was on the floor near a table, and hit him over the head with the bottle striking him twice. He fell to the floor. I then put my hand in his left vest pocked where he kept his money and took from same a $1.00 and four quarters. I then took a poker which was on the floor near the stove and forced open a trunk which was near the wall in the back of the room. Hollis got up and struck at me with the hatchet and I scuffled with him and took the hatchet from him, and I then struck him on the head with the hatchet and he fell, and he started to bleed. As he was lying on the floor he said to me, "I'll see you." I took a three-piece brown suit out of the truck and a gabardine coat which was on the bed and walked out of the house. I went back to McGee Hannah's house. When I took the money out of Hollis' vest pocket I also took a yellow gold, open-face watch.'"

Appellant in his statement identified the brown suit, the gabardine coat, the watch, the hatchet, the poker and the door key in connection with the parts which these articles played in his narrative of the tragedy. Appellant, in his written statement, also said: "At the time I was arrested I was wearing a pair of blue serge trousers, which had blood stains near the bottom on the right leg, and these were the trousers which I wore when I struck Hollis with the hatchet and the blood on the trousers was gotten on there during the struggle with Hollis." The blue trousers were put in evidence.

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Bluebook (online)
51 S.W.2d 109, 330 Mo. 737, 1932 Mo. LEXIS 485, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-white-mo-1932.