State v. Wilks

213 S.W. 118, 278 Mo. 481, 1919 Mo. LEXIS 110
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJune 3, 1919
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 213 S.W. 118 (State v. Wilks) 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. Wilks, 213 S.W. 118, 278 Mo. 481, 1919 Mo. LEXIS 110 (Mo. 1919).

Opinion

WHITE, C.

The defendant on a trial in the Circuit Court of Lawrence County was found guilty of murder in the first degree. He was charged with having killed his father, George Wilks. From that judgment he appealed to this court.

Virgil Wilks was 21 years old at the time of the trial in September, 1918. There was one previous trial of the case, in which the jury disagreed. George Wilks was 64 years of age, a farmer, and lived about five miles west of the City of Aurora, and about two miles north of Verona, in Lawrence County. He had a number of children, all of whom had married and left home, with the exception of Virgil. At the time of his death, November 21, 1917, his family consisted of himself, his wife, Virgil, and a hired boy 17 years of age by the name of Sid Pilkerton.

George Wilks lived in a house, fronting east, consisting of seven rooms. A southeast front room was the sitting-room; just west of that.was the dining-room, and then the kitchen. On the north side of the house was the parlor in the northeast corner, and back of that three bed-rooms occupied the space to the rear of the house. [485]*485Two of these bed-rooms opened into the dining-room, and the third one opened into the kitchen. George Wilks occupied the middle bed-room opening into the dining-room. On the evening of his death, November 21, 1917, the family ate supper as usual. Virgil Wilks left the table first, went out and hitched his horse to his buggy, and drove away. Soon after, Mr. Wilks passed from the dining-room into the sitting-room, and read the morning papers, which had arrived by the afternoon mail; Mrs. Wilks washed the dishes, and came into the room where he was; Sid Pilkerton went to bed in the room opening off the kitchen. Wilks, after reading the paper, went through the dining-room into his bed-room. Soon Mrs. Wilks heard the crash of glass, and other people in the neighborhood heard a shot. She and Sid Pilkerton rushed into the dining-room and found Mr. Wilks lying on the floor. He had been shot in the stomach while in the act of undressing in his bed-room, had run into the dining-room, and had fallen there. He had one pants-leg off and one on at the time he was found. He had been shot from outside of the. house, through the window of his bed-room; the shot passed through a wire screen, broke the glass of the window, and tore a hole through a lace curtain. There was ■ evidence to show that the shot was fired so close to the window that powder stains were found on the outside of the screen. The time at which the shot was fired was variously stated by the witnesses to be somewhere between 7:20 and 7:30 o’clock. Wilks died about 8:45 from the effect of the wound.

The evidence offered to connect Virgil with the murder of his father showed that in January, 1917, Virgil had left home and gone to Detroit, Michigan, where he remained until June, 1917, when he returned home. He then took charge of his father’s farm, under some sort of an arrangement by which he purchased the live-stock. Evidence showed there had been differences between the father and son in regard to feeding the cattle. Charlie Wilks, a nephew of the deceased who [486]*486lived a quarter of a mile away, testified that Virgil had mentioned the disagreements with his father and said, “I have had kill, in my head here lately.”

Wilks was shot with a number-four shot fired from a twelve-gauge gun. A box of cartridges of that size was in the house and some of the shells were missing. Virgil owned a twelve-gauge gun, which had disappeared and was never found after the murder. Virgil claimed it disappeared while he was absent in Detroit and he could not find it on his return home. The tracks of a rubber-tired buggy were shown to have been made from the road leading south, down a wide ditch which led in the direction of the Wilks home, where they turned some distance from the house and led out again. There was some similarity between those buggy and horse tracks to the ones made by the buggy and horse driven by defendant.

The defense was alibi. Defendant claimed he drove to Aurora after supper, to visit a girl with whom'he was keeping company, by the name of Ethel Ashens. This girl and several other persons testified to seeing the defendant in Aurora about eight o’clock or before. The evidence tended to show that it took about fifty minutes to drive from the Wilks home to Aurora. There was testimony to the effect that Virgil Wilks’s horse, on that evening, did not show any evidence of having been over-driven.

The telephone wire was cut in the yard, where it was attached to a tree. Bloodhounds were brought to the scene immediately. They took the trail and pursued it to the house of the nephew, Charley Wilks.

The defendant was informed .of his father’s injury a short time after he arrived in Aurora; he hurried home in an automobile, arriving there after the death. Nothing in his demeanor at the time indicating guilt is mentioned in the evidence.

The evidence apparently the strongest against the defendant and that which tends most nearly to connect him with the murder was the alleged dying statement of [487]*487Wilks. The shot attracted the attention of some of the neighbors, and they were notified of the tragedy and soon began to arrive. Among those who arrived first was Mrs. Cora Knott, who lived about a hundred yards away. A little later W. R. Wilks, or “Doc” Wilks, a brother of the deceased, arrived. After Mrs. Knott arrived she heard the wounded man exclaiming and calling upon the Lord to save him, and among other things he made the statement which was offered and admitted as his dying declaration. Later, when the brother, Doc Wilks, arrived, and the dying man had been placed on his bed, he made a different one to him. This latter statement was introduced by the defendant.

The alleged declaration testified to by Mrs. Knott was this: she heard the deceased say to his wife, “Virgil killed me.” That is all that appears in her testimony as to what the statement was. It developed, however, that at the preliminary examination, and again at the previous .trial of the case, Mrs. Knott had given the complete statement of the deceased, of which the above words were only a part. His complete declaration to his wife at the time was as follows: “You go away from me; Virgil killed me. You and him made it up this afternoon to kill me tonight. They tried to get me when I was on the porch.”

There was no preliminary examination of the -witness at the trial to show that such was the complete declaration, but it seems conceded by the State that it was. Before the prosecuting attorney made his opening statement to the jury, Mr. Skinner of the defense objected to any reference to the alleged dying declaration by the prosecutor, setting forth in his objection the complete statement as above quoted, as testified to at the former trial and in the preliminary hearing. The objection was renewed in the same form at the time Mrs. Wilks was called 'to testify, on the ground that the declaration was a mere conclusion, the expression of opinion or inference, and not the statement of a fact by the witness. The court excluded all the declaration ex[488]*488cept the expression, “Virgil killed me,” doubtless on the theory that the rest of it was expressions of opinions or inferences, while the part admitted was the statement óf a fact.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
213 S.W. 118, 278 Mo. 481, 1919 Mo. LEXIS 110, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-wilks-mo-1919.