State v. Wilson

26 S.W. 357, 121 Mo. 434, 1894 Mo. LEXIS 189
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMay 8, 1894
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 26 S.W. 357 (State v. Wilson) 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. Wilson, 26 S.W. 357, 121 Mo. 434, 1894 Mo. LEXIS 189 (Mo. 1894).

Opinion

Burgess, J.

From a conviction of murder in the first degree, by shooting one Moses Hodges to death with a pistol, the defendant has appealed to this court. The shooting is charged to have occurred on the eighth day of November, 1892, in the city of St. Louis, inflicting upon said Hodges a wound from which he died in said city on the eighteenth day of December nest thereafter. The trial was begun on Saturday, May 13,1893, the evidence heard, instructions given and the case submitted to the jury about 11:30 p. m., when the court adjourned until the following Sunday morning, May 14, at 10:30 a. m., to receive the verdict, at which time the jury rendered their verdict, finding the defendant guilty of murder in the first degree.

Motion for new trial was filed, supported by affidavits; counter affidavits were filed by the state; the motion was overruled, as was also a motion in arrest.

[437]*437Defendant and deceased were negroes. Both, were rivals for the affections of one Lyda Nichols, a colored woman residing in the city of St. Louis. She occupied one room on the ground floor of a building fronting on the street. A porch was in front of the door, and a pass way ran beside the house, leading to a yard in the rear, where there were other tenements, and thence into an alley.

At about 3 o’clock of the day of the shooting, deceased called at the woman’s house and, finding her at home, entered her room and sat down by the stove upon a “stool chair” (so called by the witnesses) with his face toward the stove, his back towards or near the wall, his right side towards the door and he was leaning forward with his hands clasped around his knees. He had been sitting in this position but a few minutes conversing with the woman, when defendant entered the door, advanced into the room, raised a pistol, pointed it at deceased, and exclaimed, “I’ve got you now!” The woman cried out, “Don’t shoot, Mr. Charley!” and ran out of the door, leaving deceased sitting in the same position on the stool chair. As she crossed 'the doorsill she heard the report of a pistol within, saw appellant come out of the room and run towards the rear.

Another colored woman, Delia Jackson, who lived in the rear, was on her way, with a little child, to visit Lyda, and just about to step upon the porch, when defendant passed her rapidly, sprang upon the porch and went into Lyda’s. As he entered the door she saw him draw “something' shining” out of his pocket. Being frightened, she took up her child and ran into the adjoining yard. She saw Lyda come out, heard the report of the pistol, and immediately afterward saw defendant come out, jump off of the porch and run to the rear.

[438]*438A third colored woman, Susie Taylor, living a short distance off, was washing clothes at her window; saw 'deceased come down the street and enter Lyda’s house. About five minutes afterward saw defendant come from the rear, pass Delia and enter the house; about two minutes afterward saw Lyda run out into the street, heard the pistol and saw defendant come out, put his 'hand in his bosom, jump off of the porch and run to the rear along the gangway. She hurried over to the house, went in, and found deceased apparently helpless, lying on the chair, his back against the wall, one leg stretched out on the floor, the foot under the stove, the other leg hanging over the chair, one hand lying on the floor and the other against the wall. Some men coming in lifted him up and laid him on the bed. The wounded man was taken to the city hospital where he died from the wound on the eighteenth day of December, 1892.

Search was made by the officers for the defendant that afternoon and night and for several days after, but he could not be found. In the early part of December it was learned that his trunk had been expressed to Chicago. Inquiries there led to his arrest in that city, and on the twelfth day of December he was brought back to St- Louis through a requisition. He disclaimed all knowledge of the shooting, and when accused of it replied, “If they say so they will have to, prove it.”

When taken to the hospital deceased was suffering intensely. A bullet wound was found in the axillary line of the right side, about two inches below the arm pit, between the third and fourth ribs. He was paralyzed in both legs, also in his abdominal muscles, and in his intestines and bladder, so that he passed his water and faeces involuntarily. On the second or third day after, traumatic pneumonia set in. ■ He gradually [439]*439sank, and four days before death became delirious. The autopsy showed tliat the bullet had passed downward from the point of entrance, went through the right lung, and was embedded in the muscles surrounding the spinal cord, pressing upon the cord itself, which was atrophied from the pressure.

A statement was obtained from deceased six days before he died as to the circumstances of the shooting, which was reduced to writing at the time and signed by him in the presence of the attending physician, two police officers and the defendant. A part of this testimony was admitted in evidence by the court as a dying declaration.

The testimony on the part of the defense tended to show: That on the day of the shooting, about noon, deceased had a conversation with one Winston, in which he stated that he had had a fuss that morning, but would not tell with whom nor what it was about During the conversation he put his hand in his bosom, drew out a pistol and remarked', “I’m fixed-for anyone that bothers me now.” It does not appear that these remarks were communicated to the defendant nor that his name was in any manner connected therewith.

That about half past 9, the same day, deceased said to one Brown, “I’m going to kill somebody before 6 o’clock to-night, or they’ll kill me.” And when pressed to tell who that somebody was, replied that it was Charley Wilson, and at the same time showed a revolver; and that this remark was communicated to defendant about an hour later. The witness Brown admitted that some days after the shooting, he had received a letter from defendant written from Chicago, and that in response thereto he expressed defendant’s trunk to him there, and that he knew the police were looking for defendant at the time; he also admitted [440]*440that he had been a prisoner in the city jail since that time where he had met the defendant every day.

That between 11 and 2 o’clock of that day, deceased was in company with defendant and one Burrell, walking through an alley in the neighborhood of the homicide, and that deceased made the remark, ‘ ‘I’ve a notion to kill some son of a bitch around here; ” but no name was mentioned; that they walked on to another alley and stopped to look at some things dumped into a lot, and there deceased stepped back and put his hand in his 'bosom, when Burrell stepped between him and defendant, and said, “Come on, let’s get out of this alley.” That they went on to another alley, where they met some other men, one of whom said to deceased, “I see you are limping,” and deceased replied, “lam lame; that is the reason I’m walking around here, but I’m scared of no bastard.” The witness Burrell had also been a prisoner in the city jail since the homicide, and it was shown that he had offered the state’s -witness, Susie Taylor, $2 to sign some papers for the benefit of defendant, and to keep away from court.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
26 S.W. 357, 121 Mo. 434, 1894 Mo. LEXIS 189, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-wilson-mo-1894.