State v. Wolff

101 S.W.2d 973, 340 Mo. 659, 1937 Mo. LEXIS 489
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedFebruary 19, 1937
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 101 S.W.2d 973 (State v. Wolff) 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. Wolff, 101 S.W.2d 973, 340 Mo. 659, 1937 Mo. LEXIS 489 (Mo. 1937).

Opinions

By information filed in the Circuit Court of Jasper County Byron Wolff and five others, L.B. Harmon, Charles Napper, Victor Earl Powell, William B. Moors and Glenn Harmon (brother of L.B.) were charged with murder in the first degree for the alleged killing, on March 3, 1934, of Brooks L. Van Hoose. A severance having been granted this defendant was tried alone, convicted and sentenced to life imprisonment. Upon his appeal to this court said judgment was reversed for lack of sufficient evidence. [See State v. Wolff, 337 Mo. 1007, 87 S.W.2d 436.] The cause was again *Page 660 tried in March, 1936, and defendant was convicted of murder in the second degree, sentenced in accordance with the verdict to ten years' imprisonment in the penitentiary and has again appealed. This appeal presents but one question, viz., the sufficiency of the evidence. There are other assignments of alleged error in defendant's motion for new trial. We have examined them and find them without substantial merit, but shall not discuss them because defendant, in his brief here, has expressly waived all contentions except that the evidence was insufficient to warrant submission of the case and to sustain the verdict. On the second trial there was additional evidence, consisting of statements made by the defendant while his first appeal was pending, and some variations in the testimony of certain witnesses from that given on the first trial; also some testimony which in our former opinion we indicated should not have been admitted was not offered — the latter fact, however, not affecting the question of submissibility of the case. These differences in the evidence will be referred to later, as may be necessary. Except as thus indicated the evidence on the second trial was substantially the same as on the first. In our opinion on the first appeal, State v. Wolff, supra, we stated the facts at length and in detail, for which reason a less detailed statement will suffice here. The former opinion may be read in connection with this, for complete details of the facts.

The State's evidence on this trial tended to show the following:

[1] Van Hoose, the deceased, lived alone, in the country, about five miles southwest of Carthage. Along the north side of his premises and near his house is a street car track running east and west and immediately north of and parallel with said track is an east and west highway known as the Morgan Heights Road. Intersecting that road there is a north and south graveled road on the west side of the Van Hoose residence which, about three quarters of a mile north of said residence, joins or intersects paved Highway No. 66. L.B. Harmon owned a place and had formerly lived on said graveled road between the Van Hoose residence and Highway 66, but at the time in question was living in Carthage.

On the west side of the Van Hoose house there is a driveway extending in a semicircular manner from the northwest corner to the southwest corner of the yard, passing close to the house and under a portico which extends from the west side of the house above the west entrance door. This west entrance door opens into a vestibule or hallway about six feet long east and west and about four feet wide, from the north side of which there is an opening, without a door, into a large room extending the length of the house on the north side, spoken of as the "north room." The body of deceased was found in this north room on the morning of March 5, 1934.

Deceased was last seen alive about six o'clock on Saturday evening, *Page 661 March 3, 1934, when he left his office. An automobile, presumably deceased's and presumably with him in it, was seen driving up to his residence about seven o'clock that evening.

On the following day (Sunday), a Mr. Murray went to the home of deceased to return a borrowed trailer. Murray was unable to arouse anyone in the house. He noticed the automobile of deceased standing in the driveway, facing south, under the portico and directly in front of the west side entrance door. At that time, he noticed a hole (shown to be a bullet hole) in the left door of the deceased's car — that side nearest to the house. The following morning (Monday, March 5, 1934), Murray was driving by the Van Hoose house, and seeing the deceased's car still in the same place, he stopped, went to the door and tried to arouse the occupants. Getting no response and being unable to open the door, he proceeded to Carthage and notified friends of the deceased, who went to the house. The outer door was found locked. The west door was fitted with a night lock which, when the door closed, would lock the door automatically. The screen door attached to the west entrance did not have any lock or fastener. Entrance into the house was effected through a window. There was no bullet hole through the west door or the screen door there located.

The deceased's body was found lying on the floor in the north room, near the opening between that room and the vestibule. He was fully clothed and his eyeglasses were in place. An examination of the premises disclosed everything in order. Nothing had been stolen nor was there any indication of attempted theft or robbery. A valuable diamond ring which the deceased had been in the habit of wearing was still on his finger and other jewelry and some money was found upon his person and unmolested. Two electric lights, one in the vestibule and one in the living room were burning.

Two bullet wounds were found upon the body of deceased. One bullet had struck him in the right chest, passed through the body and had evidently struck the east wall of the vestibule and fallen to the floor where it was found. The other bullet had struck him in the left shoulder, passed nearly through the body and lodged therein. Both were steel jacketed .32 caliber bullets. On the floor by deceased's left side was found deceased's revolver, which he had been in the habit of carrying — a .38 caliber weapon using leaden bullets. It was fully loaded except for one empty cartridge found in the cylinder. On the floor of deceased's car was found a .38 caliber leaden bullet corresponding to those found in deceased's revolver. It had passed through the car door.

The body of deceased was examined by the coroner about noon on March 5th. The coroner testified that, in his opinion, deceased had been dead about thirty-six hours; that from the nature of the *Page 662 wounds, death was not instantaneous, but probably occurred within an hour or so after the wounds were inflicted.

One R.E. Dugan operated a tourist camp, called Sleepy Hollow, on Highway 66, about two and a half miles northeast of Carthage. In the afternoon of March 3, 1934, Glenn Harmon, Powell, Moors and defendant came to that camp, in a Ford V-8 sedan. Harmon and Moors entered the building by a rear door and defendant and Powell drove on to Carthage where they found L.B. Harmon and, with him, returned to Sleepy Hollow. It appears that defendant did not then know L.B. Harmon. Seeking him, he went to the restaurant of one Purl Stemmons at Carthage and asked Stemmons if he was L.B. Harmon. Stemmons misunderstood him, thinking he had asked if he, Stemmons, knew Harmon, and answered affirmatively, whereupon the defendant told him "The girls are out at the same place they were before." Stemmons informed defendant that he was not Harmon and called Harmon, who lived near. Harmon came, he and defendant held a short private conference and then, with Powell, returned to Sleepy Hollow.

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Related

State v. Gregg
399 S.W.2d 7 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1966)
State Ex Rel. Golloday v. Shain
110 S.W.2d 719 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1937)

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Bluebook (online)
101 S.W.2d 973, 340 Mo. 659, 1937 Mo. LEXIS 489, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-wolff-mo-1937.