State v. Woods

204 S.W. 21, 274 Mo. 610, 1918 Mo. LEXIS 338
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJune 3, 1918
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 204 S.W. 21 (State v. Woods) 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. Woods, 204 S.W. 21, 274 Mo. 610, 1918 Mo. LEXIS 338 (Mo. 1918).

Opinion

WILLIAMS, J.

Defendant was convicted of murder in the first degree in the circuit court of Buchanan County and was sentenced to life imprisonment. He has duly perfected an appeal to this court.

[613]*613Tlie evidence upon tlie part of the State tends to establish, the following facts:

Defendant killed his wife about 1 a. m. July 15, 1916, at 2608 Delaware Street, St. Joseph, Missouri. Defendant and his wife, both colored, were united in marriage in September, 1915, and separated about March, 1916, the wife at that time going to the home of Mjrs. Wilson, where she resided until the time of her death. On June 29, 1916, the deceased instituted a divorce suit in the circuit court of Buchanan county.

On the night of the tragedy the deceased, in company with other members of the Wilson household, attended a church festival, returning to the Wilson home about 12:30 a. m. Shortly thereafter defendant knocked at the door of the Wilson home and asked to see his wife. She stepped out on the porch and after conversing with defendant for a few minutes both returned into the house and continued their conversation in the front room. Mrs. Wilson and her daughter were in the dining room immediately adjoining the front room. A visiting colored minister had retired for the night in another part of the house.

Shortly after defendant and his wife came into the house scuffling was heard, and the deceased, with her hand to her throat and blood streaming therefrom, immediately rushed into the dining room, in the presence of Mrs. Wilson and her daughter. Mrs. Wilson testified that defendant pursued his wife, grabbed her, threw her on the cot and cut her throat with a knife. The daughter corroborates the testimony of' her mother, except that she did not see the defendant use the knife. Defendant went back into the front room, and Mbs. Wilson’s daughter accosted him, saying, “Oh! Lee! What did you do that for?” Defendant made no reply, but departed from the house leaving his ha,t lying under the table. The wife died in a few minutes.

The coroner arrived about 1:10 a. m. and found the wife dead, with a cut on her neck and throat extending from ear to ear. The cut severed the “carotid artery and the jugular vein.” There was also an [614]*614additional small scratch, on lier throat. The main wound was jagged and hád the appearance of being accomplished with' one stroke of the knife.

About five o’clock a. m. on the morning of the tragedy a police officer, having read the account of the killing in the newspaper, immediately went to the house where defendant was rooming. Looldng in at the window, the police officer saw defendant asleep and awakened him by rapping on the window- pane. Defendant arose and permitted the policeman to enter. In answer to the questions of the policeman the defendant admitted that he had been ont to call on his wife that morning and that they had had some trouble and he thought he had cut her on the shoulder. The bloodstained knife with which the cutting was done was lying upon a table in the room; one of defendant’s hands had a slight cut across the palm, which had been bandaged by the defendant; the policeman told the defendant that his wife was dead, but the defendant appeared to be unable to believe it. On direct examination the police, officer testified that defendant said that the knife in question was his knife, but upon cross-examination the witness stated that he was not positive that the defendant had made that statement. The defendant was then placed under arrest and taken to the jail.

The colored minister testified that he saw the defendant sitting on a platform in front of the church where the church festival was being held about nine p. m'. on the night in question. A. justice of the peace record, showing one Lee Woods to have been convicted of- assault and battery in the year 1914, was introduced in evidence.

The evidence upon the part of the defense tends to establish the following facts:

The reputation of the deceased for “peace, quietude and morality” was bad. The reputation of defendant as a peaceful, law-abiding citizen was good.

Defendant in his own behalf testified that after his wife went to live with Mrs. Wilson she visited his [615]*615Louse one or two days each week; that she was vicious and quarrelsome, causing their separation; that about 10:30 on the night in question he went to the Wilson home to see his wife; that prior thereto he had agreed with his wife to either let her return to his home or to pay her expenses for a visit to her mother in Iowa'; he found no one at home when he first' arrived, and waited until midnight, at which time Mrs. Wilson and the members of the Wilson household, including the visiting minister and an escort of Miss Wilson, returned from the church, but his wife was not with them. He was informed by them she had gone to the home of Mrs. Walters; defendant in company with Fred Barnes walked to a near-by cigar store for cigars and procured change for a ten-dollar bill; defendant then went to the Walter’s home and inquired for his wife; on learning that she had gone to the Wilson home, he also returned to the Wilson home, arriving there about 12:3'0 a. m.; as he approached the house he looked through the window and saw his wife and Conser Walters standing in the front room; he knocked on the door, asked his wife to come out, and there told her that since she was going with Mr. Walters and not living right he was not going to take her back or give her money to visit her mother. They then went into the house, and continued the conversation. His wife asked him to give her seven dollars to make the trip to Iowa,; she opened her purse in order to show him that she had no money. After site opened the purse she took a knife therefrom and attempted to cut defendant with it; that he grabbed her hand and they struggled for possession of the knife; that he finally got hold of her wrist, reaching over her shoulder from behind her, and pulled her Hand up over h'er shoulder until she dropped the knife; that he then released his wife, and she rushed into the adjoining dining-room and lay down on the cot; that he walked to the dining-room door and saw his wife on the cot, and saw some blood on her shoulder and thought it had come from his hand, which had been [616]*616cut in tbe struggle; that .as he went to the dining-room door Miss ‘Wilson said, “Don’t.you see me undressed; what in the world is the matter with you? I am ashamed of you.” He thereupon left the house, went to his home, bandaged his injured hand and went to sleep. He denied that he left his hat at the Wilson home or that' he was at the church on the night in question, and denies that he intentionally strucK his wife with the knife. He also denied that he was ever convicted of assault and battery or that he had ever threatened to cut his wife’s throat.

Appellant has not favored us with a brief. We will discuss the points raised by the motion for a new trial.

I. A mere reading of the foregoing statement of facts will at once disclose that appellant’s contention that the verdict is not supported by the evidence must be disallowed.

Pormer^Triai.

II. The further point is made that the court erred in refusing to permit counsel for defendant to read to the jury pages 3, 4/and 5 of the transcript of defendant’s testimony given upon a former trial, and a^so erred in permitting counsel for the State to read to the jury any portion of said transcript.

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Bluebook (online)
204 S.W. 21, 274 Mo. 610, 1918 Mo. LEXIS 338, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-woods-mo-1918.