State v. Worton

41 S.W. 218, 139 Mo. 526, 1897 Mo. LEXIS 192
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJune 8, 1897
StatusPublished

This text of 41 S.W. 218 (State v. Worton) 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. Worton, 41 S.W. 218, 139 Mo. 526, 1897 Mo. LEXIS 192 (Mo. 1897).

Opinion

Gantt, P. J.

Defendant is charged by the indictment with the murder of Mrs. Louisa Worton, a woman with whom he had cohabited as his wife for some twelve years. They were gypsies, and traveled from place to place, as is the custom of such people. About three months before the date of the murder they were at Bollinger Mills, near Kennett, Missouri, where Mrs. Worton, the deceased, left defendant, taking with her a young girl thirteen years old, a daughter by a former marriage, and went to St. Louis, where defendant found them, three or four days before the offense [529]*529was committed, at 918 North. Broadway. Defendant called to see the deceased with a view, as he stated, of persuading her to return and live with him. He called again the following day and found her not at home. On Thursday, March 5, 1896, the nest day after the second call, defendant went to the room of his said wife about 9 o’clock in the morning. The room was on the second floor of the building at 918 North Broadway, and in which there were several other tenants occupying different apartments. The deceased and her.daughter, Pearl, were in bed when defendant entered the room, and at the suggestion of both defendant and his wife, the girl arose and left the room, whereupon, in the course of fifteen or twenty minutes, defendant was seen by several witnesses coming from the room with blood on his hands and clothing and was heard by a witness who was in the wash room of the first floor, to remark that he had “fixed her.” On coming out upon the street he was discovered by a police officer and arrested. The following facts were narrated in evidence by officer Curley. “I saw he (the defendant) was covered with blood, on his shirt and the collar of his coat, also his hands, and he says, lI hilled my ivife! I says, ‘What is the matter?’ and he said, ‘lam after hilling my tvife! I says, ‘What did you kill her for?’ and he says, ‘I have been jealous of her going with other men! I says, ‘What did you kill her with?’ and he says, ‘a razor! I says, ‘Where is the razor?’ and he says, ‘I threw it down after I killed her.’ ”

On being taken back to the place of the tragedy the defendant admitted to Pearl Riley that he had killed her mother, and after he had been taken to the police station, he voluntarily signed the following statement in the presence of Sergeant King:

“My name is Andrew Worton; I am 33 years of age; I was born in Montreal, Canada; I am a gypsy [530]*530of English extraction; I have been off and on coming to St. Louis for about a year past; I am married; my wife’s name is Louisa Worton; I married her in Hampton, Virginia, about 12 years ago; she is also a gypsy; we got three children living and three dead; my.mother resides in a tent on the north side of Easton avenue, between Pendleton and Newstead avenues; she has lived there about one year; my wife ran away from me at a place called Bollinger’s Mills, Kennett, Mo., about two months ago and came to St, Louis; I came to St. Louis three or four days ago and found out that she was at number 918 North Broadway, a rooming house; I went there this morning and saw her in bed with my little 12 year old daughter, on third floor of said house; I told the little girl to go down stairs, which she did; I then pulled out a razor and cut my wife’s throat, from the effects of which she died; the reason I done so was because she was sleeping and going with other men; after killing my wife I came down stairs and went along the street toward Washington avenue, and when near Lucas avenue I was arrested; I have no certain place of abode; I trade in horses.”

Defendant set up plea of self-defense, stating in evidence that while in the room talking she became angry and reaching behind her got a razor and drew it on him, at the same time cursing and swearing she would cut his heart out. And when she made at him he caught her arm, took the razor from her and killed her with it.

Archie Edmonstone, a Star reporter, testified upon the part of the State that he visited the defendant shortly after the mui’der, and that. defendant told him he had gone to see his wife a few days before he killed her, and asked if she would not return and live with him. He made two or three, such calls, and could not [531]*531get his wife to consent to it, and on the night before the killing he had a talk with her, and she refused to live with^him, so he ivent home and decided that he would hill her, and early the next morning he got tip, stole his brother’s razor out of his trunk, and with that went to the house where the woman lived and, after sending the little girl down out of the room, turned to his ivife and told her, “You have got to die,” that his wife laughed at him; whereupon he dreio the razor, cut her throat and left the house. An effort was made to strengthen defendant’s plea by introducing evidence to show that deceased had threatened to take his life on different occasions prior to the killing.

He was indicted for murder at the March term, 1896, of the St. Louis Criminal Court and a plea of not guilty entered. On May 13 both parties announced ready, and a trial ended in a conviction of murder in the first degree. From the sentence upon said verdict he has appealed. For grounds in his motion for new trial defendant alleges: First, the verdict is against the evidence; second, the verdict is against the weight of the evidence and the law; third, incompetent, irrelevant and immaterial evidence was admitted by the court over objection of defendant’s attorneys; fourth, the State was allowed to introduce evidence not in rebuttal after it had announced its case closed; fifth, new and important evidence has been discovered.

In the motion for arrest of judgment the following reasons are given: l(First, the indictment does not properly charge an offense’under the laws of this State; second, if the facts as charged were admitted they would not show defendant guilty of a crime or offense.”

I. As the motion in arrest challenges the sufficiency of the indictment, we will first consider that objection. The indictment is in these words:

[532]*532“The grand jurors of the State of Missouri, within and for the body of the city of St. Louis, now here in court, duly impaneled, sworn, and charged, upon their oath present; that Andrew Worton, late of the city of St. Louis aforesaid and State aforesaid, on the 5th day of March, in the year of our Lord, one thousand, eight hundred and ninety-six, at the city of St. Louis, with force and arms, in and upon one Louisa Worton, in the peace of the State, then and there being, feloniously, willfully, deliberately, premeditatedly and of his malice aforethought, did make an assault; and that the said Andrew Worton, with a certain knife the said Louisa Worton, in and upon the head and body of said Louisa Worton then and there feloniously willfully, deliberately, premeditately, and of his malice, aforethought did strike, cut, stab, and wound, giving to said Louisa Worton then and there feloniously, willfully, deliberately, premeditatedly, and' of his malice aforethought, with the knife aforesaid, in and upon the head and body of the said Louisa Worton one mortal wound of the length of one inch and of the depth of five inches; of which the said mortal wound the said Louisa Worton then and there instantly did die.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

State v. Gilmore
19 S.W. 218 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1892)
State v. Johnson
22 S.W. 463 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1893)
State v. Welsor
21 S.W. 443 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1893)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
41 S.W. 218, 139 Mo. 526, 1897 Mo. LEXIS 192, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-worton-mo-1897.