Defendant was charged and convicted of murder in the first degree, and his punishment assessed at life imprisonment. The indictment alleged that he killed one Edna Ellis, with a razor in the city of St. Louis on November 4, 1920. His defense was an alibi. After the usual motions he has appealed, contending that a confession obtained from him by the police and used against him in the trial was not voluntary, and that without such confession there was insufficient testimony to sustain the conviction.
In the matter of the sufficiency of the testimony to convict, without the use of the alleged confession, it was shown that appellant and deceased, though bearing the same name, were not related; that they met at some place of entertainment in August, 1918, and became sweethearts, the deceased being then sixteen years of age; that the attachment thus formed resulted in an engagement, and that the appellant went to board at the home of the deceased, who resided with her mother; that during this courtship appellant gave the deceased a diamond ring, which he subsequently sold while having it temporarily in his possession, telling the deceased that he had lost it.
He failed to pay for his board, as contracted by him, and was required to leave the home of the deceased. This was followed by a breaking of the engagement. Appellant and deceased, however, met occasionally, but did not continue their former relations.
At the date of the homicide the mother was a waitress in one of the down-town restaurants, and the deceased was a stenographer for the Bell Telephone Company, with offices in the Boatmen's Bank Building. *Page 276 Some controversy arose over appellant's unpaid board bill, which it was shown amounted to $95, and this was argumented somewhat by appellant's indebtedness to the deceased for money borrowed at different times, aggregating about $20. After leaving the home of the deceased and breaking the engagement, appellant gave his attention to another young woman.
On the evening of the homicide the deceased had worked until about eight o'clock at the offices of the Bell Telephone Company, 210 Boatmen's Bank Building. It was not a usual thing for her to work so late, but sometimes occurred about the first of the month because of business exigencies. Her home was at 1833 North Garrison Avenue, and as she was about to leave the office on the evening of the tragedy she telephoned her mother that she was starting for home. She left the office with Catherine Norton, another stenographer, went to Seventh and Olive Streets, where she boarded a Cass Avenue street car. This was not her usual route, but was traveled by her so that she and Miss Norton might be together. This car passed one block east of her home, on Glasgow Avenue. It was necessary for her to leave the car at the intersection of Glasgow and North Market Street, and walk west one block on North Market, and thence to her home on North Garrison Avenue. Garrison and Glasgow Avenues are parallel streets, one block apart, running north and south.
When the deceased reached North Market Street she left the car from the east side, and while waiting for it to pass on to the north, she waved at Miss Norton, and then was seen to cross diagonally from a point near the southeast corner of Glasgow and North Market Street to a point near the northwest corner of said intersection, where she was approached by a man, who had been seen loitering at or near that corner for two hours or more. This was exactly at 8:30 p.m. When last seen she was a considerable distance west of Glasgow Avenue on the north sidewalk of North Market Street. The lot immediately north of where the deceased *Page 277 was last seen was vacant. Failing to return home, as expected, a search was instituted and the next morning her body was found about fifty feet north of North Market Street on said vacant lot, and about midway between Glasgow and Garrison Avenues, and near the place where she was last seen. Her throat had been cut; her face bruised, and, according to the testimony of physicians who examined her, death ensued within a few minutes after the wounds had been inflicted upon her.
Two of the State's witnesses positively identified appellant as the man who had been loitering at the intersection of Glasgow Avenue and North Market Street during the evening, and one of them saw him approach and follow the deceased after she had left the car and was proceeding on her way, and when last seen they were not far from the place where her body was found.
One of appellant's witnesses saw a man loitering at said intersection, but did not identify appellant as the man. He described him as about five feet and eleven inches tall, which, according to the testimony, was several inches taller than appellant. However, this witness gave the same description as to dress.
Another witness for the State saw the same party about 6:35 p.m., standing at the northeast corner of Garrison and North Market Streets, as a Natural Bridge car went west on North Market, and immediately thereafter walked east on North Market toward the point where he was frequently seen at Glasgow and North Market. This witness gave the same descriptions as that of all the other witnesses, but did not see the face of such person, and did not identify him as appellant. He gave the height corresponding to appellant. Deceased ordinarily traveled on a Natural Bridge car, which stopped but a short distance from her home on Garrison Avenue.
About one week before the homicide at 11:20 p.m. appellant and the deceased were seen together at Garrison and North Market Streets. At that time appellant *Page 278 was importuning the deceased to accompany him somewhere, and the deceased, who was very angry, told appellant that she would not go with him "and furthermore I am through with you. I don't want any more to do with you."
Appellant offered testimony by members of his family to the effect that he was at the home of his parents from 5:30 p.m. of the evening of the tragedy until the next morning. The homicide occurred on Thursday evening, and appellant was first arrested on Friday afternoon. After being questioned at the police station he was released, upon being admonished to remain within the city for the convenience of the police in making their further investigations. Shortly before eleven o'clock a.m. of the next day (Saturday) he was re-arrested and taken to the Dayton Police Station in a patrol wagon, where he was interrogated by the police almost continuously until about daylight Sunday morning. During the inquisition, continuing for a period of eighteen hours, he was given no food and was not permitted to sleep. His shoes were taken away from him, and at one time he was stripped of his clothing. He was compelled by the police to make two trips to the place where the murder was committed, and was also required to accompany them to the undertakers, where the body of deceased was, and there required to look on her face. He was slapped twice by police officials during the night, and called a liar many times.
Early on Sunday morning he agreed to confess, and a confession was written out giving the details of the homicide. This was signed by him and witnessed by several persons. The inquisition did not cease with this written confession, but continued until a supplementary confession had been obtained, and thereafter it continued intermittently through Sunday, Sunday night and Monday. During this time, in addition to his written confessions, and in answer to the inquires of newspaper reporters and police officials, he repeated the gruesome details of the homicide, culminating in a detailed *Page 279 oral statement made on Tuesday afternoon to the warden of the city jail, to which place he had been transferred. In his statement to the warden, he confirmed all that he had said in his written confession, and repeatedly corroborated his story of the homicide to various parties after the written confessions had been obtained.
Learned counsel for appellant argued with vigor at the bar of this court and vividly described in his argument, as well as in his brief, the treatment to which appellant was subjected by the police. His contention is that this treatment was far more severe than we have stated it. We do not feel justified in accepting the details, as urged by appellant's counsel. He grounded his argument, as well as his brief, upon the grossly exaggerated statements of appellant, made in his testimony before the court, in the absence of the jury, as to the abuse and tortures to which he claimed to have been subjected by the police. Appellant did not testify before the jury, but he did testify before the court in the absence of the jury on the question of the voluntary or involuntary nature of his confession. Appellant said that he had been beaten with rubber hose; hit with police clubs; punched with fists, and menaced in such a way all through the time of the inquisition as to force him to confess to save himself from further torture, and he brought witnesses who testified that they had seen him on Sunday morning on his third visit to the scene of the killing, and that his eyes were blackened, his face swollen and one of his ears cut.
Counsel for appellant completely overcame this testimony by his own proof, as Dr. Wheeler, the jail physician, was his witness, and he testified that he made a physical examination of appellant on Tuesday, November 9th, and that "the only abnormal condition I could find about him was a slight discoloration of the skin under the left eye. . . . He complained of a soreness in his left arm. I gave him a liniment to rub on his arm and told him it might reduce the soreness." Witness *Page 280 said that he examined appellant's arm, but found no discoloration or bruises. In fact he said:
"Q. Did you find any bruises on his body? A. None whatever."
Furthermore, Mr. Finnegan, a reporter for the St. Louis Times, testifying for appellant, whom he had seen and interviewed on Sunday morning and thereafter, said that "he looked haggard and worn. I did not notice any marks on his face or hands." To this witness appellant had made a detailed statement of his guilt. This witness further testified on direct-examination as follows:
"WITNESS: I asked him the question, `How is it you confessed to me on Sunday night, and on Tuesday afternoon you enter a denial?' `Well,' he says, `the police promised me something.' He said, `They told me that if I would confess they would release me on bond. They said further' — continuing his story — he said, `One of the policemen there promised to give me a written note to this effect, that I would be released on bond. He promised me that I would be released on bond if I would confess, and after the confession was made,' he said, `I asked the officer for a copy of this agreement made and they laughed at me.'"
The foregoing testimony offered by appellant before the jury overcomes his own testimony given only before the court in the absence of the jury, and indicates that he was then seeking to discredit his confession by showing that a promise had been made to him, and sustains our statement of the facts as gleaned from the unusually and needlessly long record in the case. Other facts, as they may appear pertinent, will be stated in the course of the opinion.
I. Appellant's contention that aside from the alleged confession the facts were insufficient to make a case for the jury, and that his demurrer should have been sustained, is wholly without merit. The fact that he and the deceased had been betrothed; that the engagement *Page 281 had been broken; that feeling had been engendered because of appellant's business relationship to the household of deceased; that about one week before the homicide he and the deceased were engaged in a violent quarrel at a late hour of the night; that at that time the deceased finally and indignantly rejected him as a suitor; that on the evening of the homicide appellant was seen and positively identified at the places where deceased would necessarily leave the street cars on her way home, whether she came by way of a Cass Avenue or a Natural Bridge car, all point to his guilt. There was the further fact that appellant was seen to approach and follow deceased to a point within a few feet of where she was murdered, and about the time when the murder must have occurred. It became a question for the jury, and this is true notwithstanding that appellant offered testimony by members of his family tending to show that he was elsewhere during the time. [State v. Jackson, 186 S.W. (Mo.) 990; State v. Moore, 225 S.W. (Mo.) 924; State v. Gulley, 272 Mo. 484, 199 S.W. 124; State v. Brown, 234 S.W. 785.]
II. However, a more serious question arises in the matter of the alleged confessions. The court admitted his admissions of guilt in evidence and appellant claims error. Before admitting such confessions the court excluded the jury and heard much testimony touching the voluntary or involuntary nature of his inculpatory statements. In reaching the conclusion that the confessions were competent, the trial court said that as there was a sharp conflict in the testimony before him he would relegate the whole matter to the jury for its determination under proper instructions. Ordinarily this was proper. [State v. Stibbens, 188 Mo. 387, 87 S.W. 460.] In this case, however, as stated, appellant testified only before the court while pursuing his inquiry as to the voluntary or involuntary nature of the confession, and made such an extreme presentation of the abuse and the scourging to which he said he had been subjected by the police, preliminary *Page 282 to his confession, that the court found what he conceived to be an issue between these grossly exaggerated statements and the contra testimony of the police, so that he was of the opinion there was a question for the jury and not for the court.
Adverting to the undisputed facts with respect to the police inquisition, appellant was questioned almost continuously from eleven o'clock Saturday morning until the time of his confession at seven o'clock the next morning. He agreed to confess at five o'clock a.m. so that he was subjected to a rigid examination for a period of eighteen hours. During that time he was interrogated in relays by the police, and was not permitted to sleep, nor was he given food.
Police Officer Gerk, who was a large man, slapped him during the inquisition, because he said that appellant was disrespectful, and Officer Sweetin again slapped him, because he called said officer a liar. Sweetin was also a large man.
Appellant's shoes were taken from him; at one time he was stripped of his clothing; he was required to look at two bright reflectors, so that the light fell full on his face, and was forbidden to turn his face away so as to rest his eyes; he was taken to his cell for a few minutes at a time during the night, and then brought back for further interrogation; he was compelled on Saturday afternoon, and again before daylight on Sunday morning, to go with the police officers to the vacant lot, where deceased was murdered, and then while it was yet night to go to the undertaker's, and there stand before the body of the deceased, while a light was flashed on her face. He was required to put his hand on the corpse.
Under such circumstances, the confession was not voluntary, and should have been excluded by the court. [State v. Powell,258 Mo. 239, l.c. 248, 249, 167 S.W. 559; State v. Powell, 266 Mo. 100, l.c. 107, 108, 180 S.W. 851; State v. Thomas, 250 Mo. 189, l.c. 212, 157 S.W. 330; Bram v. United States, 168 U.S. 532; 16 C.J. 720.] *Page 283
The conduct of the police officers in needlessly laying hands on a helpless man while being detained without warrant deserves the severest censure. [People v. Trybus, 219 N.Y. 18,113 N.E. 538; Hector v. State, 2 Mo. 167; 12 Cyc. 475.]
III. The circuit attorney apparently doubted the competency of said written confessions, for he did not at first offer them in evidence, but called the warden of the jail, to whom appellant had made a confession on Tuesday following the inquisition of the police that continued from Saturday morning until the following Monday. It was contended by the State's attorney that even if the original confessions were involuntary, the appellant had been removed from the influences which prompted such confessions, and that his admissions of guilt and the details thereof, as given to the warden of the city jail, were wholly voluntary. No effort was made by the State to show that the influences operating to produce the original confessions had been removed, and that the appellant was no longer dominated by such influences. This burden was on the State. If the first confession was coerced by intimidation and fear, the presumption would arise that a second confession was the product of the same influence. [16 C.J. 722; State v. Jones, 54 Mo. 478; State v. Brown, 73 Mo. 631.]
A prisoner, who had been thus subjected to such rigid inquiry with violence to his person; who had witnessed the gruesome and uncanny scenes mentioned and to whom food and sleep had been denied for so long, would not immediately thereafter be freed from the dominating influences of his experience, and a confession shortly after such treatment had ceased would, in the absence of proof to the contrary, be adjudged involuntary.
Under the circumstances, complaints with respect to the admission and exclusion of testimony during the trial need not be noticed. For the error of the court, as above stated, the case must be reversed and remanded *Page 284 for a new trial, and it is so ordered. Railey, C., concurs;White, C., not sitting.