The defendant was found guilty of murder in the second degree, in the Circuit Court of *Page 76 Ozark County, and sentenced to imprisonment in the penitentiary for a term of twelve years in accordance with the verdict of the jury, and appealed.
She was charged by information in the Circuit Court of Taney County with murder in the first degree, in that on the 12th day of August, 1924, she shot and killed N.D. Boles, who was at that time the sheriff of Taney County. A change of venue was awarded to Ozark County, where there were two trials. At the second trial, in May, 1925, she was found guilty as above stated. The facts are fairly and impartially stated by the Attorney-General as follows:
"The evidence on the part of the State tended to show that the Sheriff of Taney County, N.D. Boles, and his deputy, Ben Layton, were searching for one Robert Ramsey, who was wanted in connection with the robbery of the Bank of Protem. The sheriff and his deputy met at Branson on the 11th day of August, 1924, and from there went in a car to Kirbyville. Here they left the car and went to the residence of Mrs. Smith, the defendant. Arriving there at `dusky dark' they went up the back way and at a distance saw defendant and Robert Ramsey. The officers were slipping up towards the house when the dogs began to bark, which fact seems to have prevented them going up and arresting the fugitive, Ramsey; they watched the house until about eleven o'clock, when Mrs. Walton drove up in a car and went into the house. The officers then went to the neighbors, by the name of Christian, and Mr. Christian and his two sons went back with them to the Smith house, arriving there at about midnight.
"The lights were still burning and the officers waited until the occupants of the building had extinguished the lights and gone to bed, which was about three o'clock in the morning, and then they surrounded the house. The sheriff, Mr. Boles, went to the front door, and Layton, with the aid of a flashlight, looked in at a window.
"Looking through the window he saw the young son of the defendant in bed, but saw no one else. *Page 77
"The sheriff knocked at the door several times and finally the defendant answered him and the sheriff informed her he was looking for Robert Ramsey, but was informed by the defendant he was not there; for the sheriff to go look in the barn; he might be there.
"The sheriff, however, went in the house and brought the fugitive, Ramsey, down from upstairs. Ramsey was undressed save for a union suit, his other clothes being on the bed, and the sheriff searched these clothes before he handed them to Ramsey, who put them on. Ramsey was then taken out of doors and handcuffed. All this time, the defendant was abusing Layton and making threats toward him and telling him that the crows would pick his bones before morning, or, as some witnesses said, `before this is over.'
"It appears that Ramsey had sore feet and was not able to walk to Kirbyville, some two miles distant, where the car had been left; so the sheriff sent Layton for the car, with instructions to meet him and Ramsey at the Gobbler Knob Schoolhouse, which was about a quarter or a half a mile away and to which Ramsey agreed to walk.
"When Layton last saw the sheriff, Ramsey was sitting down, Mr. Boles was leaning against the fence, and Mrs. Smith was on the inside of the fence. This was about four o'clock.
"Layton went to Kirbyville to get the car and returned shortly before daylight. He failed to meet Mr. Boles at the Gobbler Knob Schoolhouse, and he drove on down to the Smith home, but the lights were out and he failed to see anyone. Later he met Mrs. Smith going home.
"Layton then went on to Kirbyville and got his brother and while on this trip he learned that Mr. Boles had been hurt. He again met Mrs. Smith and asked her if she knew where Boles was and she said that she did not; that she had gotten her car out and picked up Boles and Ramsey and hauled them down the road about a mile and let them out at the mouth of the lane. *Page 78
"The evidence showed than when Ramsey started away from the Smith house (he was) without a coat, and that the defendant got his coat and gave it to Mr. Boles, who searched it, and then Ramsey put in on.
"The sheriff also asked Ramsey where his gun was and he said it was upstairs. This statement was made in the presence of Mrs. Smith. However, no one went to get the gun. The mouth of the lane where the sheriff and Ramsey left the car of Mrs. Smith was on the road over which Layton would return from Kirbyville. The mouth of the lane is also referred to in the evidence as the `mail boxes.'
"The evidence showed that the sheriff carried a 38 special Smith-Wesson revolver, and the deputy carried the same size revolver but an earlier model. When defendant was arrested at Hollister there were some old coats lying in the back seat of her car and the cushion was wet. After Ramsey had put on his coat, furnished by defendant at the Smith house, he and Mrs. Smith had a conversation behind the door, but what was said could not be heard by the State's witnesses.
"It was also shown in the evidence that the defendant offered to take Boles and Ramsey to Forsyth, but refused to take anyone alse, and that she also knew that the sheriff and Ramsey were going down to the Gobbler Knob Schoolhouse and wait for the return of Layton with the car.
"The morning following the arrest of Ramsey, one Frank Riley went to a watering trough on his farm, about five o'clock. This watering trough was located about one hundred yards from the lane, or mail boxes, where the sheriff and Ramsey left the car of the defendant. Riley had gone down there to prepare some feed for his cows, and found a hat in the trough. It was later identified as the hat of Sheriff Boles, and which had been pierced by a bullet from the rear. A flashlight was also in the trough and the holster of a revolver was lying east of the trough. It was a foggy morning and Riley did not find the body of the sheriff. *Page 79
"Riley's wife took the hat, flashlight and holster over to a neighbor by the name of Wheeler. Wheeler and another man went in search of the body, and about forty or fifty feet from the watering trough they found the body of the deceased. The tracks and bloodstains indicated that he had been shot at the watering trough and had walked to the place where he was found.
"At the time Boles was found he was still breathing, but died shortly afterwards. The autopsy was held at Branson and it was discovered that Boles came to his death from the effects of a bullet which entered the back part of his head, ranging downward and to the left, hitting the inside front part of his skull. The nose of the deceased was also broken. The bullet was a steel jacket 32-caliber and the impact of hitting the skull had split it.
"On the 14th of August, Ramsey was arrested where he was hiding in a box car at Branson and on his person were found two revolvers, a 38 Smith-and-Wesson special and a 32 automatic, which was identified as one owned by him. The Smith-and-Wesson was identified as the revolver of the sheriff.
"At the time of defendant's trial, Ramsey already had been tried and sentenced to the penitentiary for life.
"Evidence was also introduced to show that Mrs. Smith possessed a revolver which was seen in her home a short time prior to the killing. Mrs. Smith was arrested the morning after the homicide as was also her daughter, Mrs. Walton, sometimes referred to as `Blondie.' Mrs. Walton operated a restaurant at Branson. Defendant and her daughter were placed in the jail at Forsyth, and when news came of the arrest of Ramsey at Branson, she was heard to ask `Blondie' if she thought Bob (Ramsey) would give it away on her, or would give her away, and that `Blondie' told the defendant she did not believe he would.
"The evidence on the part of the defendant was practically the same as that introduced on the part of the State, varying only in minor details, except that the defendant *Page 80 positively declared she had nothing to do with, and knew nothing about, the killing of Newt. Boles, the sheriff.
"Defendant's evidence shows that after the arrest of Ramsey, she and her small son got their car and went to Branson, where they stayed until the following morning. When they left her house they overtook the sheriff and his prisoner and hauled them down to the forks of the road, referred to as the lane, or the mail boxes, and there left them and that she knew nothing about their movements after that time. That it was a very foggy morning.
"Her evidence showed also that she did not have a revolver and that there had been none at her place, except that of Ramsey, so far as she knew, for more than a year, when her husband had taken his revolver back to Clinton with him. The gun taken from Robert Ramsey at the time of his arrest was shown to have been his individual property and in his possession some time before the homicide.
"The defendant positively denied making the statement testified to relative to her conversations with `Blondie' in the jail, that she did not know Ramsey had a gun on the night of the homicide and that she did not give him one.
"Defendant offered a demurrer at the close of the State's evidence and renewed it at the close of all the evidence."
The defendant filed an application for a change of venue, supported by the affidavits of five citizens of Taney County, alleging that the minds of the inhabitants of all the counties of the Thirty-first Judicial Circuit, consisting of Taney, Ozark, Christian, Douglas and Stone counties, were so prejudiced against her that she could not have a fair trial in said counties and she prayed a change of venue to some county where such prejudice did not exist. Over the objection and exception of the defendant, the court heard the oral testimony of several of the supporting *Page 81 witnesses, from which it appeared that all of the affiants lived in the western part of Taney County and that these who testified knew nothing of any prejudice against the defendant in the other counties of the judicial circuit. The court sustained the application for a change of venue from Taney County, but overruled it as to the other four counties. When the case reached Ozark County the defendant filed a plea to abate the action because the Circuit Court of Taney County erred in refusing to grant a change of venue to some county out of the Thirty-first Judicial Circuit, and that in consequence thereof the Circuit Court of Ozark County was without jurisdiction. This motion was overruled.
I. Section 3973, Revised Statutes 1919, as amended (Laws 1921, p. 206), provides that in counties having a population of less than 75,000 inhabitants, if the petition for change of venue shall be supported by the affidavits of five or more credible, disinterested citizens residing in different neighborhoods of the county where the cause is pending, the court or judgeChange of in vacation shall grant the change of venue, and it isVenue. further provided that if the application shall allege prejudice of the inhabitants of more than one county in the circuit in which the case is pending, the court may, upon proof of the allegations, "as herein provided," order the case sent to some county in the same or some other circuit where such causes do not exist. It is apparent that the words "as herein provided," which are not a part of the amendment of 1921, refer to the first part of the section which provides that when the application is supported by the affidavits of two credible, disinterested citizens of the county, the truth of the allegations of the application shall be proved to the satisfaction of the court "by legal and competent evidence." In the present case it was shown hat several of the supporting witnesses had no knowledge of any prejudice against the defendant outside of Taney County. But, without considering the propriety *Page 82 of the action of the court in hearing the evidence of the supporting witnesses, it is clear that, by the terms of the statute, even if proof of prejudice had been offered as to the inhabitants of the other counties of the circuit, the granting of the application for a change of venue to some other judicial circuit was a matter within the discretion of the court. There was no error in awarding the change of venue or in overruling the plea in abatement.
II. Appellant's learned counsel insist that the demurrer to the evidence should have been sustained. The outstanding facts and just inferences for the State are that about a year before the homicide, Mrs. Smith's husband returned to Clinton County, where they had formerly lived, to resume his trade. There is no suggestion that he thereafter visited theDemurrer defendant. He abandoned her and was not at theto Evidence. trial. The day on which Ramsey was arrested was not the first time he had visited at Mrs. Smith's home. Miss Christian saw Ramsey there on Sunday before the date of the homicide. Mrs. Smith did not conceal her passion for him. When he got ready to leave Mrs. Smith accompanied him to the shed where he cranked his car. On the night on which the sheriff arrested Ramsey, Mrs. Smith told the sheriff that Ramsey was not in the house. She was evidently trying to conceal him in her house and prevent his arrest. Boles, however, found him upstairs, and when Ramsey was asked where his revolver was he said it was upstairs. No weapon was found on him. At this time he wore high-topped boots. As the sheriff was about to take Ramsey away, Mrs. Smith addressed him, saying: "Honey, I want to speak to you." They stepped behind the door out of the sheriff's sight. What she said was not heard. Mrs. Smith followed Boles and Ramsey into the yard and proposed to take them in her car to Forsyth, the county seat, but said she would not take the other trash, referring to Layton, the deputy sheriff, and other assistants. Boles, however, sent Layton to Kirbyville for his *Page 83 car, where he had left it, and appointed a place of meeting at the end of the lane, called "the mail boxes," a mile or so distant, to which place Boles set off on foot with his prisoner. "Hell hath no fury like a woman scorned." Boles had arrested Mrs. Smith's paramour whom she was harboring. Although it was four o'clock in the morning, Mrs. Smith and her boy got her car, overtook Boles and Ramsey, took them in and let them out at the mail boxes. Ramsey did not have his revolver when he left Mrs. Smith's house, but when he was arrested a few days later at Branson he not only had on his person his 32 automatic revolver, identified as his by several witnesses, but he also had the 38 Smith-and-Wesson revolver that Boles had carried when he arrested Ramsey. Dr. Mitchell, the coroner who performed the autopsy on the body of the deceased, removed the upper part of the skull and found the bullet. He was familiar with firearms and said the bullet was one used in a 32 automatic revolver, and produced it at the trial. He testified that the bullet did not penetrate the most vital part of the brain; that it did not cut the motor tract; consequently Boles was not paralyzed; that Boles could have lived several hours and could have walked after he was shot. Dr. Mitchell was of the opinion, from the course of the bullet, that Boles was stooping as if to get a drink from the watering trough at the time he was shot, and that his hat fell into the trough.
It is clear that Mrs. Smith had a motive and that she alone had an opportunity to give Ramsey his revolver or to slip it into his boot top as he and Boles got out of her car at the mail boxes. From all the facts and circumstances in evidence, it seems clear beyond a reasonable doubt that Mrs. Smith gave Ramsey the revolver that he might kill Boles and effect his escape and that, while Boles was in the act of stooping to take a drink from the trough, Ramsey, fired the fatal shot. Mrs. Smith was an accessory before the fact. If she did not give Ramsey the revolver, it is difficult to conceive why she asked her daughter, when they learned of Ramsey's arrest, if she *Page 84 thought he, Ramsey, would tell on her or give her away. If she did not give him the revolver, what could he tell on her? How could he give her away? A careful consideration of the record leads us to the conclusion that the court properly overruled the demurrer to the evidence and that it is sufficient to support the verdict of the jury.
III. Appellant insists the court erred in admitting proof that, at the time the sheriff arrested Ramsey, Mrs. Smith abused Layton, the deputy sheriff, and told him the crows would pick his bones before morning, or, as one witness said, before this is over. This was a part of the res gestae. [State v.Res Gestae: Parr, 296 Mo. 406, 246 S.W. 903, cited in State v.Threats. Joseph Witham, 281 S.W. 32, decided at this sitting of the court.]
Different inferences might have been drawn from this threat. Soon after making it, however, Mrs. Smith showed her real animus towards the sheriff. [See State v. Kester, 201 S.W. 62, 63 (3), and 13 R.C.L. 924.] She, no doubt, veiled her enmity against Boles that she might get an opportunity to hand the revolver to Ramsey. This she could not hope to do if Layton accompanied Boles and Ramsey.
IV. The court instructed the jury upon murder in the first and second degrees, the presumption of innocence, the burden of proof, reasonable doubt, and that the jury were the judges of the weight and credibility of the evidence. In addition thereto, the court gave the following instructions:
"6. Gentlemen, when two or more persons agree together with a common intent to do an unlawful act and said act is consummated, then the act of one is the act of all.
"7. Gentlemen, if verbal statements of the defendant have been testified to in this case, they are to be received by you with great caution, on account of the liability of witnesses to forget or misunderstand what was really said or intended. *Page 85
"8. If you believe and find from the evidence that the defendant made any statement or statements in relation to the offense charged in the information after such offense is alleged to have been committed, you must consider such statement or statements all together. The defendant is entitled to what she said for herself if true, and the State is entitled to anything she might have said against herself in any statement or statements proved by the State. What the defendant said against herself, if anything, the law presumes to be true, unless negatived by some other evidence in the cause, because said against herself. What the defendant said for herself the jury may believe or disbelieve as it is shown to be true or false by the evidence in this case. It is for the jury to consider, under all the facts and circumstances in evidence in this case, how much of the whole statement or statements of the defendant proved by the State, if any, the jury, from the evidence in the case, deem worthy of belief.
"9. In connection with the instruction herein, permitting a conviction of one who aids and abets in the commission of a crime, the court instructs the jury that although you may believe and find from the evidence that the defendant may have consented to or been willing that the deceased be killed, or that she was actually present at such killing, yet she would not be guilty of the crime charged, and before you can find the defendant guilty under said instruction it must have been proven to your satisfaction beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant rendered some aid to the actual perpetration of the killing, and such aid must have been furnished with the criminal intent and for the purpose of committing murder.
"10. The court instructs the jury that although you may find and believe from the evidence that the defendant had Robert Ramsey, who was charged with bank robbery, at her home and that she may have denied to the officers the fact of his presence and may have attempted to prevent his arrest, yet such acts alone are not such as would make such person guilty of aiding and abetting the *Page 86 crime of murder, but before the defendant can be so convicted the State must have proven to your satisfaction beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant rendered some aid with the intent and felonious purpose that such acts would contribute to and assist in the actual killing of the deceased.
"Gentlemen, the word feloniously means wickedly and wrongfully and against the admonition of the law.
"11. The court instructs the jury that although you may find and believe that the defendant made threats against any individual other than that of the deceased, yet such threats should not be considered by you in arriving at your verdict.
"12. The court instructs the jury that before one can become guilty of aiding in the commission of a crime, it must be shown that the person so aiding therein had knowledge of the intention of the principal to commit the crime charged."
Instruction 8 is not a comment on the evidence, as is claimed by the appellant. It was approved in State v. Glazebrook, 242 S.W. 928 (14). Other criticisms of the instructions are without merit. They were favorable to the defendant and fully instructed the jury upon all questions of law arising in the case. Instruction 11 should not have been given, as it was too favorable to the defendant.
V. In the closing argument to the jury, the prosecuting attorney said: "I believe that the defendant was the one who passed the pistol to Ramsey and it is my belief that she is guilty." An objection to this remark wasArgument to Jury. sustained. The court being asked to rebuke counsel for the improper remark, said: "Yes, you cannot say what you believe, but you can say what the evidence is." Counsel for the defendant excepted to the failure of the court properly to reprimand the prosecuting attorney.
It is the province of the prosecuting attorney, in his argument to the jury, to sum up the evidence pointing to the guilt of the accused, but it is improper for him to attempt *Page 87 to influence the jury by asserting his belief that the accused is guilty. [State v. Cole, 252 S.W. 701 (3); State v. Reppley, 213 S.W. 477, 480, and cases cited.] We have reversed convictions for inflammatory remarks of the prosecuting attorney in his argument to the jury. [See State v. Connor, 252 S.W. 713, 720.] In the instant case the court promptly sustained the objection and, in effect, admonished counsel that he could discuss the evidence, but not express his belief. This plainly indicated to the jury that in the opinion of the court the prosecuting attorney had transcended the limits of legitimate argument. The extent to which the court should go in administering a reprimand in such a case is largely within the discretion of the court.
In State v. Hart, 292 Mo. 74, 96, 237 S.W. 473, Judge WHITE said: "A reprimand by the trial court in such case should be for the purpose of counteracting the prejudicial effects of objectionable remarks. It is likely to be injurious to the party reprimanded, and should not be such as to go further than that, nor to give advantage to the side objecting. The court, in this instance, by peremptorily ordering the prosecutor to keep within the record and directing the objectionable remarks to be stricken out, doubtless thought the reprimand was sufficient to neturalize the bad effects of the remarks. We are not prepared to say that the court incorrectly determined that question. The incident was not sufficient to require a discharge of the jury, a matter largely within the discretion of a trial court. [See State v. Bersch, 276 Mo. 397, 424, 207 S.W. 809.]"
Another criticism is that the prosecuting attorney in his closing argument, said: "It is my opinion that a life sentence would not be commensurate with the crime that this defendant had committed." An objection to this remark also was promptly sustained. Thereupon defendant's counsel said: "We object and except to the action of the court in refusing to reprimand counsel for the State." *Page 88
In a capital case we cannot see that the prosecuting attorney should be rebuked for urging upon a jury the duty of inflicting the punishment provided by the statute. But the jury disregarded the plea of the prosecutor and acquitted the defendant of the capital charge; she was not prejudiced by the remarks complained of.
A careful consideration of the record has failed to disclose any error prejudicial to the defendant. The judgment, therefore, is affirmed. Railey, C., concurs.