State v. Taylor

Gantt, P. J.

— The defendant was indicted at the May term, 1893, of the criminal court of the city of St. Louis, for the murder of Tobe Carlyle in the city of St. Louis, March 13, 1893. He was duly arraigned at the October term, 1893, and a plea of not guilty entered in his behalf, and he was tried and convicted of murder in the first degree.

The testimony on behalf of the state tended to show, substantially, the following: The' defendant, a negro man, was a barber by occupation, with a wife, and a son nine years old; they had been living some little time with his wife’s sister at 1533 Gratiot street, St. Louis; defendant was of intemperate habits and frequently quarreled with his wife, and, finally, left her about a month before the homicide. The sister-in-law, one Ida Anderson, unmarried, maintained herself by washing and ironing and by furnishing meals to Pullman employees on trains running into the city. The deceased was a young negro man, porter of a chair ear on the Chicago & Alton railroad and lived in Chicago; he had been running into St. Louis about a week, and, a few days before the homicide, had been brought to Ida Anderson’s by one of her regular patrons, who was a cousin of his; and, on the morning of the homicide, he made his second call at the house, having come in on his train that morning; he came' in late, his train being behind time, and when he reached the house he found Ida Anderson ironing; she stopped her work and got breakfast for him.

After eating his breakfast, he put on his hat, took up his overcoat and lighted a cigar. Just then the appellant came up the stairway leading to the room where the meal had been served, and called out his lit-*535tie boy. Tbe boy hung back, but appellant called to bim: “Come bere, Clyde; your papa didn’t come bere to hurt you; be only came bere to hurt some of tbe damned sons of bitches that’s bunting around your mother.” Deceased started down tbe stairs, but appellant barred tbe passage by placing bis arm across and seizing tbe banister. Deceased said: “My friend, I don’t know you, and you don’t know me; I don’t want to have any trouble with you; you are not alluding to me, are you? If I am in your bouse, and you don’t want me here, let me go out.” Appellant replied: “No, I don’t intend for you to come out, you son of a bitch; I’m going to kill you.” Ida Anderson stepped forward to pacify bim, and at that moment appellant fired. Deceased fell immediately back into the room, and appellant stepped into the room and fired at bim tbe second time as he was down. A third shot was fired and the bullet went into the wall. Appellant left the house immediately, carrying with bim tbe overcoat of the deceased. When the officers reached the house, after the shooting, deceased was in a sitting position, his back against tbe wall, between a bed and a chair; bis bat was on bis bead, bis eyes open and tbe cigar between bis teeth.

Tbe autopsy disclosed two bullet wounds, either of which was necessarily fatal, and producing death almost instantly. One wound was in the median line of the throat, under the chin, and was powdér burned, the bullet ranging downward, passing through tbe right lung and lodging in tbe back between tbe first and second ribs. Tbe second wound was on tbe right side of tbe bead, three inches above tbe right ear, ranging diagonally across tbe skull, and lodging in tbe left lobe of tbe brain. In tbe opinion of tbe medical expert tbe wound in tbe bead was tbe first received.

It appeared that when deceased came to tbe bouse *536he had a revolver in his overcoat pocket, its striking the frame of the bed calling the woman’s attention to it, and he took it out and showed it to them. It was a small affair, belonging to a woman in Chicago; was not loaded, and he took it apart to show the woman how it worked. This revolver was picked up from the floor near deceased, after the shooting, and turned over by the police to the coroner, and it was unloaded at the time.

The appellant was arrested by an officer, who started in pursuit from the scene, a short time after the shooting, several blocks away. When overtaken by the officer, he said: “I guess I know what you got me for.” He turned over his weapon to the officer and was taken to the station. The son of appellant testified as an eyewitness, and in every particular corroborated the testimony of Ida Anderson, and was subjected to a long and rigid cross-examination.

On the part of appellant, there was testimony to the effect that, though given to liquor, his general reputation for peace and quiet was good; also, testimony to the effect that his nine year old son (the witness for the state) had a bad reputation, but that his veracity had not been questioned; and there was some little testimony that Ida Anderson’s reputation for truthfulness was not good.

The appellant, testifying in his own behalf, gave this version of the homicide: He went to the house of his sister-in-law that morning to see his little boy, whom he had not seen for several days; as he went up the steps his sister-in-law saw him and cried out, “Oh, Grace, Grace! here is Will” (Grace being appellant’s wife)', and at this exclamation the wife opened the door of a'room at the head of the stairs and looked out; she was clad only in her chemise, and behind her was the outline of a form, which appellant took to be that *537of a man; the sister-in-law exelaimed, “You yellow son of a bitch, don’t you come up here?” and undertook to shove him back; he retorted, “Now you can’t say you’re not making a whore of my wife,” and they began quarreling. Then deceased came out, followed by the wife, deceased having a gun in his hand, and she carrying his overcoat; and then began another wordy quarrel between the three; the wife struck him and threw the overcoat over his head, and deceased fired, appellant drew his pistol and fired, shooting until the chambers were empty; and when he got the coat off his head his sister-in-law had disappeared; his wife cried out, “My Glod! I believe he has killed the man,” and just then the little boy came running in, inquiring of his mother what was the matter. Appellant claimed to have remained there four or five minutes after the shooting, talking with his wife, and that his sister-in-law said to him: “You son of a bitch, if it is the last act of my life, I’m going to have you hung,” and he then left the house.

I. The indictment is sufficient and fully informed the defendant of the nature and cause of the accusation against him. The objection now made that it is an absurdity because it alleges that the revolver was loaded with one leaden bullet, with which two mortal wounds were inflicted, is without merit.

II. When the witness, Robinson, the stenographer for the coroner’s office, was testifying he stated that the defendant had testified at the coroner’s inquest on the body of Tobe Carlyle. He acted as reporter of the inquest. He was then asked if defendant voluntarily gave his statement on that occasion. He answered: “I don’t remember that. If I am allowed to state I can tell what is done always, in every case.” Q. “How is that?” A. “I say, if I am allowed, I can tell the methods pursued by the coroner in every case when a *538prisoner is called up to testify.” To this statement defendant objected. "Witness then stated that the method or custom to which he referred had been invariable without an exception in his experience in the office. To this it was objected that it was not germane and nothing but what pertained to this case was competent. The court thereupon ruled that he might answer. He then answered, “In every case where a prisoner testified, before testifying, the coroner or deputy who is holding the inquest asks the prisoner whether he desires to make a statement under oath or without being sworn. He is also informed at the same time* that he can either make a statement or refuse, just as he sees fit.”

The stenographer then identified the statement of the prisoner made at the inquest and testified it was a correct, true, faithful and complete transcript of the defendant’s evidence on that occasion, to which no objection was made nor exception saved.

It was entirely competent and proper for the witness to state what the uniform practice in the coroner’s office had been. It is a character of evidence resorted to every day in our courts and often the most satisfactory. It is in this way that accounts are proven, and engineers and firemen are daily allowed to state their custom as to ringing bells or sounding the whistle in approaching crossings. Mathias v. O’Neill, 94 Mo. 520.

III. Defendant complains that he was not allowed to prove that one Kearney, who was not present at the homicide, had threatened his life, and this as a justification for carrying the pistol. The court properly excluded this. For the purposes of this trial it was wholly immaterial that Kearney had threatened his life, as Kearney was not present and had no part in the killing. Nor did it matter why he carried a pistol. *539He was not being tried under tbe- charge of carrying concealed weapons. He might have been lawfully carrying a pistol but that would not justify him to use it feloniously upon Carlyle. The proposed inquiry could have thrown no light on the transaction. The question was, what justification or provocation had he for using it to kill Carlyle.

IY. It is next complained that the court erred in not granting a new trial on the newly discovered evidence. The burden of all this evidence was to impeach the evidence of Clyde Taylor, the son of defendant. It is unnecessary to consider this at length. It is the established rule in this state that a new trial will not be granted to enable a party to introduce newly discovered evidence which merely contradicts or impeaches that given on the trial or to impeach a witness. State v. Howell, 117 Mo. 307; State v. Welsor, 117 Mo. 570.

. These affidavits ■ themselves are such as call for close scrutiny by the courts. The appellant’s affidavit is that the facts stated in the affidavits of Willis Elijah Brown, Garrett Johnson, Daniel Brown, Jerry Henderson and Buanna Henderson came to his knowledge after the trial; said parties, after learning the verdict, came to affiant and his counsel and informed them of the facts, etc. Now, these parties named all give their affidavits at Clarksville, in Pike county, and not in St. Louis. They all purport to give a conversation of the boy Clyde, on the same day (Sept. 17) in Clarksville, in which he is deposed to have said that he was not present at the shooting, but was going to St. Louis to testify against his father, by reason of fear. The conversation is stated by Buanna Henderson to have occurred in her house; by Daniel Brown to have occurred in his house; by Willis Elijah Brown to have occurred in his house; by Jerry Henderson to have occurred at his house; and by Garrett Johnson to *540have occurred in the city of Clarksville, but at no house in particular.

The affidavit of Tony Demartine avers that he had a conversation in St. Louis with the boy, “about the last week in March or first week in April, 1893,” seven months before the trial, in which the boy stated that he was not present at the shooting, but had been sent on an errand by his mother at the time, and that he was compelled by his aunt to testify as he did at the coroner’s inquest.

The affidavit of Kurt Yon Reppert states that he had a conversation with the boy during the first week in April, 1893, in which the boy said he was going to testify against his- father (who was not indicted until May 16), because his aunt had threatened him with punishment and he was afraid of her. The affidavit of Anne Renfro w states that she heard a conversation between Clyde and certain unknown parties during the coroner’s inquest, in which he stated that he was not present when his father killed Carlyle, as his mother had sent him on an errand and he did not return until after the shooting.

The strangest affidavit of all, however, is that of one Ben Huhn, who swears that in August, 1893, at the city jail in St. Louis, he heard a conversation between Clyde and his father (the appellant), and heard Clyde say he did not see the shooting, but that his mother and aunt had threatened to punish him and send him to the house of refuge if he did not swear on the trial that he was present and saw the shooting. And yet, during a long and rigid cross-examination of the boy, this fact was not brought out, because, as appellant swears, appellant did not know of this conversation until after his trial.

The defendant himself does not swear that the matter contained in the affidavits of Tony Demartine, *541Kurt Von Reppert and Ben Huhn were not known to him. It is inevitable that he knew of Ben Huhn’s evidence or that Huhn had madó a false affidavit.

The court very properly refused to set aside the verdict on this showing. A peculiar feature of the ease is that, although the court gave time to file affidavits, the affidavit of Clyde Taylor was not filed until after the time had expired, nor until after the motion had been overruled. What function it is expected to perform in this record we can not understand. The criminal court was not asked to consider it and certainly we are not expected to do so. At any rate we shall not. It forms no part of any exception in the case. •

V. The only complaint urged against the instructions relates to the definitions of “deliberation” and “premeditatedly.” In all other respects the instructions are such as have been approved again and again by this court.

The definition of deliberation is in harmony with our decisions, but by some oversight the word “beforehand” was omitted from the definition of “premeditatedly,” otherwise correct. It was held in State v. Harris, 76 Mo. 361, that when the defendant was convicted of murder in the second degree, as premeditation was an essential element of murder in the second degree, it was absolutely necessary that the word should be defined, and as it was defined to mean “thought of for any length of time however short,” omitting the word “beforehand,” it was error. But in this case, the defendant was convicted of murder in the first degree, and the court not only correctly defined deliberation, which includes premeditation (State v. Dale, 108 Mo. 205), but correctly defined “malice aforethought.”

Now, we have on more than one occasion held that an indictment which omitted “premeditatedly” altogether, but used the words malice aforethought, was *542sufficient, as malice aforethought was equivalent to malice and premeditation. State v. Low, 93 Mo. 547; State v. Thomas, 78 Mo. 327; State v. Dale, 108 Mo. 205.

The case was well tried. The defendant had the full benefit of his evidence, but the jury who saw and heard the witnesses evidently believed those testifying for the state, and, if they did, they were bound to find that the defendant, without provocation, shot and killed Carlyle, actuated by a feeling of jealousy.

The judgment is affirmed and the sentence of the law will be executed.

All concur.