State v. Baker

BURGESS, J.

At the October term, 1906, of the Boone Circuit Court, the defendant was convicted of murder, in the first degree, under an indictment charging him with said offense, for the shooting and killing of one Boss Hall. His motions for a new trial and in arrest of judgment having been overruled, defendant appealed.

After the grand jury returned the indictment in this case, Hon. A. H. Waller, the regular judge of said court, was compelled on account of sickness to vacate the bench, and the case was tried before Hon. E. W. Hinton, a member of the Boone County Bar, who was duly elected special judge.

The defendant, the deceased and nearly all the witnesses on both sides were negroes. The evidence for the State tended to prove that on the 16th of June, 1906, one Lewis Berry, a negro, gave a picnic near Deer Park, Boone county, to which was invited the colored population of the neighborhood. For the accommodation and pleasure of the picnickers, and Ifia own enrichment, Berry erected dining and cooking booths and a dancing platform upon the grounds and had for sale various table delicacies and liquid refreshments. The picnic lasted all evening, and until after midnight. At ten o’clock, or thereabouts, the defendant raised a disturbance at the dancing platform, and used some vile and vigorous language in addressing- those about him. Lewis Berry stepped upi to him and told him to hush and sit down, and the defendant replied, “You damn son of a bitch, if you don’t like that you don’t have to *448take it.” Berry’s wife had occasion to leave the cooking bootli and get some meal to be used in connection with tbe fisb wbicb she was cooking, and she met the defendant outside, who struck her on the shoulder, and the two engaged in a little altercation. Soon after-wards the defendant left the grounds on his horse, Elwood Baker accompanying him, and went home. In the course of two or three hours, the defendant returned to the picnic grounds; going in through an opening in a fence, and1 riding up to a point within a few yards of the eating booth, he said, “I will kill all of you sons-of-bitches. ” He stopped his horse, drew a pistol and fired three shots, one of which took effect in the head of Boss Hall, wlm was standing quietly near the booth and in the act of lighting a cigar. The defendant jumped from his horse, and some one called to Lewis Berry and said, “He will kill you; run, run.” Berry immediately made a dash for the woods, as did also Shannon Stark, but while fleeing two additional bullets fired from defendant’s pistol struck and brought both men to the ground. When Berry fell, the defendant said, “I got you.” Berry managed to get further into the woods, and was found next morning concealed under a brush pile, where he was bleeding and suffering from the wound which he had received. The State’s evidence further tended to prove that the defendant fired five shots from his pistol, that no one else did any shooting, and that neither the deceased nor Berry nor Stark had any weapon at the time of the shooting. After the shooting, the defendant said, “I told you that I would get some son-of-a-bitch here to-night.” The deceased was taken to Columbia and medical attention given him at the Parker Memorial Hospital until July 8, 1906, when he died from the effects of the bullet wound in his head. Dr. Walter McNabb Miller testified that he made a post-mortem examination, and found a bullet wound on the right side of the head of *449the deceased, about one inch from the median line over the ear, which wound was one and one-half inches long and one inch wide, piercing the brain, and in the opinion of the witness said wound caused the death of the deceased. -

The defendant’s evidence tended to prove that he used some profane language at the dancing floor that night; that Lewis Berry told him to stop cursing, and that Berry’s wife came up and began choking the defendant. That one Charles Yaughn pulled Mrs. Berry away, and Lewis Berry and one Dave Jordan began cutting at defendant. He further testified that he left the picnic grounds, rode home and .went to sleep, and then returned to look 'for his hat which he said had been knocked off his head in the scuffle with Mrs. Berry. After riding into the grounds he saw Lewis Berry, who put his hand on his hip pocket as if to draw a pistol, and thereupon he, the defendant, drew his pistol and began shooting. He did not know that he had shot the deceased, nor know whom he did hit. He was unable to give any reason why Lewis Berry and Dave Jordan did not succeed in cutting him with their knives, except that somebody interfered. The defendant introduced some evidence to the effect that when Lewis Berry was found next morning, Berry asked the boys to handle him easy, as he was going to die, that he shook hands with them, told them good-bye, and said he did not know who shot him. Most of the witnesses for the defendant were his near relatives.

In rebuttal, the State introduced evidence to prove that Lewis Berry did not make the statement attributed to him by defendant’s witnesses, and that neither Lewis Berry nor Dave Jordan made any assault upon' defendant with knives; also that the defendant had his hat on when he returned to the picnic grounds and commenced shooting. It was also proved by the State *450that the reputation of two of defendant’s witnesses for truth and veracity was bad.

The point is made that the court erred in allowing Lewis Berry, over the objection of the defendant, to testify as to the nature of the wound he received and as to what he said and did following the shooting. Under the law as we understand it, all that occurred at the time and place of the shooting, which had reference thereto or connection therewith, was part of the res gestae, and was properly admitted in evidence upon that ground. [State v. Woodward, 191 Mo. 617; State v. Cavin, 199 Mo. 154; State v. Vaughan, 200 Mo. 1; State v. Spaugh, 200 Mo. 571.]

It is contended that the court erred in allowing the prosecuting attorney to ask a witness for the State if he knew Baker’s (the defendant’s) reputation for truth and veracity as an average negro. This question was objected to by the defendant upon the ground that his character was not in issue, and the objection was sustained. Defendant insists that the object of the question was to prejudice the jury against him, and that the prosecuting attorney should have been rebuked by the court for asking it, and, for failure so to do, committed reversible error. This occurred after Baker had testified as a witness in his own behalf, and he was then subject to impeachment by evidence of his general reputation for truth and morality the same as any other witness. [Sec. 2637, R. S. 1899; State v. Smith, 125 Mo. 2; State v. Weeden, 133 Mo. 70; State v. Dyer, 139 Mo. 199.] While the question propounded was not in proper form, the subject of the inquiry was, a proper one, and the question was presumably asked in good faith and the rebuke of the attorney uncalled for.

A further contention is that the court erred in refusing to grant the defendant a new trial on account of prejudicial remarks by the prosecuting. attorney. The remarks complained of were made by the prosecu*451ting attorney during his closing address to the jury, and were as follows: “The parties to this killing were negroes, and if you allow negroes to shoot each other, how long will it be until they are shooting you white men?” Upon objection by defendant to said remark, the court said to the prosecuting attorney, “Mr. Harris, it is improper for you to appeal to race prejudice, or refer to the race of the defendant. It must not be repeated, you must stay in the record.” It seems to us that this rebuke, made in most emphatic terms, was entirely sufficient, and the jury could not but have understood that the court strongly disapproved of the remark. Besides, no exception was taken and saved at the time to the insufficiency of the rebuke by the court, and the point must, therefore, be considered as waived. [State v. Murphy, 201 Mo. 691.]

It is next contended that the court erred in allowing the jury to separate after their selection to try the cause, and that, upon the hearing of the defendant’s motion for a new trial, the court should have required the State to show that there was no ground for prejudice of defendant’s cause on account of such separation. As supporting this charge, we are referred to the affidavit of one Frank Dinwiddie, in which, however, there is not one word regarding the separation of the jury or of its conduct at any time. It states in substance that the affiant left at the residence of Allen Park, a member of the jury, a copy of the Columbia Daily Tribune* of date October 22, 1905, being a paper published at Columbia, and which contained a statement with reference to the trial of defendant, also the names of the jurors selected to try the cause, among whom was one Allen Park, and the names of the attorneys engaged in the trial; but the affiant does not even state that Park ever saw or read the paper. This affidavit is no- proof whatever that the jury separated, or that Park or any other member of the jury was guilty of misconduct.

*452A final contention is that the verdict of the jury ivas the result of passion and prejudice. There is no merit whatever in this assumption. No one, unprejudiced, can read the evidence disclosed by the record in this case without being at once convinced that this was a deliberate and premeditated assault with, intent to kill and murder Lewis Berry, or any other negro who might come within range of defendant’s deadly aim; and although defendant shot at Berry with the intention of killing and murdering him, and killed Boss Hall, as charged in the indictment, he is equally as guilty as if he had killed Berry. [State v. Gilmore, 95 Mo. 554; State v. Clark, 147 Mo. 20; State v. Cavin, 199 Mo. 154.] In such case, the felonious intent follows the bullet, and the person committing the homicide is responsible for the result, although he may not in fact have intended to kill or injure the person whom he did kill.

Finding no reversible error in the record, we affirm the judgment and direct the sentence pronounced by the trial court to be executed.

All concur.