Court Opinion

ID: 8020041
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-09-09 02:09:33.52324+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:35:46.932838
License: Public Domain

WALKER, J.
Defendant was charged by informamurder in “the first degree. Upon a trial, he was contion, in the Circuit Court of the City of St. Louis, with *346victed of imirder in the second degree, and his punishment assessed at twenty years’ imprisonment in the Penitentiary. From this judgment he appeals.
The defendant, as the business agent of a local industrial union, in the City of St. Louis, collected back dues from a member of the union named Hammerle, but failed to account for same, thus depriving the latter of his right to a transfer, which he had demanded upon the payment of the dues. Hammerle related his grievance to one Samuel Nacer, a member of the union, and, at a meeting thereafter, Nacer charged the defendant with the delinquency. Subsequently, a special meeting of the union was held to consider the removal of the defendant from the position of business agent on account of this delinquency, and for other questionable transactions connected with the business of the union. When Hammerle arrived at this meeting, the defendant attempted to assault him, and upon the former denying that he had preferred the charges against the defendant, the latter «aid: “Where, then, is the s— of a b— that does make this trouble ? ’ ’ He supplemented this remark by ordering Hammerle from' the hall, and upon the latter’s leaving, followed him out into the street. A short distance from the building, Samuel Nacer appeared and repeating the language of the defendant in his inquiry as to who had started the trouble, said: “I am the man you are looking' for.” Whereupon, Nacer and the defendant engaged in a fist fight in which the defendant was knocked down three or fqur times, when a police officer appeared and stopped the difficulty. Nacer and Hammerle then returned to the hall, and the defeildant went down the street. A few minutes thereafter, the defendant went back to the hall, and upon entering, proceeded to where'Nacer and Hammerle were sitting. When within two or three steps of Nacer, the defendant motioned to him and, as he arose, defendant shot him. Nacer fell, dying almost instantly. As defendant attempted to leave the scene, a pistol was seen in his hand. He was forcibly detained until police offi*347cers arrived and took him in charge. An autopsy disclosed that Nacer had been shot and that a 38-caliber pistol ball had entered just above his left nipple, which penetrated the heart, and lodged near one of the vertebrae. The foregoing is substantially the testimony introduced on behalf of the State.
Defendant’s testimony is that, when he followed Hammerle into the street, he was assaulted and beaten .by Nacer, Hammerle and one Steffan; that after his assailants were made to desist by a police officer, they went back into .the hall an,d in a few moments he followed them. Other witnesses who testified for defendant, stated that when he returned to the hall, as he was passing where Nacer was sitting, the latter arose and struck him over the head with a pistol; that a scuffle ensued for the possession of the weapon; that while defendant and Nacer were thus engaged, Steffan came up behind the defendant and' struck him on the head with a chair, and that at this moment the pistol was discharged and Nacer fell. The jury did not give credence to the testimony of the defendant and his witnesses.
Krst^Degree I. Defendant contends that the giving of an instruction for murder in the first degree was unauthorized. The evidence was sufficient to authorize this instruction. When, there is a conviction for a l°w6r degree of an offense, as in this case, an instruction for a higher degree is harmless. [State v. Morehead, 271 Mo. 88, 195 S. W. 1043; State v. Goodwin, 271 Mo. 83, 195 S. W. 725; State v. Wilson, 250 Mo. 323.]
instruction for Murder Degree. - II. Defendant objects to the giving of an instruction for murder in the second degree on the ground that there was no evidence to sustain the same. There was evidence to sustain a conviction for murder in the first degree. The instruction, therefore, for murder in the second degree was more favorable than otherwise to the defendant, and he has no ground of complaint. [State *348v. Morrow, 188 S. W. (Mo.) 75.] Besides, under Section 4903, Revised Statutes 1909, it is provided that “any person found guilty of murder in the second degree or any degree of manslaughter, shall he punished according, to the verdict of the jury, although the evidence shows him to be guilty of a higher degree of homicide.” In addition to this statute, it is provided in our Criminal Statute of Jeofails (Sec. 5115, R. S. 1909), that no judg-. ment shall be arrested or in any manner affected because the evidence tends to show the defendant to be guilty of a higher degree of, the offense with which he was charged than that of which he was convicted. [State v. Barnes, 204 S. W. (Mo.) 264; State v. Morrow, 188 S. W. (Mo.) l. c. 76; State v. Whitsett, 232 Mo. 511.]
KiSngntal III. The court gave an instruction on accidental killing, based on defendant’s testimony, which, after hypothetically stating the facts as testified to by defen- • dant, authorized the jury, in the event they believed the same to be true, to render a verdict of acquittal. If there was error in this instruction it was in defendant’s favor, in the court putting the facts, as hypothesized, more strongly than the testimony authorized. Instructions similar in all of their material features were approved in the Wisdom, 84 Mo. l. c. 190, and Stockwell, 106 Mo. l. c. 39, cases, in which the evidence was not more favorable to the defendants than in the case at bar. These rulings, however, are persuasive rather than determinative of defendant’s contention, which should be measured by its own facts. These, in the main, consisted, as defendant detailed them, of an effort on his part to wrest from his assail-, ant a deadly weapon with which the latter was attempting to assault him, when it was discharged, resulting in the death of the aggressor. If these facts were true, they brought the defendant within the purview of the statute defining an accidental homicide (Sec. 4452, R. S. 1909), as construed, and properly so, in State v. Coff, 267 Mo. l. c. 21, and the instruction was not error.
*349Seif Defense, TV. Defendant requested and the court gave an instruction on self-defense. He complains of this as error. "While the testimony of the defendant and "that of his witnesses tended to show that the killing was accidental, there was also some testimony w£qej^ believed, sustained the conclusion that the killing was in self-defense. Under this state of facts it was not error for the court to instruct upon the theory of an accidental killing, as well as that of self-defense. This course could have resulted in no harm to the defendant, but gave him the benefit of either defense, as it might appear to the jury. [State v. Haines, 160 Mo. l. c. 569.] While the court, under the testimony, without prejudice to any substantial right of the defendant,, might have refused to instruct as to self-defense (State v. Reed, 117 Mo. 604), the error in thus instructing, i'f it can be so construed, wás more favorable than otherwise to the defendant,' and he will not be heard .to complain. [State v. Pohl, 170 Mo. 422, State v. Snead, 259 Mo. 427.]
DefiMdfenSe V. Defendant contends that an instruction defining the conditions under which he was authorized to act in his own defense was error. This instruction, as to its tenor, was in the stereotype form freqnently approved by this court, most, recently in State v. Miles, 253 Mo. 427: If it be conceded, which we do not think the facts warrant, that the giving of this instruction was technical error, it was not prejudicial to the defendant, as we held in ruling upon the more general instruction in regard to self-defense, and consequently there is no merit in this contention.
reserva ion. VI. Other instructions, claimed by defendant in his motion for a new trial to have been request- ^ anq refused on behalf of the defendant, are not preserved in the record.
*350Motive. VII. The refusal of the court to instruct on motive was not error. The intent which moved the defendant to commit the crime having been shown, it was not material that the jury be instructed as to motive. [State v. Santino, 186 S. W. (Mo.) 976; State v. Aitken, 240 Mo. l. c.. 267.]
VIII. We find no prejudicial error in the rulings of the trial court upon the admission and rejection of evidence. Testimony was permitted to be ■ introduced in regard to transactions between one Hammerle, and the defendant, other than those immediately concerning the difficulty which resulted in the killing. This testimony tended to establish a motive for the crime, and hence was admissible. [State v. Greaves, 243 Mo. 540.]
Finding no error sufficient to authorize a reversal, the judgment is affirmed'. It is so ordered.
All concur.