State v. Webb
State v. Webb
Opinion of the Court
Tbe defendant, John Webb, was tried and convicted on information of tbe prose-
The facts developed were that the defendant owned the land adjoining the property of the church and that there was a dispute between the defendant and the church as the line separating their different lands. On the occasion of the alleged offense the said persons had gone to the church for the purpose of erecting a hitch rack. They had begun work upon the disputed territory when the defendant discovered them. Pie went to where they were working' and forbade them erecting the hitch rack, and said to them that he was not going to have his land “fenced up this way,” and ordered them to leave. An argument resulted over the matter, during which defendant used very abusive language towards Winkler, drew his knife, and shoved him from the disputed territory. The year before the trouble the defendant had plowed the land in dispute. This land had been mowed and kept in condition the same as the other parts of the church property for many years previous.
It is claimed that the court committed prejudicial error in giving and refusing certain instructions. Instruction 2 given for the state, it is insisted, permitted the jury to find the defendant guilty regardless of the question whether there was a dispute as to the right of possession of the disputed territory. Taken by itself this is true, but when read in connection with instructions 3 and 3 1-2, all of which should be read together, that question is included. Instruction 3 is to the effect that if there was merely a dispute between the parties as to the true line between the two properties, the defendant had the right to protest against the action of the other parties in putting up the hitch rack
Number 3 1-2 is as follows: “On the other hand, if you believe from the evidence that the ground was not in dispute, hut that it was known to belong to defendant Webb by the parties erecting the hitch rack then defendant had the right to order them off and to eject them therefrom, provided, he used no more force or stronger or more positive language than was reasonably necessary to accomplish such purpose.” Reading all these instructions given for the state together, we do not think they embody the law of the case. Instruction 3 1-2 in the first place is not based upon the evidence. In fact it is based upon a condition that is shown not to have existed. The jury could not have found that the ground was not in dispute for it was admitted by all the parties that it was. Under the instruction the defendant could have no defense, because the jury was required to find there was no dispute about the ownership' of the ground in the face of the admission that there was. It required defendant to show what was untrue for his defense.
The law of the case is found in State v. Brumley, 53 Mo. App. 126. Judge Rombauer, who delivered the opinion of the court, held that: “One who uses violent language, though on his own premises may he guilty of a disturbance of the peace, if the person to whom it is addressed is rightfully there; hut not,so, if such language is used by one on his own premises towards an intruder.” In this case it was not shown which of the disputants, the church or the defendant, was the owner of the- disputed territory. The evidence only went to the question of possession. At the time in question, if the church was in possession, the defendant had no right to eject the parties and commit a breach of the peace in so doing. On the other hand, if the
The defendant’s theory of the case as embodied in his instructions which he tendered to the court, and which the court refused, are based upon the fallacy that the defendant was the owner and in possession of the disputed territory. There was no evidence as to his ownership and it was conflicting as to who was in the actual 'possession, the evidence in that respect preponderating in favor of the church trustees.
For the error noted the cause is reversed and remanded.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.