State v. Freeman
State v. Freeman
Opinion of the Court
The defendant, under an indictment for murder in the.second degree, was convicted of man
The defendant is married and is the father of several children. At the time of the killing he was working at the lead mine known as No. 7 Federal, near the town of Elvins. The deceased, O. C. Short, was a merchant. Short had sued defendant on an account for $7.05 and had gotten judgment, and had garnished defendant’s wages. On December 20, 1910, the parties inet on the porch in front of Eaton’s store. It was a very cold day, the ground being frozen hard. A wagon was standing in the street in front of the porch. The' testimony for the .State was to the effect that defendant said to Short: “You didn’t treat me right.” To which Short answered, “I don’t know why. I furnished your folks some stuff while you were gone.” To which defendant replied, “Yes, but you sued me.”
The testimony for defendant was to the effect that defendant said to Short, “You ain’t treated me right,” and Short said, “What is the reason I ain’t treated you right?” To which defendant replied, “You garnished me and mistreated my family.”
Short was wearing an overcoat.. He made no motion toward attacking defendant, who struck him and knocked him off the porch, against the wagon, and down to the frozen street, which was about eighteen inches lower, than the porch. Short’s skull was badly, fractured and he was taken to a sanitarium where he died a few days after.'
The defendant’s wife testified that Short had insulted her on the 10th of March, 1909, and had repeated the insult a few days afterward, but that- she did not tell her husband until after his wages were garnished.
Defendant testified that when he struck deceased, he, defendant; was angry on account of what his wife had told him about Short’s insults.
The defendant’s wife, in her direct examination, testified that at the time Short insulted her, her hus.band was away. On cross-examination she was asked where her husband was at the time mentioned, to which she answered that he was in Kansas. The question and answer were objected to as immaterial and incompetent. The objection was overruled.
Defendant was asked on cross-examination whether he had ever been convicted of a crime, and, over the objection of his counsel, was required to answer and did answer that he had been convicted of having counterfeit money in his possession.
The defendant asked an instruction on manslaughter in the fourth degree, which was refused, but the court of its own motion gave an instruction on that subject which fully covered that branch of the case. The instructions given by the court were all above criticism and fully covered the evidence in the case, and were eminently fair to the defendant.
OPINION.
No error was committed in requiring defendant’s wife to state where her husband was at the time mentioned. It was legitimate cross-examination.
Nor was it error to require the defendant to answer a,s to whether he had been convicted of a crime. It was competent for the purpose of impeaching him as a witness. [State v. Spivey, 191 Mo. l. c. 111.]
Reference
- Full Case Name
- State v. EDWARD FREEMAN
- Status
- Published