State v. Buckley

Citation274 S.W. 74
Decision Date05 June 1925
Docket NumberNo. 25773.,25773.
PartiesSTATE v. BUCKLEY et al.
CourtUnited States State Supreme Court of Missouri

Appeal from Circuit Court, Benton County; B. G. Thurman, Special Judge.

Chambers Buckley and Earl Buckley were convicted of murder in the first degree, and they appeal. Reversed and remanded.

C. C. Barrett and Henry P. Lay, both of Warsaw, for appellants.

Jesse W. Barrett, Atty. Gen., and George W. Crowder, Asst. Atty. Gen., for the State.

DAVID E. BLAIR, J.

Defendants were convicted of murder in the first degree for the killing of Alfred E. Lutman in Benton county. They were sentenced in accordance with the verdict to imprisonment for life in the state penitentiary, and have appealed.

As the main question in the case is the sufficiency of the evidence to sustain the verdict, a full understanding of the facts is necessary. Chambers Buckley is the father of his codefendant, Earl Buckley. He and his family lived upon a farm adjoining the farm of deceased. The deceased lived alone upon a farm of several hundred acres and engaged extensively in stock raising. In July, 1922, he was missed from his usual haunts, and it began' to be suspected that he might have been the victim of foul play. After a careful search of his farm by some of his neighbors, his badly decomposed body was found on July 14, 1922, in the brush on his own place about a half mile from the home of Chambers Buckley. It is not entirely clear just when deceased disappeared, but the most reliable evidence tended to show that he was last seen alive about June 14th, or about one month before his body was found.

In oral argument here, counsel for defendants conceded that the proof of the corpus delicti was sufficient; that is, that the body found was that of Lutman, and that his death was due to the criminal act of some one. However, it is vigorously contended that the evidence is entirely insufficient to sustain the finding of the jury that either or both of the defendants were guilty of killing the deceased or of conspiring with another who actually fired the fatal shots. It is the theory of the state that one Claude Estes did the killing in pursuance of a conspiracy to that end with the defendants, who hired him to commit the murder. The evidence relied upon to establish such conspiracy and to prove the killing by Claude Estes was wholly circumstantial.

In his brief, as well as in oral argument, counsel for defendants agreed that the statement of facts made by the Attorney General is substantially correct. Therefore we may safely quote from such statement as follows:

"As furnishing a motive for the murder, it was shown that a deep grudge of long standing was held by appellants against Alfred Lutman; that appellants had often been heard to speak bitterly against deceased, threatening his life, saying that he ought to be dead; that he would be found dead with his head shot full of holes; and that when so found it was their opinion that he wouldn't have friends enough to bury him. Such talk came particularly from appellant Chambers Buckley. The language of Chambers Buckley as shown by the testimony was unusually wicked and vicious. He was heard to say that he would rather kill Alfred E. Lutman than to eat when he was hungry; that he would love to walk upon his bones, and similar statements of a vicious and wicked character, were attributed to him. It was shown that appellant Earl Buckley at different times suggested to his comrades that they waylay the road and kill Lutman, and there was evidence that he went so far as to offer money for the killing. Such suggestions finally found lodgment in one Claude Estes, a young man in the neighborhood whose father bad at one time had some difficulty with Mr. Lutman. After the passage of months through which these threats had been made, witnesses heard appellant Earl Buckley propose to Claude Estes that Claude do the actual killing, offering him money for the job.

"About the 14th of June, 1922, Claude Estes, carrying a 22-caliber rifle belonging to the appellant Chambers Buckley, and accompanied by Chambers Buckley, entered the latter's cornfield, where two girls named Minnie and Mary Earth, granddaughters of Chambers Buckley, were engaged in replanting corn. This was in the afternoon, and Claude Estes was in a partial state of intoxication. When Estes left the cornfield, he was seen to go in the direction of Alfred Lutman's house and was seen no more. After he left the cornfield, the two girls, either having finished their work or discontinuing it for the day, went to the home of Chambers Buckley, where they lived, and in the evening of the same day, as they testified, Claude Estes came back to the home of Chambers Buckley, put up the gun in the house, and went out on the porch, where he had a talk with appellant Chambers Buckley. At different times following this date, Earl Buckley and Claude Estes were seen together frequently engaged in private conversation, and at one time shortly thereafter, Earl Buckley was seen to pass some money to Estes. Soon after the money transaction, Claude Estes left the neighborhood and was arrested in another state and brought back to Benton county.

"After the body of Alfred Lutman had been found, Chambers Buckley was heard to repeat the disparaging things that he had theretofore said, and it was disclosed by the evidence that when he went down and looked at the body on the day it was found, and upon observing its advanced state of decomposition, he was heard to say that, if the fellow who did it would keep his mouth shut and just say no, there would be no way to ever prove who committed the murder, and was heard to say further that Lutman had only received his just desert."

In connection with the statement of the Attorney General concerning the ownership by Chambers Buckley of a 22 rifle and its possession by Claude Estes, it should be noted that the testimony tended to show that two bullet holes were found in the body of deceased. One pierced the skull and the bones of the face, and the other entered the body in the region of the heart. Witness Drennon testified that he judged that the wound in the head was made by a 38-caliber bullet. Presumably, the hole made in the head would quite accurately indicate the size of the bullet making such hole. After the body was found and a number of people had been about and in the vicinity of the body of the deceased, one witness testified that he found four discharged 22 rifle shells not far from the body.

One Arthur Allen, who seems to have lived at the Buckley house for a time prior to the killing, testified that defendant Earl Buckley offered to pay him if he would kill Lutman. He also testified that he heard Earl Buckley suggest to Claude Estes that he lure Lutman from his house and kill him; that he would give him $25 or $30. This witness afterwards told Earl Buckley he knew what he and Estes were talking about, and Earl said, "If you ever tell it, I will kill you." Witness afterwards spoke to Estes and said:

"`You was planning on killing Mr. Lutman, wasn't you?' He never answered me; just laughed at me and walked on."

After witness Allen left the Buckley place, Earl came over to Allen's place and accused him of being too intimate with his (Earl's) wife. Two or three days later, Earl returned and told Allen he knew he was too intimate with his wife. Allen again denied it, and Earl said if he ever caught him talking to his wife he would kill them both. About the 6th or 7th of June, Earl again hunted up Allen and told him he would give him until the next morning at sunup to get out of the country, or he would kill him. Witness left the country on June 15th.

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