The State v. Lucas

Decision Date14 March 1927
Docket Number27527
Citation292 S.W. 714,316 Mo. 904
PartiesThe State v. Dink Lucas, Appellant
CourtMissouri Supreme Court

Reported at 316 Mo. 904 at 915.

Original Opinion of March 14, 1927, Reported at 316 Mo. 904.

Gallivan & Finch, of New Madrid, and Ward & Reeves, of Caruthersville for appellant.

North T. Gentry, Atty. Gen. (Walter E. Sloat, of Jefferson City, of counsel), for the State.

OPINION

Blair, J.

Upon Motion for Rehearing.

In the original opinion we held that appellant had not properly brought to this court remarks of counsel complained of in assignment twelve in the motion for new trial. The copy of the motion for new trial did not contain the matter complained of, but referred to pages 249 to 251 of the bill of exceptions. As the bill of exceptions was not and could not have been prepared until some time after the motion for new trial was prepared and filed below, we very naturally concluded that appellant had not brought the complete motion for new trial here. By leave and in connection with his motion for rehearing, appellant has filed a certified copy of the motion for new trial, and it appears therefrom that the matter contained in pages 249 to 251 of the bill of exceptions was actually attached to the motion for new trial as pages B and C thereof. This was not clearly shown by the copy of the motion for new trial set forth in the bill of exceptions.

There is not enough set out in the first argument of the State's counsel complained of to show the connection in which the argument was made. We are therefore not in a position to rule intelligently concerning the right of counsel to argue that "these defendants fell out." The court ruled that there was no direct statement that they fell out, but that there was evidence that they changed attorneys. We are unable to perceive how the argument could have prejudiced the defense, even if not based upon the evidence.

The objection to argument that a man who makes "this damnable concoction they call moonshine whiskey now and sell it to his neighbor is no better than a common murderer in my humble opinion," was a general objection. It was "We are objecting to such remarks in this case." An attempted objection in that form constitutes no legal objection at all, because it does not advise the court of the particular ground of the objection.

Not only that, but the excerpt from the argument does not show whether counsel was referring to...

To continue reading

Request your trial
1 cases
  • The State v. Lucas
    • United States
    • Missouri Supreme Court
    • March 14, 1927
    ...S.W. 714 316 Mo. 904 The State v. Dink Lucas, Appellant No. 27527Supreme Court of MissouriMarch 14, 1927 Rehearing Granted, Reported at 316 Mo. 904 at 915. from Stoddard Circuit Court; Hon. W. S. C. Walker, Judge. Affirmed. Gallivan & Finch and Ward & Reeves for appellant. (1) There is no c......

VLEX uses login cookies to provide you with a better browsing experience. If you click on 'Accept' or continue browsing this site we consider that you accept our cookie policy. ACCEPT