Adams v. Commonwealth

279 S.W. 332, 212 Ky. 334, 1926 Ky. LEXIS 138
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedJanuary 12, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 279 S.W. 332 (Adams v. Commonwealth) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Adams v. Commonwealth, 279 S.W. 332, 212 Ky. 334, 1926 Ky. LEXIS 138 (Ky. 1926).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Commissioner Sandidge

Affirming.

Appellant, Gordon Adams, indicted for murder, was tried and found guilty of manslaughter and sentenced to confinement in the penitentiary for fifteen years. He appeals.

He vigorously insists that the trial court erred in permitting' the witnesses to go too much into detail with reference to the previous difficulties between appellant and deceased, evidence of which was introduced by the Commonwealth to establish his motive for the commission of the crime charged. It is conceded that the Commonwealth was entitled to prove as tending to establish motive that there had been previous difficulties between appellant and deceased. Certainly enough of the facts may be heard in evidence to accomplish the purpose for which it is competent, i. e., to show motive. His complaint is *336 that the trial court, over his objection, permitted the witnesses to give all the details of the previous difficulties. We find the record sustains appellant’s contention that the trial court did permit the witnesses herein to go fully into the details of the previous difficulties. Appellant and deceased appear to have lived in adjoining houses. The evidence relative to the previous trouble between them was directed largely toward that which occurred the night previous to the homicide in which a number of shots were fired by appellant from about his home into that of deceased and by deceased from about his home into that of appellant. The surviving widow of deceased was permitted over appellant’s objection, to give all of the details of that shooting and was the only witness for the Commonwealth who testified on that subject. Appellant for himself, while a witness, was permitted to testify fully as to all of the details of that previous trouble. No other witness testified for the defendant on that question. According to the testimony of deceased’s surviving widow, the difficulty on the previous night was begun by appellant shooting into.their home. According to his testimony it was begun by deceased or one of his sons shooting into appellant’s home. He was permitted to testify that after the shooting ceased he left home and saw deceased and one of his sons in front of their home; that they there accosted him, and had much complaint to make that one of appellant’s shots had penetrated and broken a five-gallon container filled with whiskey possessed by them for sale, resulting in the loss of the whiskey. It is manifest that the trial court eimed in admitting in evidence too much of the details of the previous difficulty. The question then arises as to whether the error was prejudicial under the facts of this case. Only one witness for the Commonwealth and one for the defendant testified as to these matters. It would seem that the surviving widow of the deceased and the defendant who were the witnesses on that question might be regarded by the jury as being equal in interest and bias as witnesses, the one for a conviction and the other for an acquittal. The testimony from the lone witness of the Commonwealth, who was permitted to go into the details of the previous difficulty, merely tended to establish that appellant was at fault and responsible for the previous difficulty. That for appellant not only tended to establish that deceased was at fault and responsible for the previous difficulty, but that he was a bootlegger and had five gallons of *337 whiskey on hand for sale and lost it because one of the shots from appellant’s pistol penetrated the container which held it. Appellant admitted firing the shot that killed deceased. His defense was that he was compelled to do so in order to save his own life. Deceased was killed the next day after the previous difficulty, the details or which were erroneously permitted to be heard upon this trial. His evidence that deceased lost five gallons of whiskey which he had on. hand for sale as a result of the previous difficulty, which no one contradicted, certainly had a tendency to cause the jury to believe that deceased was in a frame of mind when he and appellant met the following day well calculated to cause him, as appellant testified, to renew the attack and place the appellant in a position of necessity to defend himself. In view of all these tilings the court cannot hold the erroneous evidence to have been prejudicial.

The contention made for appellant that the verdict is not sustained by the evidence, but appears to have been the result of passion and prejudice upon the part of the jury is predicated largely upon the fact that the jury was permitted to hear the incompetent evidence above discussed. The evidence for the Commonwealth establishes that on the day he was killed, deceased, Dan Stivers, then 66 years of age, and a large, fleshy man, went from his home to that of Mrs. Add Polley, a widow, and slaughtered a hog for her. After doing so and about eleven o’clock a. m., he left her home to return to his own. He had with him his butcher knife, which he had used in slaughtering the hog, and a bucket containing a part of the backbone and .some spareribs of the hog he had killed. It appears that he had at the home of Mrs. Polley a small quantity of whiskey in a soda pop bottle, and that while there he gave one of Mrs. Polley’s sick children a drink of it. Deceased was walking and before he reached home met appellant, who was riding on horseback. Mrs. Sadie Holbrook, who was looking that way, heard the shot that killed him, but was too far away to hear anything that was said by them; and, in fact, testified that until the shot was fired she had not seen deceased. She did, however, see him stagger and fall immediately after the shot was fired. She testified that until the shot was fired appellant had not stopped the horse he was riding, and that he then rode off down the road around a curve and passed out of her sight. She testified that about a minute after deceased fell, Willie Sparks went to *338 Mm, bent over, and looked at him, and then without having touched him went to William Holbrook’s gate and called him. William Holbrook and his wife testified for the Commonwealth. They both were at their home when the shooting occurred. It stood 20 to 25 feet from where the deceased was killed. They had not seen anyone or heard anything indicating trouble until the pistol shot fixed. When the shot fired Mrs. Holbrook opened the door and saw appellant on his horse immediately in front of her gate looking back to where deceased had fallen, and in a moment she saw Willie Sparks, who came and called her husband. They then went to deceased, who was found lying in the road about twenty-five feet above their home in the edge of the creek. The bucket of meat was sitting near him and the butcher knife had fallen from his pocket and near him also was found an open pocket knife identified as belonging to deceased.

Appellant’s testimony as to how and why he killed deceased, perhaps, may be best given in his own language. - He testified :

“Q. Now tell the jury just what happened when you met up with him 1 A. Well, I saw him coming, I was riding along in kindly of a slow pace and he was coming up the road and had a little bucket in his hand and I come up to him, five or ten steps, and he set the bucket down, took his pains to set it down, I noticed that but didn’t know what he meant, and I come on up and sMd, ‘Howdy, uncle D'an, or good morning, uncle Dan,’

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Bluebook (online)
279 S.W. 332, 212 Ky. 334, 1926 Ky. LEXIS 138, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/adams-v-commonwealth-kyctapphigh-1926.