Addington v. Commonwealth

182 S.W.2d 442, 298 Ky. 275, 1944 Ky. LEXIS 864
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedJune 9, 1944
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 182 S.W.2d 442 (Addington 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
Addington v. Commonwealth, 182 S.W.2d 442, 298 Ky. 275, 1944 Ky. LEXIS 864 (Ky. 1944).

Opinions

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Tilford

Affirming.

The appellant, Ernest Addington, was convicted of the crime of rape and sentenced to death.

Nora Coleman, the prosecuting witness, testified that her home is at Kings Mountain in Lincoln County; that she is nineteen years of age, and that for some time prior to December 19, 1942, she had been working in Cincinnati, Ohio; that during the afternoon of that date, she left Cincinnati by bus and arrived at Kings Mountain road where she got off the bus about 9 o ’clock p. m.; that appellant, with whom she was acquainted, and one Oran Jones whom she did not then know, got on the bus at Stanford; that Addington, Jones, and Crit Coleman, to whom she was not related, and a man whom she did not know, got off the bus when she did; that all of them walked along Kings Mountain road toward her home *277 which was some two miles distant; that the man whose name she did not know turned off into a side road; and that after they had walked about a mile and a half, Oran Jones, who was behind her, caught her around the neck, pressed something into her back which he said was a gun, took her purse from under her arm, and, to quote her testimony, “at the same time Jones was doing this Addington walked around in front of Crit Coleman with a knife on his chest and told him to stop and to give him his money, and he says ‘I don’t have any money’, and he says, ‘Yes, you do’, and he put his hand in his overall pocket up here and took a bill-fold out and took his money out of the bill-fold, and he had two pieces of white paper, and he says, ‘I’ll give this back to you’. I don’t know what it was, but anyway he gave it back to him — and he told him — they told us they was going to kill both of us, and so Addington took — walked down the road and Jones took me up the road a few steps and told me that he was going to kill me. I — and we were begging and crying, we told him they had their money so why didn’t they let us go, and they said they was going to kill both of us.” The prosecuting witness then related how Jones had made her “walk over in the field just a little ways”, and attempted to assault her; that “just as I started to run Ernest (the appellant) came up and caught me”, whereupon, with each holding one of her arms, “they pulled me down through a field and shoved me through a fence, and I was crying and begging to let me go, but they said they wasn’t — they said they was going to kill me, and one time they said they was taking me to Tennessee with them, and they said they was going to take me over there in the field or woods and kill me, and I begged — I kept begging them all the way, and they pulled me down through the other field, and that was down through almost two fields, and Jones shoved me down on the ground and Addington held the knife on me — ” while Jones raped her, after which appellant raped her while Jones held a knife at her throat.

Crit Coleman fled as soon as he had been robbed, and hence did not witness what occurred in the field, but in relating what took place on the road immediately preceeding the rape, he testified:

“Well, sir, we was all going walking along out the road, coming out this side of the underground church house, there was a little road that turned off to the left. *278 Well, right back this side of that little road there was another one turned to the right. Well, this fellow with this suitcase, Prewitt, he set the suitcase down and stopped off there at that little road that turned to the left, ■and so we just kept walking along on out the road, and these boys kept coming on out, that is, Jones and Addington, and I was walking on one side of the road and Nora was walking on the other, walking along saying nothing to nobody, so this Addington boy walked up pretty close to me right just- — -oh, just on the yon side of the underground church just a little, why, he come right —right up — him and the Jones boy — right up between the — me and Nora, she was walking on the left and me on the right of the church, and just — just come walking right in front of us, and Addington said, ‘I’ll take care of him and you take care of her’, and he just made a grab then and grabbed her around the waist, so Mr. Addington run right around in front of me with a pocket knife and said, ‘Stick them up, you G-od d — n son of a b — , you,’and so I — just like anybody else — I stuck them up, this hand (indicating), and this hand (ind.) —I had my groceries on my back, holding my groceries with this hand, so then I just let this hand down and took this hand and held my groceries and held this hand up. ‘Well,’ he said, ‘give your money up’. I said, ‘I ain’t got no money, Mister’. He said, ‘You are .a d- — n son of a b— and liar, you have got money’. I says, ‘No I haven’t got no money’. He said, ‘Yes, you have’, he said ‘Give that money up’, he says, ‘I’ll gouge this knife through your heart’. I said, ‘Big boy, I haven’t got no money’, and so he just went to unbuttoning my jacket down here (ind.) .with one hand and held the knife on me with the other, and so he just went right on in this pocket with his hand and begin to rake the money out. Well, I had $60.00 in this pocket—
“The Court: There is no use going into that. Get to this other matter, Mr. Rankin.
“Q. Well now, after that where did you go to? A. Well—
“Q. Did you hear him and Jones make any threats to your life and to her life? A. Yes, sir.
“Q. What did they say? A. Well, Addington there said that he was going to kill us both and put us in the underground church house, that dead bodies wouldn’t tell nothing. ’ ’

*279 At the conclusion of Coleman’s direct examination, the Court, without being requested to do so, admonished the jury as follow: “Now, gentlemen, the Court wishes to remind the jury of this: That you are not trying the defendant here on the charge of robbery. You are trying him on the charge of rape. The testimony here with regard to the defendant taking money either from Nora Coleman or Grit Coleman is competent for you to consider only in connection with the other charge, that of rape, in the event that you think it has any bearing on whether or not that other occurrence took place as Nora Coleman claims it did.”

It is insisted by appellant that so much of the foregoing testimony as related to the robbery of the prosecuting witness and Crit Coleman was' incompetent under the rule that proof of crimes other than that for which the accused is being tried is inadmissible, and that if admissible as an exception to the general rule, the Court’s admonition to the jury as to the purpose for which it might be considered was erroneous. One of the exceptions to the rule prohibiting the proof of other crimes is that the exclusion does not extend to crimes, so interwoven with the offense for which the accused is being tried that the evidence of the two acts cannot be separated (Conley v. Commonwealth, 273 Ky. 486, 117 S. W. 2d 189); and we are of the opinion that the testimony complained of was within that exception. Farley v. Commonwealth, 263 Ky. 769, 93 S. W. 2d 858. In any event, the appellant failed to object to the testimony complained of, or to request any admonition limiting its effect. In the case of Farley v.

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Related

Ellison v. Commonwealth
225 S.W.2d 470 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1949)
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194 S.W.2d 363 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1946)

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Bluebook (online)
182 S.W.2d 442, 298 Ky. 275, 1944 Ky. LEXIS 864, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/addington-v-commonwealth-kyctapphigh-1944.