Ball v. Commonwealth

101 S.W. 956, 125 Ky. 601, 1907 Ky. LEXIS 315
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedMay 8, 1907
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 101 S.W. 956 (Ball v. Commonwealth) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ball v. Commonwealth, 101 S.W. 956, 125 Ky. 601, 1907 Ky. LEXIS 315 (Ky. Ct. App. 1907).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Lassing

Affirming.

In October, 1905, appellant, J. F. Ball, shot and killed Jack Bolen in Middlesboro, Ky. He was indicted in the Bell circuit court for murder, and, on motion of the commonwealth, a change of venue was granted to the Knox circuit court. When the case was [604]*604called for trial in the Knox circuit court, on motion of the Commonwealth, the indictment was quashed and the case referred to the Knox county grand jury, which returned a new indictment in two counts. The first count charged appellant and his brother, C.'D. Ball, with having entered into a conspiracy to kill Jack Bolen, and the second count charged appellant with his murder. Upon this indictment returned by the Knox county grand jury appellant was tried, found guilty, and his punishment fixed at confinement in the penitentiary for life.

The grounds relied upon for reversal in the motion for a new trial are numerous, but we will consider only those which we deem material.

The record shows that appellant had been a candidate for the office of sheriff of Bell county before a Republican primary; that the deceased openly espoused the cause of his opponent on the alleged ground that Ball was not a suitable man for the office, and appellant offers much testimony to the effect that during the progress of that campaign deceased frequently spoke very bitterly and disparagingly of him and his candidacy. Appellant was defeated, and ■a week or 10 days after his defeat he went to the home of deceased, in which he conducted his business —that of a barber — for the purpose, as he alleges, of ascertaining why deceased had spoken of him as he had heard he had'. He admits that he was armed on this occasion, and, although he disclaims any intention on his part of raising a disturbance, or doing any injury to deceased, yet from the evidence it is plain that he and deceased had a wordy altercation, and that but for the timely interference of a citizen and the little 12-year-old daughter of deceased, the result of this visit would have been serious, if not [605]*605fatal, to deceased. Deceased ordered him from his house. He left, went outside, and for some little time sat in front of deceased’s place of business. He was in an ugly and threatening mood. Thereafter deceased filed suit in the Bell circuit court againsit appellant, charging that on the occasion of this visit appellant had said to him, “You murdered your wife, and you know it,” and later, when the grand jury of Bell county was assembled, he had gone before it and' testified as to the difficulty at his house with appellant, and upon this testimony appellant was indicted for assault. Appellant’s brother, C. D. Ball, was at the county seat upon the same day that the indictment for assault was returned. Whether appellant knew that this indictment had been returned the record does not show, but it may be fairly inferred from the evidence that he did, inasmuch as he and his brother, C. D. Ball, were seen in an earnest conversation in the rear of deceased’s house a short time before the killing, and the record does show that C. D. Ball knew that this indictment had been returned, and was very much incensed because of it. Deceased had in his employ a barber named Lane. About 7:30 o ’clock he sent Lane to the hotel a short distance from the barber shop to get some change for $1. . When Lane left the shop, deceased was sitting in a chair near the door. As he. approached the hotel, he saw three men standing or sitting in front of it, and appellant conversing with them. Ball immediately left the hotel and walked down the street in the direction of the barber shop. When he got opposite the door, he was seen to fire three shots in rapid succession-. After the first shot a noise was heard in the shop as though some one or something had fallen upon the floor. After the third shot was fired Ball walked away. [606]*606About this time, Lane, having received the change, had returned to the shop, and he and the other people who gathered there found deceased lying upon the floor, as though he had fallen from the chair, Ms feet rather doubled under him, and his right hand in the right hand pocket of his trousers. He died almost immediately. A bullet wound was found in the back of his head, and, from the undisputed testimony of the doctors who made an examination of the wound, the shot had been fired from behind, the bullet passing entirely through the head. Three holes were found in the screen door near together, and all of them were about three feet from the bottom of the door. Deceased was searched, and had no weapon upon his person other than an ordinary pocketknife. Some cartridges for a 38 Smith & Wesson pistol and some shells for a 12-gauge shotgun were found in his pockets. In one of the stand drawers was a 38 Smith & Wesson pistol, and in the back of his office or bathroom was a double-barrel shotgun. The record shows that after the first altercation with appellant deceased had borrowed a shotgun and secured a pistol, and had stated to several people that he had them for the purpose of defending himself, and some of the witnesses say that he told them he had them for the purpose, of killing appellant; but, however this may be, it is certain that on this occasion he was, not armed. Appellant, testifying for himself, says that on the evening of the' killing, just as he got opposite the door, or nearly so, he spoke to a gentleman 'who passed; that deceased evidently recognized his voice, and that he thereupon sprang out of his chair and made an effort as though to draw a pistol from his pocket, and, that, believing that he was going to do so and shoot him, he fired the three shots in rapid [607]*607succession; that at the time that he fired the first shot deceased was standing erect. The record shows that deceased was a man five feet six inches tall, and that the floor of the barber shop was 17 inches above the level of the pavement, and that the bullet holes in the door were about three feet from the floor, one of the bullets passing through the back of the chair in which deceased was sitting when the witness John Lane left the shop not more than two minutes before he was killed. This is in brief the testimony.

During the progress of the trial, on motion of the commonwealth, the court had the body of the deceased exhumed and examined by skilled physicians, and the testimony of the physicians for both the commonwealth and the accused shows that deceased was shot in the head, the bullet entering below and back, of the left ear, and ranging through the head, passed out near the right temple, the range of the bullet being slightly upward. This was the only wound in the head.

Appellant complains that, as no evidence of a conspiracy was shown, the trial court erred in permitting the witnesses Fuson and Riley to tetsify as to the conduct and statements of O. D. Ball, made in Middlesboro, in the office of Riley, and in the presence of Jack Bolen, a day or two before he was killed. This evidence was objected to at the time it was inlroduced, and admitted over the protest of appellant’s counsel. Later the trial court, evidently having some doubt as to whether a conspiracy had been proven, withdrew this testimony from the jury, telling them that it had been introduced or admitted through error, and that they must not consider it for any purpose whatever. Appellant insists that this was most damaging testimony, and that, although it was withdrawn- from the [608]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
101 S.W. 956, 125 Ky. 601, 1907 Ky. LEXIS 315, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ball-v-commonwealth-kyctapp-1907.