Barnes v. Commonwealth

201 S.W. 318, 179 Ky. 725, 1918 Ky. LEXIS 290
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedMarch 12, 1918
StatusPublished
Cited by39 cases

This text of 201 S.W. 318 (Barnes 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
Barnes v. Commonwealth, 201 S.W. 318, 179 Ky. 725, 1918 Ky. LEXIS 290 (Ky. Ct. App. 1918).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Clarke —

Affirming.

The appellant was indicted, tried, convicted, and sentenced to imprisonment in the penitentiary for life for .the murder of- his wife, Pema Barnes, and from that judgment is appealing, urging as grounds for reversal that the court erred: First, in overruling his motion for a peremptory instruction; second, in the admission and exclusion of evidence; third, in failing to instruct the jury upon the whole law; fourth, in refusing to grant him a new trial} because of the separation of the jury and because of newly discovered evidence.

1. Defendant and his wife separated in August, 1916, the wife living for a short time in Owensboro at the home of Nellie Blanford, and going from there some time in September to the .home of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Eacine, who lived about nine miles from Owensboro in the direction of Calhoun, where she remained assisting Mrs. Eacine in the work about the house until her murder on November 21,1916. Defendant had visited his wife at Mrs. Ea-cine ’s upon several occasions and, on the day before her murder, called Mrs. Eacine on the telephone telling her that on the next day he was going’ to Calhoun to see about doing some painting’; that he would kill some rabbits on the way and stop at her home. About eleven o’clock the next morning, defendant arrived at the Eacine home on foot, with a rabbit, a 12'-gauge, double barrel shot gun, and two pints of whiskey. He and Mrs. Eacine cleaned the rabbit and drank some of the whiskey, and defendant ate dinner with Mr. and Mrs. Eacine and his wife. After dinner, Eacine went to work on -the farm, and defendant, Mrs. Eacine, and his wife, went hunting on the Eacine farm of 140 acres, defendant carrying the double barrel shot gun he brought with him. Mrs. Eacine started with-her husband’s shot gun, which she left at the barn, and later procured a rifle at the home of a relative living near. Mrs. Barnes was unarmed.

[727]*727There is some evidence that Mrs. Racine was under the influence of the whiskey she and defendant had .been drinking, of which Mrs. Barnes did not partake; and there is a conflict in the evidence of Mrs. Racine and that of defendant as to which of them proposed the-hunt after dinner and as to the attitude of Mrs. Barnes toward her husband during the day. Mrs. Racine said that Mrs. Barnes was adverse to being with or conversing with defendant, while defendant said his wife was happy in his company, addressed him as “honey,” and that they agreed that day that she would join him in Owensboro the next day and resume their marital relations.

Defendant is contradicted by Mrs. Racine, Henry Stengaíl, and Aldon Terry, in his testimony with reference to a trip by Mrs. Barnes to the spring across the road from the Racine home, shortly before defendant started back to Owensboro about dusk, and as to a razor which defendant had and claimed to have found at the spring, and as to Mrs. Barnes firing two shots from defendant’s shot gun. Mrs. Racine also relates that, when Mrs. Barnes returned from the spring, defendant followed her to the back porch where Mrs. Racine was, and that defendant then had both barrels of his shot gun cocked and loaded; that he kept wanting a private conversation with, his wife, but she would not go into a room with him; that witness told defendant he had better be going; that he said he would go but also said “I will come back”; that his actions were such as to excite her suspicions to such an extent that, as he left, she removed her shoes and followed him to the end of the porch to see where he went, and, not seeing him when she got to the end of the porch, she went to the front door and looked for him but copld see nothing* of him. Defendant admitted having the gun cocked at the back porch, when his wife returned from the spring, but denied the gun was loaded or thát he knew, until Mrs. Racine called his attention to i,t, that the gun was cocked.

Shortly after defendant left the house, about six o’clock and after it had gotten quite dark, Mr. and Mrs. Racine and Mrs. Barnes were seated at the table in the dining room, eating supper, Mrs. Racine across the table from and facing an outside window, with Mr. Racine on her left and Mrs. Barnes across from him and on Mrs. Racine’s right with her right side toward the window, when both barrels -of a double barrel shot gun were dis[728]*728charged simultaneously through the windbw, striking Mrs. Barnes in the temple, killing her instantly; and, in addition, extingmishing' the lamp on the table, breaking many of the dishes, and stunning both Mr. and Mra. Racine. As soon as they could, they got out of the room, and Mrs. Racine called to Mrs. Barnes. In about five minutes, they and other witnesses, who also heard the louder, heavier first report, heard another shot fired from a shot gun not far from the Racine house. Two empty yellow shells were found next morning not far from the Racine house, but in the opposite direction from Owensboro.

Defendant, after denying that he killed his wife, testified that, after leaving the Racine home while walking along the road to Owensboro, he fell over a culvert and one barrel of his gun was discharged, inflicting what proved to be quite a serious flesh wound in the muscles about his left armpit but which he scarcely noticed at the time; that, when he reached the outskirts of Owensboro and eight or ten blocks from his home, in passing the home of his friend, Tom Mosely, he called, and Mosely answered, got out of bed, and invited him in and to spend the night with him; that it was then about eleven o!clock and he undressed and got in bed with Mosely; th'at he was not feeling well the next morning and did not get up to breakfast or until about noon. At about two o’clock in the afternoon he was arrested, and he had not mentioned to any one the fact that he was wounded. The officer, who arrested him, testified that when he took hold of defendant’s left arm he discovered that his coat sleeve Avas wet and sticky with blood, and that the sleeve was nearly shot away at the arm pit; that, as soon as he got to the jail, he called the city physician and had defendant’s wound dressed. The physician who dressed the wound testified that, while the wound was entirely superficial, “the muscle here of the breast was shot into quite considerably and there were also some wounds back of that and a deep wound was located at a point -there (pointing to his body)”; that the'part of the muscle “that goes over the pectoralis muscle” was torn away; and that defendant was £ £ a month or so ” in recovering.

Mrs. Racine testified that, immediately after the killing she telephoned to the sheriff; that neighbors began to arrive at the house in a short time; that among the first to arrive were “one of the Terrys and Mr. Branor and Tom Malin”; and the coroner was notified about nine [729]*729o’clock and arrived abont eleven o’clock, Roy Terry says he heard the shots and heard the Racines on their party telephone line call the doctor about seven o’clock, or about a half an hour or may be not quite so long after he heard the shots. Tom Malin says it was about an hour after he heard the shots before he arrived at the Racine home and that he stayed until after the inquest was held. Fred Racine says that right away after the shooting he telephoned to Dr. Barr and to the neighbors, which statement he qualified by saying it,was probably between a half an hour and hour after the shooting that he telephoned these parties.

It was shown that defendant, just before leaving the Racines, had two blue and four yellow loaded shells, the latter containing No.

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Bluebook (online)
201 S.W. 318, 179 Ky. 725, 1918 Ky. LEXIS 290, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/barnes-v-commonwealth-kyctapp-1918.