Bartley v. Commonwealth

188 S.W.2d 102, 300 Ky. 152, 1945 Ky. LEXIS 510
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedJune 1, 1945
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 188 S.W.2d 102 (Bartley 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
Bartley v. Commonwealth, 188 S.W.2d 102, 300 Ky. 152, 1945 Ky. LEXIS 510 (Ky. 1945).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Stanley, Commissioner

Affirming.

The first question to be decided on this appeal of John Bartley from a conviction of voluntary manslaughter for the killing of his wife, Flora Bartley, at their home on Big Branch Creek in Pike County, is the legality of the jury. The regular panel was exhausted when twelve of its members had qualified to sit in the case. The Commonwealth peremptorily challenged two of them and their places were filled with bystanders without objection. Eight of the twelve then went out on peremptory challenge of the defendant. Over the objection of the defendant, whose motion to draw the venire from the jury drum was overruled, the court directed the summoning of enough bystanders to complete the jury, and that was done. When there are over three vacancies in the regular panel of petit jurors at the time of selecting a jury in a -civil case, it is the duty of the judge to draw double the number of names from the drum to fill the panel; but in a' criminal case if the panel shall be exhausted by challenge, it is discretionary with the judge whether he will supply the jurors by drawing from the drum or directing the summoning of bystanders. KRS 29.280; Crim. Code of Practice, Sec. 192; Williams v. Commonwealth, 254 Ky. 277, 71 S. W. 2d 626; Galloway v. Commonwealth, 293 Ky. 766, 170 S. W. 2d 594. In this case the condition arose from excusing members of the regular panel by peremptory challenge, and the court but exercised a discretion vested in him. The appellant submits that this was an abuse of discretion, saying in his brief that there was an inflamed condition in the county by reason of recent sensational homicides near Pikeville. Such condition was not revealed in the record or other facts submitted as reasons for the court not having the rest of the jury chosen from bystanders. In the absence of some factual basis *155 in the record, obviously we cannot say that the trial court abused his discretion.

The appellant contends that he was entitled to a peremptory instruction of acquittal. About eighteen months before the killing, the defendant had married the deceased, who brought ten of her eleven children to his four-room home where he had four children by a former marriage. At the time of the killing, August 22, 1944, six or seven of her children and three of his were living there. Some of the little girls had a quarrel in their playing, and one or more of her children came in the house to tell their mother about it. It was after supper and, as one of the witnesses said, “setting into dark.” The mother was busy in the kitchen and the defendant was also there making shavings of a stick of wood with which to build a fire the next morning. One of his children accused Chloe Ann, her thirteen-year-old daughter, of being in the fuss. She denied it and the defendant told her to hush, that he knew she was in it. She replied that she did not have to hush, and he threw and struck her in the head with a small stick. Her mother told him not to hit her any more, and he told her to hush or “he would cut her guts out.” She went into a bedroom and he followed her and the children followed him. He then cut her, although the two children say it was dark in the room. Not a word was spoken until their mother said, “Lord, John, you have cut me,” and then, “Lord, John, you have cut my guts out.” Such is the testimony of Chloe Ann and her eleven-year-old sister, Mildred. A nineteen-year-old son of the deceased, Junior Johnson, had laid down across the bed in another room and gone to sleep. The first thing he heard was his mother saying, “John, don’t you hit any more of my children.” After the man and woman had gone’ into the other bedroom, he heard his mother say something he could not understand, and then, “John, you are choking me to death.” He then went in there and saw the defendant ahold of his mother around her neck or shoulder. He took hold of him and he turned her loose. This witness did not testify to anything about the cutting or his mother having been cut or maldng any such statements as the little girls testified. On cross-examination he testified that when the defendant started to the porch he said, “Lord have mercy; what happened?” and then “broke and went back in the kitchen.”

*156 The cross-examination of these witnesses, particularly the two girls, developed variations and contradictions. This is especially so with reference to the conduct of the defendant immediately afterward. We believe, as testified by ,a neighbor who arrived soon and the admissions on cross-examination of the two children, that the defendant at once tried to stóp the flow of blood and to minister to his wife, as he testified he did.

The defendant denied categorically the evidence of the three witnesses of the Commonwealth concerning his statements' to the girl and to his wife, and stated he merely tossed a little stick on which he had been whittling and it accidentally struck the child. It was six or eight inches long and no bigger than his finger. His story is that he went into the bedroom with the knife without thinking about having it .in his hand. It was very sharp. He walked up behind his wife and she suddenly turned in the semi-darkness and accidentally came in contact with the point of the knife. It is made clear by a doctor and the undertaker that the end of the knife penetrated' her left groin or front side, just above the hip bone, and had punctured, but not severed, the large artery going into her leg. The wound was about the width of the knife blade and was an inch or an inch and a half deep.

There was some evidence that the parties had had some difficulty a few weeks before over the conduct of one of the woman’s daughters, and she had left the defendant and gone to her former home for three weeks. On the other side, he testified he had been with her there part of the time, and a neighbor related that the wife had later spoken about how good her husband was to her.

The character of the wound is strong evidence supporting the claim of the defendant. It seems unnatural for a man bent upon killing his wife merely to have stuck the knife in her body at such a place and inflicted a wound which would have been only superficial except for the presence of the artery so near the outside. The provocation, if any, was slight. The testimony of the two little girls, one eleven and the other thirteen years old, is variable and manifests exaggerations which are so prevalent in children of that age concerning a grave and exciting matter. At one time they would have been *157 regarded ,as incompetent to bear testimony. It is significant that they had been staying with some of their mother’s people just before the trial. The testimony of the son is also weakened in some particulars, e.g., neither of the girls said anything about their mother being choked, and he said nothing about her exclaiming she was cut. But ,the trial judge and the jury, seeing and hearing these witnesses, were better able to weigh their evidence than we are, and it was their prerogative to accept their testimony as describing the actual facts. We cannot by any means say that as a matter of law the defendant should have gone acquit.

We find no merit in the argument that the corpus delicti was not established because no witness testified that the woman’s death was the result of the wound.

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Related

Crowe v. Commonwealth
407 S.W.2d 120 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1966)
Levi v. Commonwealth
405 S.W.2d 559 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1965)
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390 S.W.2d 888 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1965)
Parsley v. Commonwealth
321 S.W.2d 259 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1958)
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208 S.W.2d 512 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1948)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
188 S.W.2d 102, 300 Ky. 152, 1945 Ky. LEXIS 510, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bartley-v-commonwealth-kyctapphigh-1945.